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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)KO
Posts
5
Comments
296
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Everyone overthinks it, and you are too.

    Mint is great. It may not work for you if you have super new hardware.

    Fedora is great. It’s mint but with newer stuff.

    Arch is great. Bleeding edge. But it’s not “set it and forget it”.

    Linux is great. There’s a million other options. Any of them work if they work for you. Find someone bashing Ubuntu - they would HAPPILY choose Ubuntu over win11.

    And you have to realize the “what version I’m on dependency hell” thing is a thing of the past for the most part. Flatpaks just about solve this problem. You’ve got containers and vms too. Switching to another distro ain’t hard either as a nuclear option.

    Just install mint or fedora like everyone says. Your requirements aren’t special, and both options are great.

  • Yup - I was thinking the fast train, which isn’t fast at all compared to the rest of the world. I think that one is only once or twice a day - could be wrong though. Price aside, it’s not a terrible experience.

    I’d rather dig my eyes out with a dull spoon than take the others. Snail’s pace and stops every 5 min.

  • San Francisco has a pretty good bus/trolley system. There might be other cities with decent busses but I’m unaware of them.

    Some major cities like New York, Boston, Philly, Chicago have acceptable subways, and commuter rails. You can probably get a daily train from one city to the next. Example: you can take a train from Boston to NY once a day - it’s fairly ok, and probably preferable than driving for most people.

    Most cities have busses that suck, and literally zero trains and subways.

    Most Europeans don’t realize how big the US is, and how much of it is quite rural. It doesn’t make sense to build a rail to service the few dozen families in east bumfuck nowhere.

    Getting a license to drive is, generally speaking, pretty easy from most states. Usually just a written test and a road test where you just have to drive around the block without breaking any rules.

    Some city dwellers survive without cars, but they are kind of stuck in the city. When they want to get out, they’ll rent a car for the day.

  • I dunno, I recently bought two keyboards and both could do all theee, wired, wireless with the dongle, or Bluetooth with no dongle. I have a keychron and love it - if you’re looking for desktop keyboard, that’s a great choice although pricy. Logitech makes some good travel ones too that operate in all three modes. Try those brands if you’re having trouble finding Bluetooth keyboards.

  • Has that ever happened across drives? Without user error?

    Every Linux distro I’ve ever used has been pretty damn specific about where it installs boot, and respectful of all other drives and boot loaders.

    I’ll concede defeat, but I find your claim hard to believe.

  • Lots of good advice here. I’ll add a bit about dual booting.

    1. the problem with dual booting is when you use the same physical hard drive. Windows doesn’t play nice sometimes on the same drive. Just do yourself a favor and buy a second ssd. Then you can break linux six ways to Sunday and always have a windows backup. (And if you want to be extra safe - you can just unplug your windows drive during Linux install and you can’t f up and pick the wrong drive by accident)
    2. dual booting is nice just in case something doesn’t work - you can easily switch back to windows.
    3. dual booting sucks because there’s very few things that don’t work in Linux - it just requires a little elbow grease to figure out. But having a windows partition right there leads to many people giving up way too early with fixing their issues.

    My recommendation is always to have more than one drive in your computer. It’s YOUR computer. Regardless of what you pick as your “main” OS, you always have another spot to screw around in. Distro hop, extra storage, set up a hiveos miner, whatever. Its flexibility and screwing around with other things helps you understand what’s YOUR computer vs what is Microsoft’s OS.

    • Reads this on his iOS phone
    • While playing modern games on fedora workstation 42
    • While all my backups and containers run on a synology nas
    • with a literal blank 2nd hard drive that used to have windows 10 on it but now has nothing
    • while his computer illiterate wife uses her hp laptop just fine with linux

    Ya… Go f yourself Microsoft. You used to be the cool kid in town. Now you’re trash.

  • I bought a psvr2 for my ps5. It’s really impressive but has three major flaws.

    1. it’s too hot. It seals against your face with a rubber gasket and turns into a sweat machine.
    2. vr in general causes motion/simulation sickness. Takes all the fun right out of the game.
    3. there’s no games for it. Even the “good” games suck. Beat saber being the exception to the rule.
  • Ok this is interesting. I wasn’t aware flatpaks could update on their own. I thought it was either “flatpak update” OR the package manager gui helper kicked off flatpak updates. I’ll have to dig into this on fedora. I’ve been running arch/endeavor for so long, it never occurred to me fedora may be auto updating flatpaks.

  • Linux Gaming @lemmy.world

    System needs to be updated for steam to work. Advice?

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    Linux really has come a long way

    Arch Linux @lemmy.ml

    CD to flac recommendations?

    Arch Linux @lemmy.ml

    Updating Arch the right way - Please critique my practices

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    What happens with optical drives