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Holzkohlen, in Filesystem mirroring: best backup tool?

Just setup an rsync script. I use that KDE backup tool instead. It’s just a gui to setup auto rsync backups.

Pantherina,

Kup, right? It has a systemsettings page?

d3Xt3r, in CLI monitoring with GPU overview

Just use a terminal multiplexer to split your screen (so you don’t need a separate tab), and then ceate an alias/session file with your monitoring programs so you can call it with a single command.

Like @muhyb, I too use btop and nvtop, and this is how it looks like in zellij: https://lemmy.nz/pictrs/image/2e8ad660-f844-4df2-b5ce-aebb0d61d918.png

KISSmyOS, in The ASUS Eee PC and the netbook revolution (including Linux)

I used to play around with an original Eee PC 700 quite a bit.
The most interesting experiment was installing Debian without X and using that as a desktop OS.
I used links2 in framebuffer mode to browse the internet, alpine for mail, cmus for music, fbi to view images, mplayer to watch movies, mc for file management and tmux for multi-tasking. It worked surprisingly well and solved the issue of the tiny storage, anemic processor, low RAM and small screen, but only after you’ve memorized all the keyboard commands.

MyNameIsRichard,
@MyNameIsRichard@lemmy.ml avatar

I’ve still got mine. I ran Debian with Xfce if I remember correctly.

soulfirethewolf, in Firefox Development Is Moving From Mercurial To Git

Dang, I was really hoping that they would stop using bugzilla and switch to something like GitHub/GitLab/Gitea issues instead. Perhaps also put things like feature requests there as well and have one place to contribute to Firefox

Kidplayer_666, in The ASUS Eee PC and the netbook revolution (including Linux)
SuitedUpDev,
@SuitedUpDev@feddit.nl avatar

I wish I could give you more upvotes because you deserve all the upvotes

LouisGarbuor,

I was wondering where the dankpods would be

Tokyyo, in Linux holds more than 8% market share in India, and it's on the upward trend

I wonder how many of them are using Kali Linux

kixik, (edited ) in Firefox Development Is Moving From Mercurial To Git

Mozilla being Mozilla, I’d guess. They should have gone sel-hosted with sourcehut, or at least gitlab. Or if not self-hosted, the choice should have been at the least gitlab or better, given it allows to chose DCO over CLA. But perhaps not everyone cares… I remember when gitlab introduced DCO, and how that helped debian and gnome to migrate to gitlab. After allowing DCO, other projects migrated as well.

I’m not that fan of gitlab, and I’d prefer sourcehut for open source projects, but if wanting something closer to github, then gitlab might be the answer. But Mozilla is a corp, maybe they don’t care much about these things, and as a corp, perhaps they were looking for CLA sort of contribution any ways…

Chewy7324,

I also think gitlab hosted by Mozilla Foundation would have been a better solution than github.

Mozilla Corporation is owned by the Mozilla Foundation, so their incentives aren’t that of a corporation but a non-profit.

andruid,

I would love to see the Mozzilla foundation double down on ActivityPub and host a Forgejo instance or work with Codeberg for hosting.

I wonder how much Github being the primary place for FOSS source code limits people around the world from joining the movement.

Chewy7324,

I’d also like to see an open platform for their source code, but Github is undeniably the preferred platform for most developers, so I understand Mozilla’s decision.

So long as only the source code is hosted on Github I don’t think it limits people to contribute. Bugs and features are still tracked with the existing tools.

Resol, in The ASUS Eee PC and the netbook revolution (including Linux)
@Resol@lemmy.world avatar

LXQt time

njordomir,

I remember running lxde and xfce on my eee at various points. If lxqt still supports 32 bit machines, I bet it would still work okay.

