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GrappleHat, in 13 Best Open Source ChatGPT Alternatives
@GrappleHat@lemmy.ml avatar

Sure, it is not perfect. But, sometimes it is incredibly helpful. No matter what you do with it, unfortunately, it is not an open-source solution.

This article needed a better ai to write it .

simple, in COSMIC: The Road to Alpha

I’ve been following Cosmic and really looking forward to it. I love the idea of a Gnome-like desktop without Gnome-like design decisions.

MyNameIsRichard, in What's your current favorite distro that isn't Arch, Debian or Fedora?
@MyNameIsRichard@lemmy.ml avatar

Another vote for openSUSE Tumbleweed

WeLoveCastingSpellz, in Linux in the corporate space

Don’t be so humble. You know, I started out exactly where you are, and to be honest, you know, my heart is still there. So I see you’re running Gnome. You know, I’m actually on KDE myself. I know this desktop environment is supposed to be better but you know what they say. Old habits they die hard. Yeah, I know what you’re thinking. I’m an executive. I mean why am I even running Linux? Again old habits. It’s gonna be fun working with you. I should join the rest of the group. Bonsoir, Elliot.

SidewaysHighways,

Hello friend

pastermil,

Hello friend

lautan, in Help with laptop buying decision

Framework 13 AMD running PopOS no issues. It’s great.

wingsfortheirsmiles,

If I had to get a replacement for my current laptop that’d definitely be it

GentooIsBased, in New laptop

Just get a thinkpad.

tobiah,

Easy choice. Takes out the guesswork.

GentooIsBased,

Yeah, Thinkpad’s are at the end of the IQ curve.

kzhe,

Which one?

electric_nan,

Any T or P series with the minimum specs you’re lokkung for. Tons on eBay.

windlas, in Linux Distros Evolution - January 2024 Update: Pop!_OS in Decline?

Very interesting, thanks for sharing. I didnt realise that Arch adoption was so high. I (don’t) use arch, BTW. Although now I feel like I want to give it a spin to see what all the fuss is about!

Or maybe I’ll stay fat, dumb, and happy with Fedora and Nobara on my desktop and laptop.

Not that it would change anything for me personally, but I really think Pop! OS is a poor naming choice. Who puts an exclamation mark in their name? Aside from Yahoo! I suppose.

MyNameIsRichard,
@MyNameIsRichard@lemmy.ml avatar

Who puts an exclamation mark in their name? Aside from Yahoo! I suppose.

And Westward Ho!

funkajunk,
@funkajunk@lemm.ee avatar

Stick with Fedora and Nobara, they are good distros. I use Arch myself, because I like that bleeding edge, bro - but if those other distros are working for you, there’s pretty much no reason for the average person to switch.

Pantherina, (edited )

Nobara is sooo hyped. It is not a secure Distro. They literally

  • do tons of weird stuff with Apparmor and literally disable SELinux “because its easier to work with” (fedora variants are the only Distros using it, which is such a security advantage!)
  • add tons of packages
  • modify GNOME to make it very strange
  • delay an update for over a month

I recommend to use bazzite.gg if you want Gaming. They do all the Nobara fixes but

  • immutable
  • daily updates
  • SELinux intact
  • various spins for every hardware, including custom Kernels and tweaks
electro1,
@electro1@infosec.pub avatar

This talk gave me a realistic set of expectations about Arch, and made me wanting to stick to Fedora even though they didn’t talk positively about it for the most part

www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwD88hxOykk

Cwilliams,

Panic! At the Disco

Lettuceeatlettuce,
@Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml avatar

Arch was great for teaching me about Linux. It was rough, I completely borked my system about 3-4 times in the course of about 10 months lol. But it taught me valuable lessons on how to fix a destroyed system, how to use Timeshift to rollback changes, how to patch drivers and specific system packages, etc.

Ultimately, it was the constant fiddling that got me to go away from Arch and towards Nobara for my main gaming PC. I just wanted an OS that was stable, had great gaming performance, and didn’t require me to install a bunch of obscure packages and tools like Arch needed to get certain things to work.

