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TheAnonymouseJoker, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

Starting delay for first time, then smooth sailing. But Flatpak has a major con over Snap - sandboxed system integration of programs.

danielfgom, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Only using it for Telegram at the moment but it’s been good. A like slow to launch but otherwise works great and integrates with the notification features of Linux Mint.

Other things like WhatsApp, Inoreader, Mastodon, Lemmy I run as a web app using Mint’s brilliant web app tool which makes the web app like and with like a native app.

woelkchen, in Anyone have experience with Intel Arc GPUs?
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

As a general rule for new hardware from Linux friendly companies, you’re pretty much in the best possible position already by using a rolling release distribution. It’s the same with AMD where reports of bugs from 6 months ago are basically ancient past by now.

art, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?
@art@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve been using Flatpak applications for a year (I think) and it’s been wonderful. There are a few bugs here and there but overall way less headaches.

I can run my mature, rock solid Debian system and sell have the freshest builds of desktop software that I use.

mcepl, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?
@mcepl@lemmy.world avatar

I am on MicroOS-based distro, so all my GUI applications are from Flatpak. I don’t see any difference from more traditional distro, it just works.

Sh1ft, in 10 REASONS why Linux Mint is the desktop OS to beat in 2023

I have used some distros by now and I do love mint. But a few years back every major upgrade of mint lead to bugs and me reinstalling my system. So far the only Distro i tried that just keeps working is MX Linux on my old laptop.

Because I want to get rid of windows I installed Nobara. I love to play games. I works pretty good, but since only one guy ist maintaining it, it should be not considered a daily driver.

I am still not happy because it dont want to switch between distros for gaming and working.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Because I want to get rid of windows I installed Nobara. I love to play games. I works pretty good, but since only one guy ist maintaining it, it should be not considered a daily driver.

Nobara is just a Fedora remix. I’ve used another remix a bunch of years ago and converting that to a regular Fedora installation after its maintainer left was just removing that addon repo and letting dnf handle the rest. I think I only needed to switch to Fedora’s branding packages.

jw13, in 8 Websites Linux Users Should Have bookmarked

I highly recommend LWN.net.

Ward, in CapyPDF 0.6.0 is out
@Ward@lemmy.nz avatar

capy.life creator here, incredible tool

kelvie, in 10 REASONS why Linux Mint is the desktop OS to beat in 2023

I’ve used Linux for over two decades (red hat to Gentoo to Ubuntu to arch) and I must say it’ll be a tough sell to get me back to an RPM or a debian based distro solely due to how god awfully slow the package managers (dpkg and rpm) are.

Since Docker came along and brought with it the ride of Alpine and APK, it made me realize that system upgrades on a modern processor, fast internet, and an SSD should take seconds, not minutes.

Secret300, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

When it works if works pretty well. When it don’t it’s a pain in the ass

mactan, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

it’s my preference for proprietary apps

corsicanguppy, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

It attempts to copy binaries onto a system on a manner that avoids the single source of truth used for regular installables. So it invites dependency hell.

Is this the one that seems to need a binary running constantly in the vast in-between times when no installation is taking place? That would be a risk.

Never used it. I worked in OS security and don’t need that stress either at work or home.

Pantherina, in Are there any downsides to using Homebrew as a package manager on Linux?

Distrobox… or simply Flatpak?

alt,

Read the part after P.S 😅.

Psynthesis, in Clevo Laptop doesnt boot any Linux USB sticks? partitions not found, fstab errors and all?

I have never used those tools, I usually just dd the iso to a usb. I am assuming you are on a linux distribution already. I would download a fresh iso and verify the checksum. Then use dd to write to the usb. I use this format, and of course replace the path to iso bit and /dev/sdx (your usb)with what is relevant to your situation. Just open terminal and type

sudo dd bs=4M if=path/to/your.iso of=/dev/sdx conv=fsync oflag=direct status=progress

You probably already know but you can find the usb’s specific /dev/sdx with sudo fdisk -l

Pantherina,

Both tools use dd underneath so this should be no problem. But I can try

radiofreeval, in this random process was using 25 % cpu is this a virus?
@radiofreeval@hexbear.net avatar

Reboot

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