KISSmyOS,
nitrogenez, in Linux holds more than 8% market share in India, and it's on the upward trend
@nitrogenez@lemmy.world avatar

netbsd is just chilling somewhere in the corner, left to rot alone :(

OsrsNeedsF2P, (edited )

NetBSD’s license helps it get adoption, but much fewer public forks/natural contributors, so it’s gonna be pretty much impossible for it to catch up

possiblylinux127,

I think it actually hurts adoption as is allows companies to steal code

Resol, in New Plasma 6 Default Icon Theme Looks
@Resol@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve seen better designs. But I’ve also seen worse designs. This is pretty meh.

And I was gonna try out KDE anyway.

KISSmyOS,

KDE is the epitome of meh.

jernej,

Isn’t KDE spearheding HDR support for Wayland? And doing a bunch more objectively good/usefull projects like the xwayland video bridge?

KISSmyOS, (edited )

Technologically, it’s the best DE out there, no contest. (Maybe with the exception of touchscreen integration)
But some design decisions grind my gears so hard I can’t use it.
I get irrationally angry when I see the bouncing cursor animation, or look at a list of my programs and half the names start with “K”.
It feels too sluggish, overloaded and Windows-y in its default configuration and getting rid of everything that nags me takes too long, when Gnome comes out of the box looking simple and stylish.

conrad82, (edited ) in Who uses pure GNOME (no extensions)

I use Debian + Gnome without custom extensions and like it.

I don’t use too many programs, so in the overview I have Firefox in position 1, signal in position 2 and steam in 3. Then I use Win+1,2,3 to launch them.

For other programs, I hit Win and then start typing the name and hit enter.

For switching between windows, i use alt-tab or alt-(key above tab). If I have many windows or playing game in full screen, I hit Win-key once and choose the window i want.

I don’t use workspaces, never found a good flow. And I rarely miss a taskbar.

bushvin, in Filesystem mirroring: best backup tool?

The question is not which tool should I use?

The question is what is it that you want to achieve? That will drive your choice of tools.

I want to mirror my drive can be achieved by a lot of tools. But I want to be able to restore a file I accidentally deleted up to 24 hours with a 1 hour interval is a totally different game.

For backups I am very fond of restic as it does a lot of things in a simple way: encryption, (incremental) snapshots, mounting of said snapshots, support various storage backends, policy based purging, tagging, …

Your tool may not be able to do all you need, like automated scheduled backups, so you will need to also learn cron (or whatever scheduler you may have)

And finally, what about maintenance? What should happen to all those files you’ve synced? How long do you want to keep them?

DidacticDumbass, in Fedora Linux 39 Released As A Wonderful Upgrade For Leading Workstations & Servers

I am thinking of switching from Linux Mint to Fedora. I have always liked Fedora, but have been bitten by some BS like NVIDIA drivers not working and some programs only available as a .deb file (I know about alien… or do I?)

I love GNOME DE, has that modern “I work on a spaceship” feel.

I mostly do music production and some gaming, so pipewire seems intriguing.

Here is the real question: Should I got Silverblue? I just learned about distrobox, so maybe that is my solution for programs I cannot get through flatpak?

skilltheamps,

You can install silverblue, and then rebase to ublue ( universal-blue.org ). Specifically to the “silverblue-nvidia” variant, and you should get a nice silverblue experience without any of the nvidia struggles, as people at the ublue project take care of that stuff for you.

And yes, distrobox is the goto solution to run stuff that is basically ubuntu-only, or by extension bound to any distro variant / version and not flatpak. This includes graphical applications. Distrobox works great, I do all my work in it.

DidacticDumbass,

Nice! Looks like I have a fun night ahead of me!

Thank you for showing me uBlue! I want to avoid os-tree if I can, since that seems to defeat the purpose.

alt,

I want to avoid os-tree if I can, since that seems to defeat the purpose.

How so?

DidacticDumbass,

Oh, I totally misunderstood the OS. I was under the impression that using os-tree should be totally avoided for anything other than necessary system programs, and all other software should be installed with flatpaks or containers.

