linuxmemes

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Gruntyfish, in You should

I prefer spoon bombs, thanks.

ShitOnABrick, in Accurate?
@ShitOnABrick@lemmy.world avatar

Do you have an life should exclusively just say NO

rattking, in Wayland vs X11 be like
@rattking@lemmy.ml avatar

This meme would be far more accurate if Wayland was flickering constantly ;)

stjobe, (edited ) in You should

Heh, haven’t seen the bash forkbomb in close to two decades… Thanks for the trip down memory lane! :)

Bizarroland, (edited )
@Bizarroland@kbin.social avatar

You know how I know I've gotten better at using linux?

I saw the command and read it and figured out what it was although I've never been exposed to a fork bomb before in my life.

I was like okay, this is an empty function that calls itself and then pipes itself back into itself? What the hell is going on?

I will say that whoever invented this is definitely getting fucked by roko's basilisk, though. The minute they thought of this it was too late for them.

barsoap, (edited )

99.999% of that function’s effectiveness is that unix shell, being the ancient dinosaur it is, not just allows : as a function name but also uses the exact same declaration syntax for symbol and alphanumeric functions:


<span style="color:#323232;">foo(){ foo | foo&amp; }; foo
</span>

is way more obvious.

EDIT: Yeah I give up I’m not going to try to escape that &

tdawg, in Accurate?

Am I stupid. Most Linux users I know are more paranoid about tech than anyone else

frozen,
@frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz avatar

The difference between paranoia and fear is the difference between not wanting to buy a Google Home because it listens to you and not wanting to buy a Google Home because you’re afraid you’ll break it.

JustEnoughDucks,
@JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl avatar

That is actually a great metaphore. I always just used:

It’s like me not wanting to use google photos because they scan your photos to train algorithms vs my mom not wanting to use google photos because she is afraid all of her photos will get deleted.

assa123, (edited )
@assa123@lemmy.world avatar

This is the comment I was looking for. I am very paranoid of technology and live in a constant fear of 0-day exploits and encryption backdoors.

jaybone, in You should

It’s interesting that colon is a valid function name. Replace it with something else and it’s much more clear to understand what is going on here.

azvasKvklenko, in It's OK if you cry

Extremely outdated, but would still work with fingerprint sensors or NFC readers

PeWu,

I had a case where fingerprint sensor was working out of the box fortunately. Although I had a problem where cryptfs would stop authenticating successfully with fingerprint sensor after distro update

AVincentInSpace,

What display manager do you use? I have not been able to get Howdy to work without also typing my password with SDDM

Aganim,

Absolutely not outdated. I had a horrible time getting my hands on a working driver for the WiFi card in my brand new laptop last year. Horrible enough to resort to Ubuntu and even that gave me the finger. When I finally had it working I had to manually rebuild the damned thing each kernel update because I couldn’t convince DKMS to do it automatically. Had to wait two or three kernel releases for the card to be supported ‘out of the box’.

So no, fuck WiFI drivers in Linux. If it is not in the kernel and the manufacturer doesn’t provide one, don’t expect fun times.

woelkchen, (edited )
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Outdated for Linux Intel, still valid for Broadcom, probably not so bad for somewhat recent Realtek and AMD/Mediatek (last I’ve read is that Mediatek WiFi hardware sucks in general and disconnects happen on Windows, so the same happening on Linux would be the fault of the Linux driver).

EDIT: Accidentally wrote Linux instead of Intel.

Prismey,

I installed linux on a new pc 2 days ago, had no problem with the wifi drivers. I don’t know if it’s the fact that the wifi is integrated on the motherboard, but it was up and running without any tweeking from me (unlike windows)

Aganim,

In my cause it was actually a newer type of Realtek chip. 😞

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

But was the cause the Linux driver or the hardware? If the fault is the hardware and the experience on Linux is the same as on Windows, it’s feature parity.

If in doubt, get an Intel WiFi card. Even in otherwise not upgradeable notebooks those are usually not soldered on. Also whatever is in a Steam Deck OLED looks like a good pick.

SimplyTadpole,
@SimplyTadpole@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Does Intel sell wifi cards that use USB rather than PCI slots? My motherboard doesn’t have the slot for a wifi PCIe card, and I’ve only seen Intel sell those :/

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Does Intel sell wifi cards that use USB rather than PCI slots?

AFAIK the problem is that the chip itself was only developed with the PCI protocol in mind.

SimplyTadpole,
@SimplyTadpole@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I see, that is a shame…

Aganim,

It was the driver, now that support is provided by the kernel it is rock-solid.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Realtek upstreamed their drivers in 2020 or 2021. I got rid of my last notebook with Realtek hardware for unrelated reasons.

