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savvywolf, to linuxmemes in This truly is the year of the linux desktop
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You know, I do wonder how many of these statistics are influenced by Linux users tendancy to use adblockers and block tracking. Linux could be more popular than it looks.

Also, they should tell us how much of that increase is due to the Steam Deck. :P

savvywolf, to linux in Microsoft says a Copilot key is coming to keyboards on Windows PCs starting this month
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Do people actually want this?

Like, I know the megacorps that control our lives do (since it’s a cheap way of adding value to their products), but what about actual users? I think many see it as a novelty and a toy rather than a productivity tool. Especially when public awareness of “hallucinations” and the plight faced by artists rises.

Kinda feels like the whole “voice controlled assistants” bubble that happened a while ago. Sure they are relatively commonplace nowadays, but nowhere near as universal as people thought they would be.

savvywolf, to linuxmemes in You should
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If you’re cold, they’re cold.

Run this command to warm up your computery friends.

savvywolf, to linuxmemes in Year of the Diagonal Linux Desktop, y'all
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The steam deck does have a gyroscope for sensing rotation… Just saying.

savvywolf, to linuxmemes in you guys are spying
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… Didn’t Chrome get in trouble recently for scanning random files on the user’s disk looking for malware?

savvywolf, to linux in Is anyone here using their hardware TPM chips for credentials?
@savvywolf@pawb.social avatar

Personally, I don’t see how a TPM module is more useful than full disk encryption with a password you enter on boot.

I struggle to see how it makes automatic login safer given it does nothing to protect against the really common threat of someone physically stealing your laptop or desktop.

I don’t trust any encryption or authentication system that I don’t have access to the keys for. Microsoft has also kinda made me feel it’s more for vendor lock in, like they did with secure boot.

Still, I’m probably being unreasonably pessimistic about it though - be interested to see any practical use cases of it.

savvywolf, to programmer_humor in Twitter/GitHubProjects has no chill 😅
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Anyone else getting that corporate “forced meme” vibe from this?

savvywolf, (edited ) to linuxmemes in Using Fedora Atomic is like...
@savvywolf@pawb.social avatar

Recently switched to using Flatpaks instead of random .debs for a number of apps on my system. /var/lib/flatpak takes up 7GiB, which honestly isn’t that much (even though it’s like quarter of the OS size), given that’s the software I use most of the time.

Was skeptical at first about Flatpaks, but SteamOS showed me that is great at just giving OS developers access to a fully populated app store with minimal work.

Honestly, nowadays I’d say “ability to install flatpaks” should be the criteria on which we decide whether an OS is really “linux” or not (that is, SteamOS is, but Android isn’t).

Edit: Okay. I said something stupid here, my bad. What I was trying to get at is the distinction between Android, etc. and “Desktop” Linuxes like traditional distros, Chromebooks and the Steam Deck. Even though it technically runs Linux, it’s hard to argue that developers for Android are really writing apps that work on “Linux”. Wheras if someone releases a Flatpak version of their app because they think the Steam deck is cool, it works on other distros “for free”.

savvywolf, to linux in Thinking about making the big switch – recommend me a distro!
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Imo Mint is the gold standard for a Distro that just works and meets the needs of most people.

savvywolf, to linux in openSUSE Logo Contest Concludes With Winners Selected
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Oh, it’s a cameleon with the Linux Mint logo as the head.

savvywolf, to linux in Looking to switch to Linux in the somewhat distant future
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Mint is my recommendation, having using it myself for many years now.

If you have a Nvidia GPU, a case could be made for POP! due to the built in drivers, but installing Nvidia drivers is rather painless in Mint.

savvywolf, to linux in Friendly reminder
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Remember to check your three "B"s; your balls, your breasts and your backups.

savvywolf, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.
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In the spirit of bashing Ubuntu, I’d like to propose we stick with the swiss army knife. But it’s one of those strange Kickstarter projects where it’s entirely controlled by an unnecessary phone app.

Arch being something that requires some research and prep beforehand makes sense through. As well as having fans who will swear that is actually quite enjoyable if you try it.

savvywolf, to linux in Is anyone here using their hardware TPM chips for credentials?
@savvywolf@pawb.social avatar

I’ve heard that before, but there are two main problems that stick out to me:

  • A lot of the marketing for TPM (at least when I was setting up bitlocker on Windows) suggests that it’s used to support decrypting drives without a password on boot. But that doesn’t seem to offer any protection from the devices being stolen. The bootloader may be safe but it’s not actually verifying that I’m the one booting the device.
  • I can’t think of a situation where someone would be able to actually modify the bootloader without also having full access to the files and secrets. Especially in a single-boot environment where every time the system is running, the device is decrypted.

I’m not saying that it’s all just a scam or anything like that, but it really feels like I’m missing something important and obvious.

savvywolf, to linux in is there a foss project to automatically sort files
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Does this “obviously” have to use AI? I can see a tool that sorts files into folders based on file extensions, modification dates and/or metadata could get the work done.

And if organising files by content (e.g. “my zoo trip”, “meetings with Xenia”) is that important, doing it manually seems like a better idea because accuracy is presumably important.

I don’t really see the distro hopping argument either. Even if you don’t share your home directory between installs, presumably you copy over your files as directories rather than individually pouring them into one super folder?

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