Pantherina

@Pantherina@feddit.de

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Pantherina,

Of course it does. Firefoxes new ClearURL copy feature is great

Switching to Debian on my gaming pc

Hello everyone - I have been wanting to ditch windows on my gaming pc for a while now, and since I have recently finished a large project, I now have the free time to switch. I am relatively comfortable with Debian having used it for a while on my web server as well as school laptop, but I am concerned about using it on my...

Pantherina,

What does Linux mint have what debian doesnt? I can only think of the deb firefox and the timeshift backups which are both really neat

Why I need extra kernel modules to be able to run Wayland on nvidia?

If i run X.org i dont need to modify my kernel or its configs, it just works well (well, well for X.org) out of box. With wayland its the other story. I need to enable nvidia-dkms module and much other stuff to should be configured. There is a whole page about enabling hyprland on nvidia....

What are the differences between linux distributions?

Hey guys! Trying to understand what developers actually do to create a yet another distro, or what are the differences between existing distros. Lets say we have ubuntu and fedora. What are the differences? Excluding DE, Installer, theme, installed packages/libs and package manager. They both are FHS compliant, both running...

Pantherina, (edited )

Distros

  • are putting together a set of packages in repos.
  • the repos are either close to upstream, or they backport security fixes. Everything else is not secure
  • make working, secure, sometimes branded bundles including Desktop, some apps, some specific software
  • the bundles get updated and if it is a point release, upgraded to a new set of packages. That is called a "Distro version"
  • This ensures new features and security fixes
  • the Distros care about bug reports, work with upstream, getting new contributors, packaging (bundling the packages, presets, libraries into a set with a name, handling dependencies etc.)
  • Distros also often package and build their own Kernel or multiple ones. These kernels are general purpose most often, even though there is the kernel-hardened or Oracles “unbreakable kernel” (whatever that is). Also there is a lts Kernel that has backported security fixes, as well as other releases of the kernel like git (latest of everything)
  • Distros take care of the versioning, so not every package is always the latest but tested to work with other packages.
  • Distros also implement security systems like SELinux and Apparmor with matching configurations

So you see that is highly complex. So stay as close to upstream as possible to get the best experience. I think of the main distros as

  • Debian + Ubuntu
  • Fedora + the RHEL stuff or clones (Oracle, Alma, Rocky etc)
  • Opensuse, SEL
  • Arch
  • Gentoo
  • Alpine (busybox and musl, not real Gnu+Linux)
  • NixOS
  • GUIX
  • ClearLinux
  • Coreboot (yes that is a Linux distro)
  • Slackware and other probably outdated projects
  • small ones with different focus

All the others are either downstream modifications of these, or less known. Some Line ublue, EndeavorOS etc. also just take an upstream distro and change very little.

"We are looking for Text-To-Speak (TTS) expertise to help or advise us on improving the default voice of the Linux desktop." (floss.social)

Hello Fediverse, We are looking for Text-To-Speak (TTS) expertise to help or advise us on improving the default voice of the Linux desktop. :linux: 📣 Please reach out or boost :boost_love: Thanks! #Linux #tts #accessibility #a11y #GNOME #KDE #FreeSoftware #freedesktop #ml...

Pantherina,

This! Good tts (piper for example) is key.

  • apps supporting modern screen reader stack, including wayland
  • good stable screenreaders
  • the entire OS supporting the screenreader not only as a GUI-level service
  • very good voices especially when set very fast
Pantherina,

You can use what you want. I just say X11 is not developed anymore really, since years. It is decades old and insecure by design. Wayland just works, if not supported XWayland is chosen automatically.

If you use MacOS or Windows today, you will see that Linux has no permission system at all. This is simply insecure.

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