SimplyTadpole, (edited )
@SimplyTadpole@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I can absolutely confirm it’s still valid for Realtek. I had one using the RTL8812AU chipset that basically no kernel version nor distro provided out of the box, so I constantly had to download a third-party driver from Github and manually patch it via dkms, or use a third-party repository containing the driver package… and then the driver broke so badly that it wouldn’t let me update at all unless I uninstalled it, which left me without the internet I needed to actually update, effectively leaving me unable to update until I could buy another one from Mediatek that’s compatible.

And said Mediatek wifi is really slow, so I just went from the frying pan into the fire…

woelkchen, (edited )
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

I can absolutely confirm it’s still valid for Realtek. I had one using the RTL8812AU chipset

Yeah, and I was explicitly writing about recent chips. RTL8812AU isn’t recent. The very latest Windows driver is from 2018, so the chip itself was released a good while before that.

I know exactly what you had to go through because I had to do the same with mine a couple of years ago but since then for newer chips Realtek started contributing to Linux itself:

which left me without the internet I need

USB tethering your WiFi-connected phone would have worked as stop gap just as well. I had to do that a lot.

SimplyTadpole,
@SimplyTadpole@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Ahh I see, thanks for clarifying. It seems that where I live mostly only has the older Realtek chips for sale, so I likely mostly had bad luck.

I tried USB tethering, but it wouldn’t work for some reason… I don’t remember exactly what happened, but I think either the phone or my computer couldn’t detect each other.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

USB tethering should look on the PC just like plugging an Ethernet cable.

bertd2,

I do occasionally fall for just buying shtuff without a quick google search to see if my kernel would be cool with it, but I have an even greater number of stories about good experiences with Windows shtuff driving me bonkers.

For example, the Brother ADS-1200 under WIndows beats anything SANE supported scanners can do hands down. Scan to PDF with excellent compression and top of the line OCR. The spousal unit needed a scanner and I found a good deal on an ADS-2100. Under Linux, scan results are totally comparable to the ADS-1200, so the hardware is fine. But the Windows software for this scanner is crap. JPEG and TIFF are identical to the Linux scans, but OCR and PDF compression are atrocious. I’m 100% sure that if I were to edit a table in the ADS-1200 software, it would happily apply the same excellent results to the ADS-2100. But I’ve had it with hacking Windows goop, been there, done that, got the t-shirt, so onto Craig’s list the 2100 goes… Built in obsolescence, welcome to the Windows world.

With Linux, once the kernel accepts it, it’s smooth sailign without too many vendor introduced hickups.

And even on Windows, if you need to use third party scan software like VueScan because your scanner happens to be older than your Windows. it’ll work but it won’t outperform SANE supported scanners.

azvasKvklenko,

Situations like that aren’t very common these days. It usually happens when your hardware is very much new and drivers aren’t yet in the Linux kernel, or they are in the newest mainline, but your distro wont ship it for some more time. For that matter, it’s always bad when the kernel doesn’t have the drivers built in and it always requires dealing with DKMS or akmod whether it’s wifi, webcam, bluetooth or GPU (that’s why NVIDIA tends to be problematic on some systems).

That being said, the meme only works for anecdotal cases.

michaelmrose,

If it is not in the kernel and the manufacturer doesn’t provide one, don’t expect fun times.

This could be shorted to if your device has no driver it wont work which is obviously true.

If you have very recent hardware and you find it doesn’t work out of the box on stable options the easiest thing to do is install a more recent kernel. Even current Ubuntu non-LTS is 2-4 releases behind.

learnubuntu.com/install-mainline-kernel/ alternatively you can use a third party kernel repo which has a recent build with extras xanmod.org I’m using the second option.

It’s even easier in arch/void where the latest kernel is already available.

Respectfully if DKMS wasn’t automatically kicking in then you configured it incorrectly. It’s a lot easier to just rely on a package that sets this up for you properly. If for some reason this can’t be done the logical thing to do is script the process so that all operations are completed in the appropriate order that way you needn’t remember to do one then the other.

Aganim, (edited )

This could be shorted to if your device has no driver it wont work which is obviously true.

What I tried to tell is that if you have to rely on community driver projects, don’t expect fun times, at least not when it comes to Realtek in my recent experience.

If you have very recent hardware and you find it doesn’t work out of the box on stable options the easiest thing to do is install a more recent kernel.

I already had the latest available kernel at the time, as in: the very latest officially released kernel by kernel.org. Ubuntu was just a last-ditch effort as it will sometimes have drivers included that other distros might not have, normally I wouldn’t touch it with a ten-feet pole and go either Arch or Manjaro. The driver simply wasn’t included in the kernel. How do I know? Because I stumbled upon some discussions that mentioned the lack of support and 3 kernel releases later support for my card was specifically mentioned in the changelog.

Respectfully if DKMS wasn’t automatically kicking in then you configured it incorrectly. It’s a lot easier to just rely on a package that sets this up for you properly.

