Macaroni9538

@Macaroni9538@lemmy.ml

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Macaroni9538,

Thanks, will check out

Macaroni9538,

Ok I have always heard Latitudes and thinkpads up to a certain model or generation are good for Linux

Macaroni9538,

Oh no, I couldn’t care less about graphics, but at the same time I don’t want a potato lol so no Nvidia for me

Macaroni9538,

It’s just that my model is a newer generation Dell and I’ve heard from multiple people that Dell is getting more and more locked down and proprietary like Apple, so im thinking that’s why I haven’t had the best linux experience on this darn thing.

Macaroni9538,

Thanks, didn’t know about the Broadcom wifi part.

Macaroni9538,

What the heck is System76??? I see it everywhere but only affiliated with Pop OS

Macaroni9538,

Perfect, good to know. I hear some of the older model dell laptops are great for linux, but these Xps models have been troubled

Macaroni9538,

Wonderful to know! thanks alot. I have heard alot of good about linux and thinkpads but only up to a certain generation I think? What about HP? my computer repair guy swears by HP but I honestly know nothing about HP and never hear people talk about HP either.

Macaroni9538,

Gotcha! I browsed their site a bit. I’d have to check ebay because I cannot afford the prices on their new stuff lol. I have a question that maybe you can answer. alot of folks recommend older laptops or whatever for linux. Does age of the computer matter much? I know you can always make upgrades to the internals and such, but say I got an old thinkpad for example maybe from 2010… and it’s certified linux compatible and all that… would i be able to run the latest versions of distros or would i be limited to older kernels due to the system being old? or is all of that determined by the hardware specs?

Macaroni9538,

I have also heard this sentiment, that enterprise/business level hardware is best, even for personal use

Macaroni9538,

Well that’s the thing, I can’t afford to buy new where you can just return it and all that; I’ll most likely be buying a refurb or used or older but new piece of equipment or possibly piecing together my own, depending on what i can learn about what I need for a smooth and easily fixable linux system

Macaroni9538,

What about HP business grade stuff? thats what ive heard good about. Also any idea on other IBM equipment than their old thinkpads? I have no clue about nowaday IBM but am curious.

Macaroni9538,

good advice, thank you! oh ok, so since im on a budget and i’ll likely be buying refurbed or used, it’ll likely be an older machine. would older computers but from the good companies mentioned still be capable of running newer versions/kernels of distros?

Macaroni9538,

Really??? I have always heard the opposite, that Intel is best for Linux? who knows

Macaroni9538,

yes Ive heard they are good too, but i’ve been having issues with mine. it came with windows pre-installed, i doubt that plays much of a role but Idk. like the system is naturally fitted for windows only, so the linux experience has been a little rough around the edges. I have no clue, just a thought maybe

Macaroni9538,

thanks alot. are there certain thinkpad models to look at or will any thinkpad be ok? i think i’ve heard that after a certain model, lenovo started making changes or something and it affected the linux experience. idk i could be way wrong

Macaroni9538,

Sorry, over my head on what a binary blob is lol does it have anything to do with proprietary stuff?

Macaroni9538,

Yup my dell xps 13 had kaby lake processors, not all cores though.

Macaroni9538,

man, can’t afford their gear unfortunately. my plan was to get my dell xps 13 9310 fixed (bios stuck in manufacturing mode) then sell that and use whatever I make to purchase my next device. in the mean time I get to use this old old probably decade old asus machine :)

Macaroni9538,

Nope, i dont even really know what they are; always thought they were purely game related and im not a gamer. is it basically like a mini pc?

Macaroni9538,

Thanks! but when it comes to linux hardware vendors like those, for me at least, it’s hard to know which ones are good and which ones are bad or unknowns. also, i did look into the lower grade star labs and there was something about the processors they used… i did a little reading and they got poor marks for being uber slow or something. i could have misinterpreted things though.

How can I fix these darned icons in Zorin Lite Xfce??? (imgur.com)

These darn icons are pissing me off and there’s not a whole lot i can find in the settings. So on the right sys tray, the bluetooth and network icons are perfect; that’s how I want ever icon to be; perfectly sized, it’s clear and detailed, it looks proper; same with the date and clock. The notification, wifi, and battery...

Macaroni9538,

oh it’s all good brother, I could always try another distro in the future or just skip Xfce all together lol. I appreciate your help though

Macaroni9538,

I may give Linux Lite a try, which is of course xfce based. Void I hear is very good, but after researching it a bit, I feel it’s more complicated or advanced than what it appears. more for like advanced users that really know how to work linux. i’m more intermediate.

Is there a safe way to run multiple desktop environments on Ubuntu 22.04?

I have tried it on several distros before and it always causes problems because you get a million more packages intermingled with your already installed packages and sometimes you get conflicts or whatever. But it usually messes up my system. is there a safe way to have several desktops installed? or do you pretty much install a...

Macaroni9538,

good to know, thanks. arch is out of my comfort zone lol though I have ambitions to slowly work my way into it with something easy. I used manjaro years ago and loved it. seems to have a bad rep, but I think their distro is most functional and beautiful, but again, i’m no Arch expert

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