You write like one can do stuff on Linux with one command.
However, Linux enthusiasts simultaneously tell the user to spend time troubleshooting problems on their own, and say that’s a given.
It’s a double standard I see on the web.
You write like one can do stuff on Linux with one command.
However, Linux enthusiasts simultaneously tell the user to spend time troubleshooting problems on their own, and say that’s a given.
It’s a double standard I see on the web.
Using Windows I can tolerate most of their shit. But their Administor stuff and security model in general…
Next time I meet a conspiracy theorist in my workplace, I probably have to confirm he’s right…
I think this is a universal fediversal problem. We are rather informed, but the problem is the rest of the world.
Agreed. If flatpak can continue to gain more control around GUI and hardware, I would finally be able to hop on the wagon completely.
Kinoite shows the future of noob Linux I think, but it’s still new and has some rough edges. I installed it on an ARM and couldn’t make it wake up from sleep.
I prefer Fedora. I think Fedora lost the war on easy Linux branding to Ubuntu 15 years ago.
The opposition says the reforms, which among other things criminalize contempt of parliament by government officials, are needed to bring more accountability, but the DPP says they were forced through without proper discussion.
Checks for politicians, please. “They forced us” appeals to the sympathy, but the logical conclusion is NOT “we remove it”. In short, it’s a bad reasoning.
Ah, very good point! If we all had the dedication for UX like you do, Linux would be so so so perfect.
“Verified” doesn’t mean too much to privacy advocates. There have been incidents. I indeed want to check what my app is going to access before installing it.
As a professor I have to say… the site admin skipped the class that taught them to include always the color bar.
Remote desktops. I think the main complaints are the performance. To me the issue is that with x11vnc you could remote into an existing display, even the login screen. Recent Gnome finally seems to have it for wayland, but afaik KDE still doesn’t have it.
Agreed. And I do understand wayland is the future, having done studies around X11 a bit. The problem for long time users like me is that there are still expert apps and use cases that aren’t covered by wayland, at least for now. And because the current benefits of wayland are not obvious they will complain if their distros transition to wayland too soon.
The question now is, when will they remove it?
What’s the advantage of using wayland at the moment?
Why are so many Linux posts about “Why Linux” these days? We already use Linux. Isn’t there news on Linux anymore or what?
My experience is that nix package configs are tested on NixOS. I used it on other OSes, and I easily encountered misconfigurations and such. The problem is that they are understaffed.
I ended up combining a few package managers due to this, but I’d have preferred to use another manager solely.
This is starting to resemble Putin’s rhetoric against NATO since he invaded Ukraine
My point is, sacrifices can be made. Even professionals can do it.
You mean like, they risk losing their job, reducing their profits significantly during the training period, and then likely there are a few algorithms that don’t exist in Krita, and most are slower with less optimization. If Adobe releases a new killer feature those professionals who transitioned to OSS are fucked, and also they sacrifice a significant of time on additional training for using Linux, replacing their professional NVIDIA GPUs, tweaks wayland, then they spend time on fixing boot problems, their printers don’t work anymore, they have compatibility issues with everything Adobe and MS Office, lose business competitions just because their files can’t be opened by Windows, etc. etc. I’ll trust you Linux-is-easy people after you converted a few Windows / Apple / Adobe-dependent enterprise businesses.
Poor workflow. Switching applications is horrible if you have 4 windows open in one desktop. Even gnome is far better at that.