I have too many toothbrushes

  • 2 Posts
  • 58 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 9th, 2023

help-circle

  • Apple supposedly makes good hardware, and my ‘23 mbp in 14’ has excellent battery, great trackpad, very good sound and a beast of a screen. Now I don’t like whatever material these machines are made of, they are downright unpleasant to grab or touch, and the keyboard is abismal shit. I hate it, I am seriously not using it as much as I could not because Asahi, or Fedora, or bugs, or the availability of certain software for Arm64, but because of that shit keyboard. Asahi runs great, the full Pipewire sound stack developed for it is a pleasure to work on. Switch monitoring every which way, plug Firefox into Ardour and rip youtube, it all works, period.

    To me M2 with 16g of ram is about on par with an intel i12 in everyday life. Sure it will win on rendering movies or some specific stuff, but day-to-day it’s like my friend’ Carbon X1 on Mint really.








  • ReallyZen@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.ml[QUESTION] Flatpak or AUR?
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    12
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    2 months ago

    An AUR package has been done for Arch by (supposedly) someone who knows what they are doing and needs it on their Arch Machine

    A Flatpak is something done by someone, to (supposedly) work everywhere, untested on Arch, that may or may not work. And crash (Ardour on Asahi). Or waste hours or you life to render files incorrectly (kdenlive on arch and asahi).

    Native versions work perfectly.

    I thought I was clever in using arch/aur for everything, but pull KDE or QT apps from Flatpak to keep my gnome install a bit more tidy… For this, you’d have to have those Flataks to work, and sometimes they don’t.




  • My wife has a T480s on standard 2022 LTS Ubuntu, it is a machine old enough to not need the latest edgy mint ; a friend of mine has had to install it on his 2023 X1 tho.

    Standard Mint will do fine. Default DE is boring as hell, be sure to look at others like Gnome. I love Gnome.

    Also, using “live” USB keys OP can try several distros and check what they find more attractive in the default state of a distro.

    PopOS, Elementary, Fedora, Tumbleweed… So many of them.

    I say Tumbleweed is best because of the perfect, seamless integration of BTRFS / Snapshotting / Rollback system. It is truly the best way to dip your feet into Linux and get it back working in a single click when you (inevitably) fuck up.


  • I see I sideload of Gentleman Agreement with the hardware vendors here:

    • Hardware Vendors : “Oh No, The Market is Slowing Down!”
    • Microsoft: “Hold My Beer, it’s Payback Time”

    Everyone wins. Well, the usual suspects win as usual. The environment and the customer can go kiss Mr Gates and Mr Dell’s asses.


  • ReallyZen@lemmy.mltolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldWait, it's all Linux?
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    2 months ago

    I’d just like to interject for a moment. What you’re refering to as Ponyos, is in fact, GNU/Ponyos, or as I’ve recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Ponyos. Ponyos is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX.

    Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, that version of GNU which quite nobody uses today is called Ponyos, and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project.

    There really is a Ponyos, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Ponyos is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine’s resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Ponyos is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Ponyos added, or GNU/Ponyos.



  • ReallyZen@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlCool distros to try
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    That’s how I was on Slackware at the time. Reputable, functional, stable - and totally tailorable to your exact needs.

    Everybody talks about Arch as a “pedagogic” distro, but you’ll learn a lot working with Slackware. I wonder if Lilo is still around.