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Responsabilidade @ BaalInvoker @lemmy.eco.br
Posts
7
Comments
284
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I had an issue like that in the past

    Even after I run grub-mkconfig and put the efi files on the correct folder, it wasn't recognized by the UEFI

    What I did was to open my BIOS and at the EFI configs, I choose manually which efi file I wanted it to open

    Maybe it does the trick to you as well

  • It looks like your /boot partition was on Mint partition

    You can create a new /boot partition and then install your bootloader there

    It's not complicated

    I don't remember the exact steps on the top of my mind right now, but it's something like

    From a live USB (maybe it's necessary to chroot)

    1. Create a new /boot partition
    2. Install grub on it
    3. Check if your bios is starting from this new efi file. If not, make your bios boot from your new efi file by selecting it manually

    I think that's it

  • I dislike wayland

    Jump
  • Sabotage linux desktop?

    It's exactly due to immutability that Linux is reaching even more people. An example is SteamOS, an immutable distro.

    Common user doesn't wanna know if he's using X11 or Wayland, or if your distro is immutable or not. He wanna knows if the distro works and if he can do their stuff. And that's the exactly reason why Windows is the best alternative for them.

    Not everyone is tech-savy to care about the engines that make an os work or to tweak every aspect of the system. Actually this is minority.

    Off course your disapointment and contempt with Wayland and immutable distros is legit. I'm not arguing against it. You have your reasons and respect it. But please, don't jump to conclusions like "it will sabottage linux desktop" with no evidence.

  • Definitely can. But AUR make it easier, once it's not officially supported and has permission to install things on your base system with root access.

    It's kinda the same as you download a deb file and install it or use ppa on debian-based distro. All of that can make your system breaks, but in other distros the general recommendation is to use official repos always when the app is available on repos

  • Manjaro is not up-to-date with Arch repos. Using AUR in Manjaro is a huge mistake.

    If you wanna use AUR, I suggest you to go all in with Arch itself

    However I still recommend you to use AUR as less as possible, cause too many AUR can mess even with Arch

  • I did not say that.

    What I said is: you can be wrong with an allegation in the past, but it does not mean that you'll be wrong with another allegation with no related subject in the future.

    He may be wrong about Ukraine/Russia, but this subject is different from Gaza/Israel, which he is right and we have many evidences of the last one.

  • Well, in my country you have the option to pay for medcare or use a private plan. However you have full access to public, free and universal healthcare which you don't have to pay anything for it.

    We don't have to convince anyone here. If you need attention, you'll get attention. For free.

    I think that USA healthcare is a joke. A bad taste joke.

  • As everything in life, yes, there is downside. Major downside is that it can occupy more space in your hd or ssd.

    However I think the downsides are not that bad to justify all the hatred some guys have.

    Flatpak positive sides are way more relevant then the downsides