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Joined
2 yr. ago

  • My boy! Look how they massecured my boy!

    Sionara, lean windows 7 start menu

  • The thing about open source is it can usually be rebuilt for anything, and most linux apps are open source. The singular exception I've ever come across was a PS4 emulator of all things. Name a linux app and I can practically promise there's a windows version, baring things like pulseaudio and kwin that are entrenched at lower levels of the OS and realistically can't be ported to microsofts walled garden.

    Did you know you can build pacman (the archlinux package manager) for windows? Its used for distributing certain switch homebrew and cross compiler toolchains across all platforms.

  • I notice you didn't claim to be cis

  • "They may be unstable but at least they notice when I'm in the room" -> As an arch user, fair. I can feel the change in air pressure as the door opens so I notice despite the noise canceling headphones

  • TOP averages out readings from the last few seconds. If there aren't enough samples the displayed values can beโ€ฆ off

  • Broke: touch woman
    Woke: become woman

  • openssh

    Jump
  • scp autocomplete be like

  • KDE, with breeze and a custom colour scheme. I find it less likely to lead to usability issues.

  • Ah yes, because linux drivers never break!

    You might not understand the pain if you don't own a tv tuner card but trust me, it's ROUGH!

  • The stifling of innovation. So that's more of a feature to microsoft

  • Linux has technical debt. The kernel only just stopped supporting the i386. I can't imagine what patches upon patches were required to make the same code run on even 2 processors released 40 years apart, let alone every processor released in between.

  • Rebuilding the app for the newer version is an objectively better solution, because it allows you to take advantage to new features. 64-bit migrations are a game changer for example. But its an ungodly amount of effort. Every single sodding package has a person responsible for building it for every distro that supports it. Its only because its on the distros to make a given program work on their distro that the system works at all. I agree that I'd rather it be rebuilt to fit into the new system. But that's a lot of work. Never forget that.

  • I'll say it once, I'll say it forever: Windows has better backward compatibility, period. Even compared to linux. Rebuilding an old open source linux app to work on a modern distro can be done, but it's a process that could take hours or days. And if you don't have the source code you're shit out of luck. Have fun getting that binary built against a 1 year old version of glibc to work. This, incidentally is what things like flatpak, docker and ubuntu's nonsense competitor to both (of which our hatred is entirely rational no really stop laughing) are trying to solve.

    Meanwhile microsoft office still handles leap years wrong because it might break backwards compatibility with old documents. Binaries built for windows xp will usually just work on windows 11. Packages built for ubuntu 22.0 often won't run on ubuntu 23.0. You never notice this because linux are a culture of recompilers. Rebuilding every last package once a month is just how some distros roll. But that's not backwards compatibility, that's ongoing maintenance.

  • Finally, I do wish there was a simpler, more paint.net-like editor rather than GIMP, and Iโ€™m sure itโ€™s out there somewhere, but otherwise basically every thing on that list of features works well enough for me.

    Pinta my dude

  • Magnetic media is still king of price to capacity (Hard drives) and I literally do still record broadcast television on one of my linux boxes

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    So apparently you can just, type the word eject into bash and it will pop open your disk drive

    • Fedora makes very minimal changes to downstream. The gnome experience on fedora is the experience the devs intended, for better or worse.
    • It often experiments with new technologies. It was the first to ship pulseaudio out of box. And then again for pipewire. And if it wasn't the first to install wayland by default, it probably was the first to stop shipping XOrg out of box.
    • It doesn't install snaps instead of native packages when you run rpm install
    • It's also Linus Torvald's distro of choice if that's worth anything
  • Snap...

    Jump
  • at 112 megabytes per instance that amounts to about 178 flatpaks. Which sounds pretty standard

  • Snap...

    Jump
  • Oh come on, mesa is only (checks) 112 megabytes!

    you know what, carry on!

  • this is beautiful. I don't drink coffee, but "I don't need anything more" is my life ethos from everything to my IDE to the wooden backed kitchen chair I game on.

  • If you're going to shill a corpo distro, at least shill a decent one like fedora.