linux

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radioactiveradio, in Just install EndeavorOS lol

Is there an easier way to install Arch? I know there’s Archinstall but my dumbass messed that up somehow.

hex,

I used endeavourOS and it was super straightforward

g7s,

When you boot up the arch iso, you can use a script called arch-install

Bene7rddso,

I know there’s Archinstall but my dumbass messed that up somehow.

CalicoJack,

EndeavourOS is it. It’s basically a better version of archinstall, especially if you’re planning to install a DE.

Pantherina,

EndeavorOS or other. Artix maybe? But never used any of those

cows_are_underrated,

Archintstall sometimes produces problems(at least I had problems with it). Make sure that you have the current iso version of arch on your stick and try again.

radioactiveradio,

The problem I was facing was manually creating partitions. Should I use Gparted to make them first and then use archinstall, or does it not work with manual partitions?

cows_are_underrated,

It should work with both ways. First time I did them with archinstall(but didn’t like that it created a separate partition for my home directory). Second time I manually partitioned my drive and then let archintstall use that.

gamma,
@gamma@programming.dev avatar

If you use EndeavourOS, know that you shouldn’t ask for support on the Arch forums, its a policy they have.

TheGrandNagus, in Linux Mint XCFE -> Gnome?

I like it, but it’s subjective. Just try it for yourself.

I will say though to try it for a bit longer than just a few minutes. The Gnome workflow is very different to the usual Win95-inspired one pretty much everybody else uses out of the box, but once it “clicks” it’s a joy to use.

iAvicenna, in Just install EndeavorOS lol
@iAvicenna@lemmy.world avatar

Well there is always Scientific Linux if arch doesn’t quite cut it

baggins, in Just install EndeavorOS lol

Install Debian. Everything is based on it.

shapis,
@shapis@lemmy.ml avatar

It’s a hard sell explaining to new people that they will have software up to a couple years out of date.

skqweezy,

Yet they scream when their 6 months old un-updated windows install wants then to update

shapis,
@shapis@lemmy.ml avatar

Yet they scream when their 6 months old un-updated windows install wants then to update

The problem isn’t the OS being out of date I wouldn’t think, it’s the applications they actually use. Flatpaks are kind of a solution but not really.

skqweezy,

Yeah, I just wanted to say that if anyone says “this distro is a bit older but it’s really stable and good for use” it’s scaring away people without them even needing it updated since they’re used to getting told by Microsoft that “you have to to update to the newest”

The point about updating apps is also useless to them, as long as it works they will use it, my dad used windows xp with office 2003 until 2021 when the computer finally died, I told him countless times to update to a newer os but he refused every single time

iegod,

That may be true for some users but there are those in decent quality looking for a more technical experience. Development comes to mind; you probably should use the latest versions in some cases.

skqweezy,

Yeah, but developers probably already know what is Linux, either from them learning about it at school or just by other developers

But developers probably already know something about their os, they don’t just use what they get on a computer or a laptop, most of us probably messed with some deep settings of whatever system we use, i. e. something that a regular user won’t do

Sanyanov, (edited )

My brother is a Linux first-timer, and he specifically asked me to install Debian after I explained that it’s stability-focused, but as such sacrifices functional updates and is only globally updated once every two years.

Some people need latest and greatest (i.e. here’s your Arch), some need stability over everything (i.e. here’s your Debian), some don’t need extremes and strike a balance somewhere in between (i.e. everything else).

I use Manjaro (Arch-based) on main PC and Debian on a work laptop. Main PC should better enjoy all the benefits of all things new (while standing a week or two behind bleeding-edge to not cut itself, which is Manjaro’s selling point) while work laptop is mission critical and can work perfectly fine with what Debian has to offer, so, Debian it is.

uis,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar
JoMiran, in Any experience with teaching kids Linux?
@JoMiran@lemmy.ml avatar

I taught adult education in college and always introduced people to computing with “DOS for Dummies” even though Windows was the OS they interacted with. By teaching them in a command line only environment first I could then easily teach them the desktop environment because they understood what was going on behind the scenes. I think the same could be done with Linux.

0x4E4F, (edited )

Yeah, but the kid has to be older, 12 is too young for that IMO.

Still, a Linux install with a DE will do nicely. He wants to do this and this, but there is no GUI for it, tell him to open up the terminal and type in the following commands, see what happens after you hit Enter… it always brings a smile, even with adults ☺️, they feel like they’re hackers or something 😂.

Then they usually wanna know what each of the commands and options do, and this is where I know I have a great student ☺️.

TootSweet, in Which Desktop / Window Manager is most secure?

All else being equal, less code and less dependencies is safer. The bigger the application and the more it tries to do, the larger its attack surface.

(Again, all else being equal. DWM is probably smaller than Weston, but Weston doesn’t let just any old process log keypresses or take screenshots, so probably at least arguable to say that Weston is (qualifier, handwave, condition, clarification) “safer.”)

just_another_person, in tip for dealing with audio mixing in movies

VLC has pretty solid normalization settings.

library_napper,
@library_napper@monyet.cc avatar

How?

1smoothcriminal, in My weird KDE plasma workflow

Glad you got something that works for you but maybe you should look into i3WM instead. It does everything you built KDE to do natively.

gurapoku,

I understand where you’re coming from, but I think I prefer the ease of use of something like KDE. I tried sway for a while, only to figure out that I am not really a tiling window manager type of person :)

Thanks for the tip though!

annoyed_onion,
@annoyed_onion@lemmy.world avatar

The one thing I really liked about sway/i3 was having numbered spaces. The tiling I could take or leave, sometimes it was annoying if you hadn’t put in rules for an app. E.g. gimp used to have multiple windows back in the day and it was a bit of a mess

So for the work spaces I setup, I did 1 for general, 2 for web browser, 3 for code editor, etc. I really liked that and it became muscle memory.

