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lazylion_ca, in Linux Kernel of the Beast 6.6.6 exorcised by angelic 6.6.7 update

Wait til it gets to 7.11

Mikrotik had a field day with that a few months ago.

doctorn,
@doctorn@r.nf avatar

Add 2 more full versions and it might crash your towers. 😅

Sterben, in Looking to switch to Linux in the somewhat distant future
@Sterben@lemmy.ml avatar

Why don’t you try becoming comfortable with Linux while using it in a Virtual Machine? I tried different distros too, and then I decided which one was the best for me.

We can’t really suggest you one, if we don’t know what you are going to use it for.

You may want to do some research, because different distros have different purposes (gaming, privacy, programming, easy to use etc etc).

Let us know, what your use cases will be?

thespezfucker,

guess I’m booting up my VM again!!

techognito,
@techognito@lemmy.world avatar

<a href="">https://distrochooser.de/</a> is a great tool that help to understand what the different distros can do.

Also, you should probably know that selecting a distro is more about selecting the underlying OS and less about the UI (DE). Most distros support the top 5 Desktop Environments (DE for short). And selecting a DE can be just as important.

luthis, in How do I get Nviddia drivers to work in arch?

Have you tried pacman -Syu nvidia?

Liz_thestrange,

Yes, he is been using arch for almost year and a half but he has never managed to make the drivers work, this pakage unfortunatley didn´t work neither when he tried himself or now while I’m trying to help him, thanks btw

moonleay, in Kernel 6.6.6 is out 😈

now we can merge the bsd source tree

fschaupp, in Is linux good for someone tech illererate.
@fschaupp@lemmy.ml avatar

I really think you would have a great time with either “Linux Mint” because of its rocksolid philosophy of not breaking stuff or shipping “beta software”.

Otherwise a safe option would be a Linux variant with professional support options - just in case you need it. ZorinOS, Tuxedo or Pop_OS! are the most common ones.

Personally i’d take Linux Mint, which in most cases works flawless out of the box. The premium options are nonetheless also great options.

ultra,

+1 for Linux Mint. It just works unless you try to break it.

callyral, (edited ) in Can anyone tell me what format this uh.. nested dictionary is?
@callyral@pawb.social avatar

Lua function “item” called with argument of type table

The function is the outer part with the parentheses, the table is the inner part with the curly braces. [“attr”] is a table inside the table.

For example, to access (table)>attr>size you would write: table[“attr”][“size”] (assuming the table is named, that is, assigned to a variable called “table”)

moomoomoo309,
@moomoomoo309@programming.dev avatar

This is correct. You can also omit the parentheses on the function call in Lua if the only argument is a table or string literal.

fraksken, in recommendations for lightweight window managers for an old netbook

i3wm is pretty light on resources

rufus, (edited ) in [Request] Where to start with dot files?

If you use one of the standard graphical desktops (Gnome, KDE, …) you don’t need to explore all of the config files. The most important settings should be in a settings program.

And programs should (mostly) come with sane default settings anyways. Debian adds a few. So the usual way (for beginners) is to start with the defaults and change around stuff once you want to customize something, and starting with the software you use the most (like an text editor, …). The standard GUI software (like your browser, LibreOffice) has GUI settings dialogues anyways.

drwankingstein, in Intel or AMD for ffmpeg?

none, you aren’t using gpu, just whatever cpu is the fastest. if you want gpu acceleration you have to specify it. and keep note gpu acceleration is less efficient then cpu so your files will be bigger. though at preset fast it might actually be pretty close

cmgvd3lw,

So what you are saying is its better to run on cpu alone?

drwankingstein,

when possible yes, sometime sits not possible, and it will be better to run on gpu alone

Disonantezko, (edited )
  • Hardware (GPU) encoders are worst than software encoders.
  • GPU Acceleration is good for faster encoding and free CPU to do other things. But you get bigger files at similar quality.
  • Maybe is useful for live streaming or if you really really need CPU do other things.
drwankingstein,

Yes this is indeed what I said. but well calling gpu encoders “worse” isnt really fair, it’s all trade offs, they for sure have worse efficiency as we both said, but their speed is significantly faster usually. I would say that doesn’t make the encoder “worse” just different.

pruneaue, in [Request] Where to start with dot files?

The standard is to have dotfiles in your ~/.config folder, however not all apps follow that.
Some apps dump their config files in your home, others only have files in /etc or /usr and you have to copy them yourself to modify them

walden, (edited ) in [Request] Where to start with dot files?

Dot (.) files are hidden files/folders. Config files, for the most part, are located in the users home/.config folder. You should be spending very little time, if any, in that folder.

berg,

You should be spending very little time, if any, in that folder.

I know what you mean, but man if this isn’t the exact opposite of me. If the program doesn’t store its config here I’m close to crusading.

~/.config really makes life a lot easier when backing up your dotfiles.

Atemu,
@Atemu@lemmy.ml avatar

You should be spending very little time, if any, in that folder.

Hahaha, tell that to lemmy.ml/c/unixporn

0x2d, in Video editor for Linux?

Kdenlive

Openshot

espais,
@espais@programming.dev avatar

+1 for openshot if you need a no frills editor.

1984, (edited ) in GNOME's Dynamic Triple Buffering "Ready To Merge"
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

There is already a package for this in arch AUR you can install:

aur.archlinux.org/…/mutter-dynamic-buffering

I used to install this (it replaces mutter) but didn’t notice any difference in my system.

I think it makes a big difference on some systems though, since I saw other people absolutely love it.

Chewy7324,

There’s a Fedora copr with the triple buffering patches and it did improve the perceived smoothness of Gnome’s animations on my 8th gen Intel CPU.

It was especially noticeable if the system was limited in power because of running on battery.

dario,

I use this package. It makes a difference in games.

Patch,

Canonical have had it in Ubuntu for years, but it’s taken them a while to get it to a point where it could be upstreamed. That’s what this news is: that Canonical’s patch is finally all clear to be merged.

mvirts, in Can one recover from an accidental rm -rf of system directories by copying those files back in from a backup?

Give it a try! System is broken anyway. Also fix your backup to include file metadata, maybe disk images?

Heck I would try using testdisk to undelete the files onto another filesystem then copy them back if the permissions look okay.

snekerpimp, in Switching to Debian on my gaming pc

I switched from arch to Debian bookworm for my work/gaming pc, and I have no regrets. Same amount of time setting up as arch, because of the newer kernel on bookworm you don’t have many prerequisites to install. Was gaming within an hour or two. That was six months ago, and things don’t break all the time like arch, where they would fix graphics drivers, but doing so would bork the sound. I play everything from factorio to cyberpunk, no issues. Only thing I can not get running for the life of me on windows or Linux is forza motorsports.

I don’t think distro matters as much anymore with modern Linux. There are enough tutorials out there on most of them, should be easy to get setup on almost anything.

arthur,

From Arch to Debian, that’s a 180° on stability. But to be honest, I’m using arch for 2 months now and everything seems very stable. I had no problems, yet.

snekerpimp,

I never had an issue with system stability with Arch. It was just tiring every day making sure everything was up to date. Updates would break little things, like audio or some wine dependencies and I would just have to deal till I ran updates the next day. Meanwhile with Debian, the only issue I have ran into was with lutris and battle.net, and that turned out to just be a problem with mangohud.

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