linux

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

NutWrench, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?
@NutWrench@lemmy.ml avatar

Libre Office completely takes care of my Office needs.

dvdnet89, (edited )
@dvdnet89@lemmy.today avatar

if the documents exchanged by others used complex macros written on VBA using excel it looks pretty bad on Libreoffice.

theRealBassist,

Office 365 online can be a good stopgap for those cases if you need it.

desconectado,

Or reference managers. I’m in academia and it’s a pain because I can’t edit anything on Linux without breaking the fine, I tried everything, LibreOffice, Only office… Nothing works.

rar,

I simply resorted to using a windows+office VM for work, back when I was exchanging office documents with coworkers a lot. Even subtle things like font rendering would be different, making a 2 page doc into a 3 pages, etc. (Rendering, not just support - mscorefonts was already installed)

el_abuelo, in Sell Me on Linux

Starting a new business is hard enough as it is - please do not complicated it by adding in something that brings limited tangible benefits to the company, whilst making it unnecessarily harder than what it will be anyway.

Either get fluent now, and then start your business - or start your business with Windows and move on when you’re profitable and can afford the reduction in productively while you learn the ropes.

Do not go anywhere near MacOS - you can’t afford it.

GuyWithLag,

This is solid advice.

Also, the macOS ecosystem is predicated on you being rich enough (or fool enough) to buy it, and everything is nickel-and-dimed.

rah, (edited ) in SBC's with better mainline Linux support than Raspberry Pi?
cyclohexane,

Thanks a lot! What does DTS mean?

rah,

Device Tree Source. It’s a text description of the hardware. The kernel uses it to load and configure drivers. It’s the most critical set of information for supporting any particular board.

agressivelyPassive, in SBC's with better mainline Linux support than Raspberry Pi?

Are you married to SBCs? There are dirt cheap, pretty powerful and small thin clients floating around in ebay. HP G3 mini for example.

SapphironZA,

Agree on this. Servethehome on YouTube has a series on different 1 litre PCs they review in detail.

rmuk,

Can’t even being to agree enough on this. Unless you specifically need something that an SBC - ARM or X86 - offers, a second hand thin client or USFF computer will be a better fit, plus they come with high-quality power supplies and solid cases.

cyclohexane,

They seem to be the only product that occupies negligible space and is relatively affordable.

The other options are either more expensive or significantly larger.

agressivelyPassive,

Well, not really. The HP g3 mini is roughly the size of a paperback book and costs around 100€, depending on the specs. Similar devices of slightly older makes are even cheaper.

So, yes, they are physically larger, but still pretty small. Chances are, you don’t actually need a tiny device like a Pi, so you should at least consider SFF PCs.

GustavoM, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?
@GustavoM@lemmy.world avatar

I either compile em or run Windows to use said “program”.

…I mean… when the latter happens is always someone else’s PC, so eh.

byteseb, in This week in KDE: Wayland by default, de-framed Breeze, HDR games, rectangle screen recording

Very dumb complaint, but it’s something I can’t ignore after seeing it: Why are all icons for the sound previews symbolic, but the ones for the notification and USB colored?

interceder270, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?

I shit my pants

sharkfucker420, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?
@sharkfucker420@lemmy.ml avatar

Windows vm

d3Xt3r, (edited ) in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?

Web apps (for MS Office/Teams), Wine (mostly for games and random apps), and for everything else, an optimized Tiny11 Core VM + WinApps for seamless windows/integration with Linux. My Tiny11 only uses 0-1% CPU and 600MB RAM on idle so I’ve got no issues running it in the background, besides it takes only a couple of seconds to launch, if I wanted to start it on demand.

I’ve also got a portable SSD with a copy of Windows installed on it, just in case I need it for some firmware updates or something (although I’m on a Thinkpad so pretty much everything can be updated via LVFS, but I keep it around just in case + it’s portable so there’s no harm in having it around).

Steamymoomilk,

Winapps is pretty cool! Thanks for sharing. I didnt know that existed till now.

mateomaui,

I’ve been looking at Tiny10 and 11, have you run into any particular problems using it?

d3Xt3r,

I only use it to run productivity apps inside a VM (Adobe Reader etc), so no issues here.

I think the most problems people have with it is running it on real hardware, since it lacks drivers and stuff.

mateomaui,

hmmm, good to know I may have to track down drivers for a regular install, I missed that. Thanks for the feedback!

King4408, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?

Dualboot. Use windows only with the things that need windows (ie CADs) and linux for everything else.

interceder270,

Downside of dualbooting is you have to manage essentially 2 computers.