Nobara has been fantastic so far and is probably my go-to distro recommendation for folks who plan on gaming hard on Linux, their pre-included kernel patches and utilities like Protonup-QT are awesome for gamers.

I installed LMDE on my work IT laptop recently and overall I like it. Have had a few annoying bugs because of Debian’s old packages, but everything is ironed out now and it’s great. Something stable and basic that gets out of the way for me to do my job.

Cwilliams,

Personally, I think they should make LMDE the default version of Linux Mint.

Debian -> Ubuntu -> Linux Mint vs Debian -> LMDE

Since it’s more upstream, it should be more up-to-date and secure, right?

I feel like basing a distro off of Ubuntu is sort of a crutch. It’s makes things easier at the beginning, but ultimately it holds you back as a distro developer

milo128,

i think the high arch use is mostly steam deck users running steamos.

Aurenkin, in Microsoft says a Copilot key is coming to keyboards on Windows PCs starting this month

Can they just make the copilot shortcut on my taskbar permanently fuck off? It appears erratically and I don’t seem to be able to get rid of it when it’s there.

nik282000,
@nik282000@lemmy.ca avatar
Aurenkin,

I dual boot PopOS which has been great. Only use Windows for a couple of games that don’t work well with proton.

nik282000,
@nik282000@lemmy.ca avatar

F. I still have a W10 drive for VR games.

humanplayer2,
@humanplayer2@lemmy.ml avatar

Immerge more! Hide the task bar, use only desktop icons to launch your games.

theshatterstone54,

Use CTT’s winutil. I’m guessing it can get rid of that (and also telemetry and it makes updates less annoying and gives you a Ninite-like way to easily install a bunch of software and apply a bunch of tweaks etc.)

NotSoCoolWhip,

Right click taskbar.

Taskbar settings

Turn off copilot

SapphironZA, in New laptop

I would favour an AMD Ryzen 7000 based laptop. Much better battery life than Intel and better graphics performance.

Lenovo ThinkPad T and P series are excellent build quality.

Asus Zenbooks or Expertbooks with OLED screens are also excellent. Displays are on par, or superior to Macbooks. Excellent colour accuracy.

Make sure you get something with at least 16GB of Ram, or 32GB if available.

amju_wolf, (edited )
@amju_wolf@pawb.social avatar

While I agree with the recommendations (I have a ThinkPad P14S Gen4 now) I wouldn’t say the battery life is great - especially if OP wants to do video editing and such. Otherwise it’s an amazing laptop (now that it’s actually supported by the kernel). I still suspect the Intel variant would be better for battery life though.

With that being said for anything this intensive you’ll need a charger with any laptop because it will simply not be able to keep working for 8+ hours with this kind of software. In fact get a docking station and a second screen too unless you plan to be on the go all of the time; the productivity increase from getting a second screen is insane.

Oh and be prepared to lose a lot of the fancy stuff with Linux - sure you get an amazing screen but no HDR. You don’t get the sound improvements from the official Lenovo drivers for Windows, etc. Oh and you should keep the Windows partition (just shrink it to a minimum) - makes it much easier to keep the bios up to date.

toothbrush, (edited ) in Flakes aren't real and cannot hurt you: a guide to using Nix flakes the non-flake way
@toothbrush@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

cool article! However, counterpoint: What is a flake?? The article doesnt say…

Is it like a makefile?

Samueru,

A flake from cornflakes

Euphoma,

Nix flakes are a feature of the nix package manager to make nix packages more reproducible.

toastal,

Wut. It’s just as reproducible, flakes are mostly just a common unifying API with some extra CLI sugar for usability.

Atemu,
@Atemu@lemmy.ml avatar

While that is true, it’s also r13y on another level: Reproducible evaluation. That mostly stems from pure eval and locking.

In the “before times”, you’d get your Nix expressions from some mutable location in the Nix path, so running i.e. a nixos-rebuild on your configuration could produce two different eval results when ran at two different times, depending on whether anything about your channel configuration changed in the mean time. This cannot happen with flakes as all inputs are explicitly given and locked.

