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CodeSalat, in #123 Infrastructure Work · This Week in GNOME

Love what the gnome team is doing currently!

mindlessscrollingparrot, in What Tweak, Program, ... changes a Desktop Environment from unusable to great for you?

Focus follows mouse. And programs that raise the window when you click in it? Unusable.

kpw, in What are the major components of any Linux distribution?

Honestly, I wouldn't worry too much about how the OS works. If you're very ambitious, you could try to install Arch in a virtual machine environment: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Installation_guide

Installing Arch for the first time taught me a lot about how my system works, since you have to choose all the parts that make up your system yourself.

Helix, in 100% vanilla distribution challenge

How would that work on Arch Linux which literally doesn’t come with anything out of the box?

And how would I add accounts or any settings without touching dotfiles?

ZephyrXero, in What are the major components of any Linux distribution?

You need the “Userland” programs. Basic things like ls, cp, cat, etc. Usually it’s GNU core tools, but there’s also BusyBox or BSD equivalents.

FauxPseudo, in What are the major components of any Linux distribution?
@FauxPseudo@lemmy.world avatar

Package management is optional according to Slackware and Linux From Scratch.

A key part you left out is the init scripts. Without those you don’t have the fundamental under the hood flavor of a distribution.

navitux, in Any experience with teaching kids Linux?
@navitux@lemmy.world avatar

I have experience teaching Linux to adults only, but that seems to be funnier

AzureCerulean, in Any experience with teaching kids Linux?
@AzureCerulean@lemmy.ml avatar

8 Best for in

Linux distributions that you can to your kids. This way, they can begin using and learning Linux

tecmint.com/best-linux-distributions-for-kids/

Discover5164, in Best CPU and GPU monitoring app

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freijon, (edited ) in "Help me choose my first distro" and other questions for beginners

What are the best resources out there? Arch Wiki without a doubt

Doubt! The Gentoo Handbook is one of the best, if not the best documentation out there. It’s especially useful for beginners because it doesn’t just offer code snippets to copy/paste, but explains background knowledge and how things work.

Goldmaster, in Micro***t Word on Linux and alternatives

I did a look into this. softmaker is best when it comes to compatibility of displaying files. Wps office is ok, but some text would be on top of others. I did find that there is a free version of softmaker, which should be ok.

hersh, in New to Linux, have a few questions

I used to run Tumbleweed with KDE on my Nvidia system. I found the rolling release structure of Tumbleweed to cause extra work for me, because kernel updates came frequently and occasionally broke the Nvidia drivers. As a workaround, I ended up pinning my kernel to an old version.

Nvidia drivers have been at least a little troublesome on every distro I’ve used, particularly with the additional CUDA libraries.

One nice thing about Suse is that it uses BTRFS by default, and you can use snapper to revert your whole system if something goes wrong. So if Nvidia shits the the bed after an update, it’s easy to roll back. Most distros default to ext4 and do not have snapshot support by default, which feels like living in the stone age to me after using Suse and BTRFS.

Of course you CAN set up BTRFS and snapshots in any distro, but that’s a lot to ask for a beginner with Linux. I strongly recommend choosing a distro that does that for you, like Suse.

ObsidianBreaks, in New to Linux, have a few questions

If you have a spare solid state drive or a portable HDD (most USB sticks are a bit too slow for a proper install), maybe install a Linux distribution onto that portable device, then you can just boot from that, then you only need to boot switch in Bios to Windows when you need to use it again. This has the advantage of you not needing to setup a complicated dual boot setup. When you are settled in with Linux, open your drive where Windows is located from Linux, copy your files over (don’t forget your bookmarks and saved passwords) and then you can clone your linux install from your portable drive over your old Windows install using a tool such as dd.

Nokinori,

Thanks for the advice. I plan on adding another internal SSD and installing Linux on that. I should have been more specific in my original post.

You’re saying I can access the filesystem on my windows drive from Linux? So I could directly copy files back and forth? I thought I’d have to copy them onto an external drive, reboot, and then copy to the Linux drive.

Kongar,

The response you got above is the best advice. Get a second internal drive of any type and size, and install distros on that. You totally can partition your existing windows drive and install linux alongside it, but… you’ll probably screw something up along the way and bork your windows install. Use another drive and it’s much harder to do. If you want to be super safe, you can unplug your windows drive during installs and then it’s literally impossible to break your windows drive.

The other advantage is that nobody knows what distro will be right for you. That means you’ll want to distro hop - and that’s so much easier when you have another drive you can just format and start over with (and not worry about your boot loader).

To your follow up question, yes, linux can read and write to the contents of your windows drive. If you mount that drive, then you can do whatever you want to it, including deleting things that break your windows installation.

NOOBMASTER, in "Help me choose my first distro" and other questions for beginners

What about Zorin OS? I find it really simple to use, plus it has a built in wine thing for running non-linux files.

Helix, in Mnemonics for Yay and Pacman commands

Use tealdeer, grep the manpage or read --help or use wiki.archlinux.org/title/Pacman/Rosetta

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