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iHUNTcriminals, in Plasma Bigscreen

I’m going to find out if I can install it on MX debian with KDE when I get home.

beejjorgensen, in LibreOffice 7.5.8 Is Here as the Last Update in the Series, Upgrade to LibreOffice 7.6 Now
@beejjorgensen@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Some comedian, I don’t recall who, talking about his “job interview”:

“Are you good with the Microsoft Office suite?”

“I excel at it.”

“…Did you just make an Office pun?”

“Word.”

I’ve been using LibreOffice for ages. It’s been excellent–a most impressive project.

syrooks, in What distro for a MacBook pro late 2013 15'

I have mine running Proxmox to act as a VM server I access from other devices thru the home network.

heygooberman, in What distro for a MacBook pro late 2013 15'
@heygooberman@lemmy.today avatar

I think Pop OS might work on that model, and if it does, I would highly recommend it, as the DE is very similar to macOS. If I recall correctly, that distro also has multitouch trackpad functions that behave similar to those on the MacBook.

baseless_discourse,

Even on x11? I am assuming they dont support one-to-one gesture on x11, right?

mojo, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

Really awesome. They’re all contained within my home directory too, so when I swap distros I can just copy my home dir and all my installed apps are carried over that way. Super useful feature that never gets mentioned! The downside to flatpaks is having to use them for cli in any way is a huge pain.

HW07,

Why not use a seperate /home partition if that’s something you value?

mojo,

I do, that doesn’t keep packages installed between distro reinstalls or swapping between entirely different distros. I’m talking about the actual packages and app data themselves that are contained in home.

jack,

For automatic installation I recommend ansible, its real easy

mojo,

There’s literally no need. It’s auto installed because everything is portable and most applications that launch .desktop files know to look for it’s directory.

jack, (edited )

that doesn’t keep packages installed between distro reinstalls or swapping between entirely different distros. I’m talking about the actual packages and app data themselves that are contained in home.

It’s auto installed because everything is portable

Then you didn’t explain it very well. Your former comment clearly states that copying the files keeps the packages (so you don’t have to redownload?) and the data, but “doesn’t keep packages installed” (hinting that .desktop files don’t get found)

Dariusmiles2123, in What distro for a MacBook pro late 2013 15'

Fedora on a MacBook Pro from 2012 works like a charm.

silencioso, in What distro for a MacBook pro late 2013 15'

Fedora

Dr_Willis, in Dock / Panel suggestions

I have seen it with some Dock/panels, but the specific DE/tools you mention is not something I have used.

check the project page for the panel you are using.

saman34265,

Can you confirm the Dock/Panel you have seen, with this option.

Dr_Willis,

docs.xfce.org/panel-plugins/…/start

shows the preview feature you mention.

mondoman712, in Anyone have experience with Intel Arc GPUs?

I have an a770. The only issue that I’ve had with what little gaming I do, is that CS2 ran pretty terribly, although I tried again last night and it seemed much better.

Kaidao,

Appreciate it. It sounds like with the new announcement they’re putting quite a bit of support behind it so I’m optimistic improvements are made quickly

Rand0mA,

Intel have just released a driver update to combat this. Its somethimg to do with a transition layer implemetation that has been massively improved giving 500%+ performance boost.

moody,

500%+ performance boost

To one game. Most others tested have seen a 5-15% increase in performance, and a couple have had 50% increases.

folkrav,

That’s still quite massive for a driver based fix alone.

kittenzrulz123, in Anyone have experience with Intel Arc GPUs?

No personal experience but I heard support is good

fxt_ryknow, in What distro for a MacBook pro late 2013 15'

I’ve run both Opensuse Leap and Nixos with good luck. As someone else mentioned, it really just boils down to the wifi adapter being shit… But that aside, everyrhing else seemed to work well for me with leap and nix.

WeAreAllOne,

Was thinking open suse slowroll also. Dont know whether Nvidia will work…

fxt_ryknow,

Nvidia breaks on me at least twice a year using Tumbleweed. But… That’s my own fault, as I just update almost daily… And too many times I’ve done an update that breaks nvidia. I can’t speak to this issue with leap, as I’ve not run Leap on my machine with an nvidia card.

The_Zen_Cow_Says_Mu, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?

i like using bottles & steam flatpaks on debian because they use newer mesa in their containers. so the best of both worlds with stable debian but more updated gaming drivers

aport,

This is the setup for me too. It’s been fantastic

possiblylinux127,
  • slight correction: flatpak doesn’t run apps in a container
andruid,

Since it supports OCI images, and uses some of the same sandboxing tech I’d say there is a blurred line here for sure.

Kusimulkku,

Similar reason, with flatpaks having codecs with them so no need for outside the distro codec repo. (Talking about openSUSE here but might be the same for Fedora)

LeFantome, in What's the difference between package manager and why are there so many?

“Are they….justified”?

  1. Somebody thought the need for a new package manager was great enough to spend time creating one. That person at least must think it is justified.
  2. We, the users, have not chosen just one of the options to be the standard. Does that “justify” that they all exist?

In the short term, the popularity of Linux is certainly hurt by the complexity of the ecosystem and the lack of standardization. As a product, it would see better adoption of it were more standardized. Without writing a book about why, there is no doubt about this. The short version is that, today, Linux is many products, none of which can compete as effectively as one would and all of them are impaired by the confusion this causes.

In the longer run though, it is almost certainly one of the great strengths of Linux. Linux is many products and as a result, it can target and effectively fill almost every niche. That is going to make it very hard for alternatives to compete at some point. Once Linux knowledge and Linux applications ( yes, I know ) become more mainstream, this compatibility between options becomes a strength. I can have my own operating system that is just the way I want it, but it still runs Docker and Stream ( as examples ).

Think of the cereal aisle at the grocery store. If I want to introduce a new cereal ( or pasta sauce or whatever ), coming up with one that has 10 flavours is not going to work ( without immense marketing muscle ). None of them will sell well enough and probably all of them will get pulled from store shelves. I would be better off launching one. However, once I have a mature market position, I can have not just the regular version but the whole wheat version, the honey nut version, the cinnamon version, the holiday version , etc. They will collectively make each other stronger and all potentially sell well ( again, think pasta sauce flavours if that makes more sense to you ).

This is why there was The Tesla Roadster at first and now there are the Model S, Model 3, Model X, Model Y, and maybe the Cyber Truck.

Linux is not a “product” though. It is an Open Source program. While any given Linux distributor ( distribution ) may think like I outline above, collectively the Linux market is fragmented. Linux is a mix of commercial, community, and individual interests all scratching their own itch.

I am super interested in Chimera Linux right now and fairly negative towards Ubuntu. This makes me part of your problem though. Chimera Linux makes “Linux” less predictable, more confusing, and more frustrating for new and potential users. Pushing everybody to Ubuntu would be a better market strategy. That said, I personally want to use Chimera Linux and, while I say that I want Linux to succeed, I also secretly hope that Ubuntu will fail. Chimera Linux uses a package manager used by only one other Linux ( and in fact they use different, incompatible versions of it so really they are unique ). Clearly, my priorities are mid-aligned with the premise of your question.

So, what does “justified” mean in the Linux space.

HovringSquidworld97A, in Plasma Bigscreen

I believe you can install it on anything that supports KDE. PostmarketOS has it as an environment option. I’ve not tried it yet either, but I’m interested in a Linux TV Box alternative as well.

friedbun,
@friedbun@lemmy.ml avatar

I mean, Kodi (formerly XBMC) has existed for aeons now…

madmaurice, in What has been your experience with Flatpak?
@madmaurice@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

None whatsoever. Thankfully.

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