I’ve got a Mac for my job provided by work and I’ve done the same thing and setup workspaces in the same way. I use Ctrl+number to get to a space.

Might be worth an experiment setting up key binds to take you to a specific workspace. I think you’d like it! :)

Nibodhika, in Fixed Arch install error

Refind does not generate the proper Configs when ran from the live image. From the wiki

Warning: When refind-install is run in chroot (e.g. in live system when installing Arch Linux) /boot/refind_linux.conf is populated with kernel options from the live system not the one on which it is installed. Edit /boot/refind_linux.conf and make sure the kernel parameters in it are correct for your system, otherwise you could get a kernel panic on your next boot. See .conf for an example file.

This is how my /boot/refind_linux.conf looks like:


<span style="color:#323232;">"Boot with standard options"  "rw root=/dev/nvme1n1p2"
</span><span style="color:#323232;">"Boot to single-user mode"    "rw root=/dev/nvme1n1p2 single"
</span><span style="color:#323232;">"Boot with minimal options"   "ro root=/dev/nvme1n1p2"
</span>
Hiro8811,

Using nano it just created new file

Nibodhika, (edited )

Have you mounted /boot? Usually it’s in a different partition so you’ll need to mount it.

Edit: yup, your boot is in a different partition according to your fstab

Hiro8811,

From where should I mount it? Emergency shell? Chroot?

Nibodhika, (edited )

Every time I made this mistake I booted again the live iso, mounted the boot drive and edit it.

Edit: you can also just edit the entry on refind directly to boot once on a correct config, and then fix it inside your actual system. The error is that the root filesystem will have an uuid that relates to the live iso image, not to your actual system.

Hiro8811,

I think I managed to mount it but what should I edit?

Nibodhika, (edited )

Ok, if I understood correctly your fstab what you should do is:

  1. Boot the live iso
  2. Run mount /dev/nvme0n1p1 /mnt
  3. run nano /mnt/refind_linux.conf
  4. Alter the file so it says this:

<span style="color:#323232;">"Boot with standard options"  "rw root=/dev/nvme0n1p2"
</span><span style="color:#323232;">"Boot to single-user mode"    "rw root=/dev/nvme0n1p2 single"
</span><span style="color:#323232;">"Boot with minimal options"   "ro root=/dev/nvme0n1p2"
</span>
  1. Save and close
  2. Unmount the drive umount /mnt
  3. Reboot

That should work

Edit: noticed my disk was 1 while yours is 0, didn’t remembered I had two ssds on that machine hahahah

Edit2: check that the file exists in /mnt, it should if you ran refind-install the first time.

Hiro8811,

I get the same error. Should I install grub?

Nibodhika,

Did you confirm that the file existed before editing? And that you were mounting the correct boot and not root partition?

I don’t know what else it can be if that doesn’t solve it.

yianiris,
@yianiris@kafeneio.social avatar

systemd doesn't like booting with ro, too dumb to check then mount filesystems.

@Nibodhika @Hiro8811

Thade780, in ADWSteamGTK makes steam look more inline with GTK
@Thade780@lemmy.world avatar

That looks great.

aard, (edited ) in Spending a few days with Hyprland made me realize how awesome Gnome is
@aard@kyu.de avatar

Instead of rofi I’d recommend using anyrun.

I made a quick plugin to also run stuff from path, and am currently working on a proper ssh plugin for that - extending them is a bit more involved than the simple rofi/wofi scripts, but there’s a lot more things an anyrun plugin can do.

albert180, in Thinkpads RE: Repairability/upgradability

Go with T-Series not with E or L. Better quality of materials, comes with better warranty (you can get up to 5 Years), longer spare parts availability, and usually you can replace more by yourself.

TheWilliamist,

True! T series or P series are much better made. I’d also advise heading over to Lenovo support site and checking the service manual for any machine you’re interested in, just to make sure that the features you may want to upgrade are upgradable.

I’ve noticed Lenovo doing a lot of SOC style systems ala Apple where your RAM is one and done. It’s mostly been on the thin/light segment but…

My biggest complaint has been the fact that they don’t put the USB C inputs on a daughter card. I don’t know what the cost savings is, but I literally had two machines that users had killed the USB on that spent close to 10 months waiting on parts for a warranty repair.

pastermil,

I’d also like to add that between 20 series and 80 series would be the best for build quality (and reasonable performance).

Jumuta,

make sure to get the quad core models for >t440p though

pinchcramp, in Debian based immutable OSes
@pinchcramp@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Vanilla OS is moving to Debian with version 2. I don’tthink they have a KDE version, though.

Piwix,

There is a KDE flavor in development for vanilla but its not publicly available yet

pinchcramp,
@pinchcramp@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Ah, that’s good to know. Thanks for the info!

myogg, in Window snapping

You should try out KDE in a Live CD. The snapping and tiling features work very well, Windows needs to catch up

possiblylinux127,

Don’t recommend a totally separate DE for something trivial

Schmeckinger, (edited )

Do you like the color blue? You should definitely switch to fedora.

nopt, (edited ) in Kubuntu freezes after putting password in login screen

Is your root partition full to the last bit?

sergih,

It could be, last time I checked I had bery loe space and qbittorrent gave me an error for not enough space, how should I go about checking it if I cant access the gui?

KISSmyOS,

df -h

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