You could achieve the same using niv etc. before but that had its own issues.

toastal,

It was usually recommended to lock to inputs anyhow with all the fetchers requiring a hash which I hated having to manually update & like the UX flakes provides (I really wish they supported more than Git & Mercurial tho). You can still have different evals tho if you point to latest.tar.zstd or other non-hashed thing like a branch where the referred to can change & it won’t reproduce. I haven’t used channels in years, but doesn’t that just refer to the running system, not using Nix to build projects?

Atemu,
@Atemu@lemmy.ml avatar

I haven’t used channels in years, but doesn’t that just refer to the running system, not using Nix to build projects?

I have no idea what you’re trying to say here.

toastal,

Aren‘t channels for NixOS, and you’d use overlays for building packages? Now you can do that all with flakes.

brukernavn,

No, channels are a simply a mechanism for managing what’s in your NIX_PATH.

juli, in I have started using fedora silverblue

What do you mean ublue has flstpak included in the image?

kionite231,

I mean flatpak binary. Other people have mentioned that it’s already included in fedora silverblue. I didn’t know that.

uzay,

I mean, it’s the main way of installing software in immutable Fedora distributions, so it would be very surprising if it wasn’t preinstalled.

FigMcLargeHuge, in Is anyone using awk?

I use awk constantly at work. Very useful in my opinion, and really powerful if you dig into it.

java, in Gentoo goes Binary (packages)

But why? Isn’t building from sources the whole point of Gentoo?

cyclohexane,

For the ability to mix and match. Makes it easy for newcomers.

Flaky, (edited )
@Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

There are Gentoo distros that have binary packages, and Funtoo (a Gentoo-based distro that’s 64-bit only) even suggests using Flatpak for certain software that needs 32-bit resources like Steam. Hell, you can install Flatpak on Gentoo if you want. Gentoo also provided binary packages in the past but only for a few packages (mainly web browsers, but annoyingly not qtwebengine. maybe that’s changed here.)

Gentoo is more about having fine-grained control of your system than anything else nowadays. If that’s what you want, go ahead! For most people, Arch or even something with less control like Ubuntu or Fedora will suffice.

poinck, (edited )

I think I will revert some deviations from the default useflag settings to use the binary versions of some browsers.

independantiste, (edited ) in Does Wayland really break everything? (Nate Graham's OG post ref'd in the Phoronix article)
@independantiste@sh.itjust.works avatar

Quite literally, the only problem or “stuff broken because or Wayland” is some old ass apps or lazy companies that won’t update their electron version. Looking at you discord, screen sharing COULD WORK if you managed your stuff

Grass,

They make enough money off nitro and shit to not care. Everything becomes worse when they start making money

oversea,

KDE gui scaling problems too?

independantiste,
@independantiste@sh.itjust.works avatar

Idk I use gnome on 200% scaling on my laptop and on desktop gnome at 100%

leopold,

Kinda. The problem was fixed in Qt6 and current KDE is Qt5. It’ll be fixed once Plasma 6 releases in February.

oversea,

Great news. Thank you for the headsup

russjr08, in Does Wayland really break everything? (Nate Graham's OG post ref'd in the Phoronix article)

My experience with Nvidia+ Wayland was… Less than desirable. Enough to make me pickup an AMD card.

However, once I did that my experience instantly better. Hell, even X11 worked better - I was never able to get the desktop to stay at a consistent 60FPS (I’m still on a 60Hz panel which I’m just now getting around to upgrading shortly) in X until I moved to my AMD card.

The 545 driver update just made things so much worse. So I’d say Wayland+Nvidia is not great (for others it works fine so maybe it’s down to what card you have?) however on my AMD card (and my old MacBook with Intel integrated graphics) it’s fantastic.

azvasKvklenko,

Nouveau + NVK is the hope 🙏

randomaside,
@randomaside@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

How do we as the community turn hope into help? Is there a way to contribute directly to the NVK developers?

warmaster,

Check their project page or hit them up on their repo. I’m sure any help will be welcomed.

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