linux

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BCsven, in OpenSuse TW + Gnome Appreciation Post

All the things ypu said abouy GNOME and OpenSUSE I will give a +1. It really is polished and tweaked to be reliable. YAST is truly a great way to onboard to pinux withouy having to drop into CLI to configure things. I don’t think it is 100% Vanilla Gnome there are aome subtle things like OpenSUSE nautlius has a paste button, where as NixOS excludes this. While keyboard short cuts are OK, sometimes you want to just go into the hamburger menu and click paste without having to find white space in the list view to right click on. I have run it for about 7 years now, every distro upgrade has gone smooth.

paddythegeek, in OpenSuse TW + Gnome Appreciation Post

Sounds like a great experience! Congrats.

I switched from full-time windows to full-time Linux with Pop_OS and haven’t looked back. I’m very happy with it and enjoy finding FOSS alternatives to my former go-to apps. So far so good. I’m also keeping an eye on Vanilla OS as that sounds like a very cool project that is headed to beta by summer.

MagneticFusion,

I’ve heard pretty good things about PopOS aside from the steam deleting desktop environment issue that ended up screwing over LTT.

If you ever want to try a non Ubuntu based distro though, I definitely recommend checking out OpenSuse Tumbeweed. I think I will stick with this for years to come.

spacemanspiffy, in What's your favorite music player on Linux?

Sayonara

mr_right,
@mr_right@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

sayonara is very useful for those who have a large offline library

  • plus i like the visual ascetic of viewing my library by album covers
Shinji_Ikari, in What's your favorite music player on Linux?
@Shinji_Ikari@hexbear.net avatar

I’m a fan of cmus. simple and easy.

bbbhltz, in What's your favorite music player on Linux?
@bbbhltz@beehaw.org avatar

Strawberry if I had to have something visual with buttons.

cmus right now because it loads my rather large library in a split second. mpd works great as well.

More important than the player for me is sorting, though. Beets is my saviour. I could never sort the 5 or 6 albums I get by hand and tag them by hand.

I used to like deadbeef as well, quod libet is great. There really is something for everyone when it comes to something for music. If only there were as many great email clients.

digdilem, in What's the best way to have a .bashrc that I can use throughout systems?

I uses Uyuni to push config files out to the machines I’m working on, including .bashrc files, .vimrc and all kinds of little QOL improvements.

Probably overkill just to use Uyuni for that, though.

danielfgom, in Is it actually dangerous to run Firefox as root?
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

It should be ok because nothing will run on your system without a permission prompt at least. So they that should ring some bells of system is asking for your password when you didn’t try to install anything.

But best practice would be log in as a regular user and use sudo to do any admin tasks.

tslnox,

Damn, you are so lucky that the downvotes are disabled or you would be downvoted to Oblivion.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Honestly friend I don’t give a rats ass about up or down votes. I’m just here to read, learn and converse. Some things I’ll get right, some I’ll get wrong. That’s life.

I could stop using this tomorrow and it would make zero difference to my life, know what I mean? It’s just some site. My real life is something altogether different.

DarthYoshiBoy,
@DarthYoshiBoy@kbin.social avatar

A process running as root does not need a prompt or any user interaction to do whatever the hell it wants on most (nearing ALL, but I'd be wary of absolutes with Linux) systems. I'm unaware of any means that a Desktop Environment could restrict a process running with root permissions by requiring an interactive prompt of some sort for anything. If your DE is running as root, all of its children are also running as root (unless you've rigged things up to run explicitly as other users) which means just about anything you are doing could be running rampant malicious actors on your system and nothing would seem amiss until it made itself evident.

Now, it does seem unlikely that anyone has written any malicious code that would run in a browser expecting to be root on a Linux system, so that's likely the saving grace here, but that's only security through obscurity and that's not much to hang your hopes on for any system you care about.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

You mean if he has some malicious script that wants to install something or run something it’s not going to adjust ask him “do you want to install x?”

DarthYoshiBoy,
@DarthYoshiBoy@kbin.social avatar

I genuinely hope that you're kidding. If you're not. No. Just no.

rtxn, in What's your favorite music player on Linux?

VLC when I’m listening to local files, ncspot for Spotify.

fxt_ryknow, in What's your favorite music player on Linux?

I’ve always just used audacious. It’s been good. That said, I recently installed plex amp and the more I used it, the more I like it!

notenoughbutter, in What's your favorite music player on Linux?

if I’m using gui on my laptop, then amberol

if I’m using my headless server, then you can’t get anything better than mpd

pixeled,

Seconding this. MPD + ncmpcpp + an MPRIS plugin. With the latter I can control the music playback through global keyboard shortcuts and the system tray UI if necessary.

Jontique, (edited ) in What's your favorite music player on Linux?

Going to ask here, anyone know a music player that is similar to AIMP? It has no native support, unfortunately.

www.aimp.ru/?do=download&os=linux

stargazingpenguin,

I’m also curious if anyone has any recommendations on this. I’ve used it for so many years that it’s hard to switch to anything else! I’ve just been running it through Lutris on my main computer.

currawong,
@currawong@lemmy.ml avatar

Dopamine 3 is the closest to AIMP as far I know. I also use it on Windows.

QuazarOmega, (edited ) in What's your favorite music player on Linux?

I like G4Music, beautiful and straightforward

merci3, in What's your favorite music player on Linux?

Rhythmbox

sundaylab, (edited ) in What's your favorite music player on Linux?

I settled with Navidrome. It solves 2 use cases for me. Due to being web based it can be used by any PC or mobile device with access to my server. Additionally it supports subsonic which allows me to use a native android app (ultrasonic) and have music on the go. I don’t use services like Spotify.

Estebiu,
@Estebiu@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Sonixd is a nice client for navidrome.

sundaylab,

Thanks for the tip but I’m not sure why I would choose a desktop client over Navidrome itself. I usually have the browser open anyway. But maybe I’m missing something useful by using an actual app?

Turbo,

I’m also interested in this answer to see if I’m missing anything

I too use navidrome via web browser

dd56, in Thoughts on this?

You will never be a real display server. You have no hardware cursors, you have no xrandr, you have no setxkbmap. You are a toy project twisted by Red Hat and GNOME into a crude mockery of X11’s perfection.

All the “validation” you get is two-faced and half-hearted. Behind your back people mock you. Your developers are disgusted and ashamed of you, your “users” laugh at your lack of features behind closed doors.

Linux users are utterly repulsed by you. Thousands of years of evolution have allowed them to sniff out defective software with incredible efficiency. Even Wayland sessions that “work” look uncanny and unnatural to a seasoned sysadmin. Your bizarre render loop is a dead giveaway. And even if you manage to get a drunk Arch user home with you, he’ll turn tail and bolt the second he gets a whiff of your high latency due to forced VSync.

You will never be happy. You wrench out a fake smile every single morning and tell yourself it’s going to be ok, but deep inside you feel the technical debt creeping up like a weed, ready to crush you under the unbearable weight.

Eventually it’ll be too much to bear - you’ll log into the GitLab instance, select the project, press Delete, and plunge it into the cold abyss. Your users will find the deletion notice, heartbroken but relieved that they no longer have to live with the unbearable shame and disappointment. They’ll remember you as the biggest failure of open source development, and every passerby for the rest of eternity will know a badly run project has failed there. Your code will decay and go to historical archives, and all that will remain of your legacy is a codebase that is unmistakably poorly written.

This is your fate. This is what you chose. There is no turning back.

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