I now understand that using os-tree for some programs is inevitable, and I should embrace it, though still catiously to maintain as clean of an OS as possible for maximum longevity.

alt,

I was under the impression that using os-tree should be totally avoided for anything other than necessary system programs

Interaction with ostree directly shouldn’t occur that often; with sudo ostree admin pin *number* (and its -u option) probably being the commands your average Joe should interact with. You probably meant rpm-ostree.

and all other software should be installed with flatpaks or containers.

It’s indeed true that initially Fedora intended flatpaks should be preferred. If the software isn’t available there, then Toolbx(/Distrobox) is used to access it through a container. And if all else fails, then it’s layered through the rpm-ostree command.

I now understand that using os-tree for some programs is inevitable, and I should embrace it, though still catiously to maintain as clean of an OS as possible for maximum longevity.

You’re getting the drill! Though, I wonder why you weren’t able to rebase to uBlue and had to resort to installing the Nvidia drivers through RPM Fusion instead. It’s fine as long as it works, but I imagine that some issues might arise eventually. So consider sharing the steps you took so that the community might help out; perhaps even over at uBlue Discord. You could also just share it here if you will.

DidacticDumbass,

Honestly, I just followed the steps here: rpmfusion.org/Howto/NVIDIA#OSTree_.28Silverblue.2…

I was diligent about following the configuration guide first: rpmfusion.org/Configuration

I think the key is restarting at every step it asks you to, and maybe after anything that seems major or is a prerequisite for another set of program installs. I mean, I got a black screen the first time, but after a hard reset, it just worked.

No doubt UBlue is probably a lot easier. I did not realize I could have just downloaded the ISO instead of trying to rebase, but I like what I am running.

Anyways, doing it the hard way is helping me learn the intricacies of an immutable system, so I am having fun.

alt, (edited )

Ah, I got it now thanks for the explanation!

Indeed, in your case acquiring uBlue through its ISO was probably the best option; but I’m glad to hear that it worked out in the end!

Anyways, doing it the hard way is helping me learn the intricacies of an immutable system, so I am having fun.

Well said!

Just in case; consider the following:

  • Pin your current working deployment with the aforementioned sudo ostree admin pin 0 command. After which it remains accessible regardless unless you unpin it later on. This should allow you a working deployment if all else fails and thus a safe haven to rely on.
DidacticDumbass,

Oh nice! I will do that. I see this as save scumming for real life!

Speaking of, save scumming is a habit I need to rid myself of. I need to allow myself to fail in Baldur’s Gate and other games.

alt,

I see this as save scumming for real life!

Hehe, great analogy :P !

DidacticDumbass,

I saw that the image was failing to build, so I took a chance and followed the RPMFUSION guide and installed it successfully. I am learning to use toolbox for CLI stuff, but now I am going to learn about Distrobox!!

turkalino, in systemd 255-rc1 Brings "Blue Screen of Death" Support and New Tool To Spawn VMs
@turkalino@lemmy.yachts avatar

This is our chance to out-UWU the :( windows bsod

Come on all you Linux furries, bronies, etc. I know you can do it

turkalino, in Help troubleshooting issues with Sony WH1000MX5 playback
@turkalino@lemmy.yachts avatar

Have you ruled out interference? Are you near something like a WiFi router? Bluetooth uses 2.4 GHz, same as older WiFi-enabled devices.

As for comfort, I have the previous rev (WH1000MX4) and they are very comfortable, although the noise cancelling isn’t as great as my AirPods Pro

cyberwolfie,

It happens in my home office, my living room and my actual office. So where I spend 95% of my time with them. So if that were the case, I’d be very disappointed.

As for comfort - I find they are too tight and my head will start hurt (on top) after some time. Loosening them alleviates this somewhat, but they will drag more down on my ears which I find uncomfortable.

turkalino,
@turkalino@lemmy.yachts avatar

If you do find it’s interference, you can alleviate it by switching WiFi devices to the 5 GHz band if possible

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