Yes, like a Realtek-XXXX-dkms package, which simply didn’t work. I’ve configured stuff for DKMS before, scripting stuff for Linux is part of my daily workload, so yeah, you don’t need to tell me scripting beats doing stuff manually.

The fact that getting an f*cking wifi card to work takes this much effort is what I meant with ‘not fun times’ and for me validates the meme, anecdotal as it might be.

Resorting to other distros, configuring additional repos so you can install a different kernel version, having to try different community projects to see which gives you a working driver, having to deal with getting DKMS to work, this is all stuff which hampers Linux adoptment. And without more adoptment we won’t have to expect more support from manufacturers for desktop related consumer hardware. So yeah, that does make me cry a bit. It’s a catch-22 unfortunately.

HouseWolf, in Repurposing your laptop trans rights style 😎🏳️‍⚧️

Old Thinkpads running Arch are basically the new Blåhaj

And I’m all for it!

cashews_best_nut,

Lenovo Thinkpad t480 with Arch running AwesomeWM. :)

ExLisper,

OMG! Same. Well, almost. I’m running AwesomeWM, my gf has t480 and I have heard of Arch.

possiblylinux127, in Sending incremental memes

Nextcloud app

kttnpunk, in It's OK if you cry
@kttnpunk@lemmy.world avatar

Old meme

hai, (edited ) in Accurate?
@hai@lemmy.ml avatar

I had a brief expedition into game development recently and ended up using Unreal Engine, I eventually gave up on Unreal – but I do plan on checking out Godot. Although, I eventually go home sick for Linux (my computer isn’t powerful enough to run a Windows VM with a game engine; please spare me), and ended up wanting a “it just works™” setup. So, logically, I try Fedora. Although, the installer just wouldn’t boot, not on a USB, not on Ventoy, nothing. Just a cold dark screen with a solid underline cursor. I also tried OpenSUSE at one point, but there’s some bad blood between me and that distro so I think I gave up at the installer. Anyway, I ended up installing Arch Linux, and would you look at that, the installer launches!

TL;DR: Arch Linux might take more time to get setup to your liking, but once you get it there, it it just works™.

PS: I have very much non-free hardware, this could be part of it – and it made installing Artix Linux with hardware encryption very difficult that one time. :/

Edit: PPS: I’m not trying to say “don’t use Fedora or OpenSUSE,” use what you want. This is my experience.

mojo, in Accurate?
ooterness,

Hannah Montana 5 eva.

superduperenigma,

Die, heathen!

I use TempleOS btw.

AVincentInSpace,

TempleOS doesn’t have network support. How can you post this without betraying your own OS?

WhiskyTangoFoxtrot,

They write out TCP/IP packets by hand, fold them into paper airplanes and throw them at the nearest ISP.

milkjug,

Fake news!!1!!1!

Those are UDP packets.

brbposting,

From the FAQ of the site & its legendary navbar:

Q : How/why did you make such a great OS?
A : I thought - what would attract young users to Linux? So I created this idea after a lot of reading and work.

ayaya, (edited ) in Accurate?
@ayaya@lemdro.id avatar

I have been using the same Arch installation for about 8 years. The initial installation/configuration is the only time consuming part. Actual day-to-day usage is extremely easy.

Maybe this is no longer the case but I previously used Ubuntu and it was actually much more annoying in comparison, especially when upgrading between major revisions or needing to track down sources/PPAs for packages not in the main repos. Or just when you want something more up-to-date than what they’re currently shipping.

The rolling release model + the AUR saves so much time and prevents a lot of headaches.

corrupts_absolutely,

had same experience with ubuntu, just outdated packages. outside of two major breaks that were announced beforehand arch has been just fine

tourist,
@tourist@lemmy.world avatar

You may have just sold me on Arch.

I have never been able to hold down an Ubuntu install for very long without getting that dreaded you have held broken packages scold.

thisbenzingring,

You can follow the wiki guide and really have a solid systems that is just yours. That will take some time and can be a little frustrating.

Or use the installer script they have included for a year or more now and get to a working desktop in 20-30 minutes.

But if you feel the need to trim down the scripted version, you can make it just a strong as the step-by-step install in a few hours.

I have used the same step-by-step based on the wiki install since 2016, on my daily driver laptop

SuperIce,

Yeah, I love Arch for the same reasons. Try installing it in a VM and using it a bit, and you’ll see that it’s quite an easy OS to use now.

uis,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

Same Gentoo installation for last 5 years.

Here’s BTWOS for you:

https://derpicdn.net/img/view/2021/12/9/2761879.png

1984, in Accurate?
@1984@lemmy.today avatar

Just install Pop OS.

Semi-Hemi-Demigod, in Accurate?
@Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

Accurate for a Linux meme, yes.

Accurate in real life? No.

d00phy,

Thank you! So I CARE about my privacy, so ChromeOS is on the table!?

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