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2 yr. ago

  • I've been thinking about keeping a running windows on the side once I switch my "gaming" system. There's two things that won't work well (or at all) on Linux: fully PC-tethered wireless SteamVR with my current hardware (HTC Cosmos Elite), and a ripping software.

    I might keep a small windows running for VR (although I'm currently looking into trashing the hardware if a good alternative shows up). For the ripping software, I'll just stitch a script that uses existing open source software to do roughly the same thing.

    And I might just get a small box, like a 200something computer with only Steam and the wireless card, to remote play VR through it, if that's an option.

    Bye bye windows.

  • As someone outside the US, I was told that people were very keen on keeping lots of guns to react in case the government tried to pull this kind of shit. When's the part where they react?

    I'm sarcastic; I know why it isn't happening, and realistically it would be a terrible thing, but, you know, we're living in the weirdest time.

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  • also the “GUI” for debuggers on Linux aee pretty much just separate terminals for gdb, and often I can’t just jank my way out with printf() from various issues

    And that is an issue because…?

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  • vim can't use the kde/wayland clipboard to copy/past properly, you have to script it through something. I've read it's related to non foreground app not being able to manipulate the clipboard or something close to that, which a CLI app will never be.

    There are "solutions", mostly overriding vim behavior to write/read from that dedicated program, though. It's not a show stopper, but not every software allow this kind of flexibility.

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  • Still won't handle popup menu correctly, still won't allow copy/paste with CLI programs without using an extra, implementation-specific, piece of software, still won't allow some window to correctly detect their position.

    Wayland might be interesting, but between blind haters and blind supporters, it's really annoying. Forcing people to switch while some basic features are "mostly working" is not helping.

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  • I get the joke, but I'm getting tired of these very, very old memes being reposted ad-nauseam when they're so outdated. I did not have to open the xorg.conf file for at least a decade, probably more. It was a very annoying thing to do, yes, but hasn't been an issue for a lot of install in forever.

    There's a resurgence of these "but it's very weird/difficult/annoying" outdated memes these last few weeks on a lot of websites, and at this point I'm wondering if it's just people discovering them or just some people bashing linux systems based on their experience from the last century.

  • something buzzing on my wrist all the time would drive me batty

    It's the same when it's in your pocket. I'd say the issue is not that it buzz all the time on your wrist, but that it buzz all the time. I disabled most notifications, except for a selection of people and apps. When I get a notification, it is usually important enough that I should check it. Everything else (including non-emergency work stuff) is checked on my own accord, when I feel like it.

    Having the notifications pop on my wrist, with that system, does not feel like a shackle more than a phone constantly turning its screen on to tell you you have unread whatever.

  • It's interesting. As "regular" people, years ago, we already had this mindset of only having disposable electronics to visit the US, and the situation wasn't as dire as today. I wonder how much of this is actual news.