King4408,

Thats true, but it is not that different from running windows in a VM or a separate machine like a laptop. If you only use windows for little stuff, it does not require that much maintenance. Especially W10 since it stopped getting feature drops.

woelkchen, in SBC's with better mainline Linux support than Raspberry Pi?
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Just google x86 SBCs and skip ARM. There are a bunch of options using AMD and Intel SoCs such as ODROID-H3.

AnUnusualRelic, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?
@AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

I switched to Linux from Windows 3.11 because Microsoft software didn’t do what it was supposed to.

My method is that I don’t even know what’s available for Windows, so I don’t miss it at all. The opposite isn’t true though, and time spent in a Microsoft environment can quickly become painful.

My only regular contact with Windows is the Steam partition which hasn’t been used for quite some time. I have a laptop that has a small win11 partition that I boot every now and then to see what they’re up to these days.

However, in the end, the only real answer is that if you really need a piece of software, you just run whatever system that supports it. It’s not a religion, you use whatever is convenient for you at a given time.

d3Xt3r, (edited )

Ooh, Win 3.11? Which version of Linux did you switch to at the time?

I don’t recall the kernel version, but my first was Red Hat 5.2 in the late 90s. I didn’t switch to Linux permanently though, had it on dual-boot. But eventually it was SuSE that won me over, with their YaST tool and polished KDE implementation - seemed lightyears ahead of Win 9x and ME at the time.

AnUnusualRelic,
@AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

At the time, I installed slackware with a lot of floppies.

Now, after trying quite a few, I settled on OpenSuSE Tumbleweed. It has one of the best KDE desktops, and basically just works, whatever you do with it. It’s comfortable and boring which I see as great qualities.

mvirts, in How do y'all deal with programs not supported on Linux?

First start using ardour gimp inkscape libreoffice and blender on windows, then dual boot or use a VM to install Linux and start challenging yourself to use it for real stuff when you can. You may eventually realize you’re using Linux much more than Windows, like when you boot into Windows and every time require a bunch of updates. Eventually your windows will be so out of date you remove it entirely or start using a windows vm.

Moobythegoldensock, in Sell Me on Linux

If you’re writing Word documents for your own use, to print, or to convert to PDF, you should be able to switch to LibreOffice seamlessly. However, if you’re emailing .docx files with the expectation that others are going to open them, make changes, save them, and send them back to you, you’re going to need Word or things will get messy. Office 365 online is probably your best bet.

I’ll echo what others are saying and tell you to learn linux at home first. Only use it for business when you’re sure it can do everything you need, and even then you might still want to keep a Windows laptop around in case you need it. Even though Linux is great, the rest of the business world still expects you to be able to work within Windows’ ecosystem.

interdimensionalmeme,

Also that fun thing libre office does where it disappears randomly with your work !

Moobythegoldensock,

Never had that happen to me.

interdimensionalmeme,

I tried OpenOffice and LibreOffice 6 times in 20 years and that happened each time.

oldfart,

Was “your work” writing memory corruption exploits in macro editor?

interdimensionalmeme,

Nope simple excel and word stuff and whoops crash to desktop work is gone

yetAnotherUser,

I’ve heard that OnlyOffice Community Edition is Linux-compatible and has better support for Word documents, but I’ve never tried it myself

TCB13, in SBC's with better mainline Linux support than Raspberry Pi?
@TCB13@lemmy.world avatar

You most likely do not want to run a mainline kernel / system. Run Armbian instead, it is Debian optimized for SBCs, it has a very good track record and sometimes is the only option after manufacturers stop creating images for their old boards.

Generic images / mainline kernel might underperform in your board, the GPIO and other low level components will, most likely, not work and you might burn your storage as logging and other I/O intensive operations aren’t tweaked for SD/eMMC. Armbian aims to fix all those issues and provides continuous system and kernel updates long after the manufacturer stops doing so.

Pantherina,

I sold my Odroid C2 or something, as there was no support anymore… didnt know much of Linux, I guess armbian woul have been fine?

TCB13,
@TCB13@lemmy.world avatar

Yes www.armbian.com/odroid-c2/ a friend has a couple of those all running Armbian just fine. With all SBCs the trick is to get something that is supported by Armbian.

rah,

run a mainline kernel

Having a board which is supported by mainline doesn’t imply running a mainline kernel. Having mainline support is a huge advantage regardless of which kernel is run on a board.

AProfessional, (edited )

Anything less than mainline support is ewaste imo. Look how terrible the pi graphics support used to be but now thanks to excellent upstream kernel/Mesa drivers it’s great and will continue to work/improve for the foreseeable future.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • linux@lemmy.ml
  • localhost
  • All magazines
  • Loading…
    Loading the web debug toolbar…
    Attempt #