Skip Navigation

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/)LE
Posts
0
Comments
1,656
Joined
2 yr. ago

Permanently Deleted

Jump
  • Flatpak is literally installing a second Linux distribution on your machine, just without a kernel. All the dependencies right down to the C library are installed in the Flatpak environment. This why you can run a Glibc Flatpak on a musl distro.

    Microsoft could support Flatpak “natively” on Windows. It could use the same kernel and GUI glue that WSL uses but you have no need of specifying a distro or getting to the command-line. The experience could just be that you go into Flathub, install and remove apps, and everything would just work.

    Apple could do the same with macOS.

    If they did that, Flatpak could be a universal app distribution method on all three systems. Devs would only have to create and maintain a single version if they wanted.

    Microsoft will not do that of course. If it really was a brainlessly simple alternative application store, they could OS/2 themselves and loose control of the platform.

    Too bad though. It would be cool. No reason it could not be done independent of Microsoft of course but it would never be as popular if it was not built in.

  • I favour Arch because I prefer everything I want to install to be in the package repo and for it to be a version actually new enough to use.

    But I actually use EndeavourOS because it is 99% Arch but installs easily with full hardware support on everything I own (including a T2 Macbook). It never fails me.

    And now I have realized that I can use Distrobox to get the Arch repos and the AUR on any dostro I wish.

    So, I now have Chimera Linux on 4 machines because it is the best engineered distro in my view. The system supervisor, system compiler, and C library matter to me (not to everyone). All these machines have the AUR on them (via distrobox). Best of all worlds.

  • You are going to want to use the AUR, so you need yay or paru (not just pacman). You can either still use pacman (for non-AUR stuff) or just one of the others for everything.

    They all use the same switches.

  • I am not advocating. However, we should all understand that there are many countries with mandatory military service that do not use them in war.

    In addition to military preparedness and defence, it can be an opportunity for greater citizen engagement and to significantly invest in training and skills. This has social and economic benefits beyond war.

    Sweden has mandatory military service. How many wars have they started in your lifetime.

    Again, not taking a position. Just pointing out that mandatory military service does not have to translate into young men in body bags.

  • That happens to the commercial folks too. It is just the nature of the adoption curve.

    It is the same with price. A few will say that your product is already worth 10x the price. Most will say it’s too expensive. If you drop the price, a few more will see the value. Lots won’t.

    More users is more users though. It is not something to get discouraged about. The advantage with Open Source is that, as long as it is useful to some, we have almost an infinite amount of time to expand it to new audiences. Baby steps pay off for Open Source.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • RHEL 9 defaulted to Wayland in 2022. RHEL 10 will not even include Xorg.

    I agree that businesses lag, often by years. So the fact that RHEL is so far along in the Wayland transition kind of shows how out-of-date the anti-Wayland rhetoric is.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Your point is that it is still rough and then you bring up a bunch of stuff that is no longer an issue.

    NVIDIA in particular is a solved problem with both explicit sync and open source kernel modules as the default from NVIDIA themselves.

    RDP, Rustdesk, and Waypipe are probably going to eat into your billion dollars (and network transparency laments).

    As stated in the article, opt-out vsync is already a thing (though not widely implemented yet).

    I have not used GNOME in a while but KDE on Wayland is great. And the roadmap certainly looks a lot nicer than xorg’s.

    I was on a video call in Wayland an hour ago. I shared my screen. I did not think about it much at the time but, since you brought it up….

    If that is your full list, I think you just made the case that Wayland is in good shape.

    RHEL 9 defaulted to Wayland in 2022 and RHEL 10 will not even include Xorg as an option. Clearly the business world is transitioning to Wayland just fine.

    GNOME and KDE both default to Wayland. So, most current Linux desktops do as well.

    X11 will be with us a long time but most Linux users will not think about it much after this year. They will all be using Wayland.

  • Politics is real.

    Look at the US. Winning matters. A lot. A lot more than just being right.

    Dying on hills that cannot be held is not leadership.

    Knowing what battles to fight is leadership.

    Canada deserves the politicians it is willing and able to elect. Blaming politicians for the quality of candidate that the electorate will consider is folly. Point your derision in the right direction. We are not in a situation where Canadians are demanding something that our leaders are not delivering. On some issues, we are demanding that our leaders do not deliver.

    The problem is us.

  • With the AUR, there is an “it depends” since AUR packages are unofficial and variable in quality.

    That said, I have a strong bias for installing the distro package over using AppImage or Flatpak.

    There are three reasons not to use the distro package:

    • the package is not available
    • the package is too old
    • the package maintainer cannot be trusted

    My #1 reason for using Arch is to eliminate 1 and 2. In my experience, the AUR is almost always fine for #3.

    Even when I use another distro, I put Distrobox with Arch on it and get any of the packages that the distro does not have from there.

    The only Flatpak I have had to install has been pgAdmin.

  • While I agree with your emotion, let’s please also not abandon facts.

    One in three Americans voted for Trump. So we cannot with any certainty say that any American individual did.

    That said, as a group, they did elect him. One third voted for him and one third did not voted—allowing him to win. So I agree completely that they elected him and they do not get a pass for that.

    However, I do not know how any individual voted.

  • Performance is not the ISA. It is just the culmination of historical investment. It will get there.

    Remember, it is not about licensing costs, it is about minimizing risk and maximizing flexibility (control).

    Open always wins.

  • Accusing people of disliking the group you wish you were a part of is an attack on that group. You are using them as human shields.

    If she was actually a strong woman, she would not have to trot out such a weak excuse for why people are mad at her. Stand up for your own actions. Be strong. You know, what you say you are. Don’t plead immunity because of the protected class you want to claim membership in.

    There are lots of strong women. They do not need Smith diminishing their reputation.

  • Except he does care about his reputation. It is all he cares about. He is just wrong about what helps it.

    He will go down as the dumbest and weakest President ever. He cares. But without a ghost of Presidents past intervention, he will not believe it. He feels tough right now and, I believe, honestly thinks he is right on tariffs. He is wrong and history will record it so, but he really believes it.

  • China is more stable and reasonable. Normally, the problem with China is that they are authoritarian despots. In the current situation, the US is matching them on the authoritarian despot front. So, China wins by being more stable and reasonable.

    Moving away from doing business with China is a problem that has to be solved in the next ten year. Moving away from the US needs to happen now.