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data1701d (He/Him)
data1701d (He/Him) @ data1701d @startrek.website
Posts
101
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737
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • I tried UE5 on Debian Testing and it seemed to work fine.

    If it works there, it’ll probably work on almost anything.

    Personally, I dislike Ubuntu, but if it’s been working for you, you shouldn’t have problems.

    I really like Debian and think it’s not too difficult, but it isn’t for everyone and might not be your thing.

    EDIT: Looking at the website for UE5, almost any distro released in the past 3 years should do the trick so long as the distro works on your hardware.

  • I mostly prefer Detail view, but I enable Icon view in Videos, Photos, and Music folders so I can see previews.

    I’m guessing most file managers have similar behavior, but on XFCE Thunar, I’m able to set detail as the default but have it remembery choice per folder.

  • What the heck! I might have to go for this one!

    Some of them aren’t that interesting to me - I own a lot of these, but some of these I’ve wanted really bad.

    Sucks there’s not the Who crossover on here, but nuts anyway.

  • Did this significantly speed up the font menu? I might have to try that!

  • While (I think) you can install HWE (hardware enablement) kernels on Mint, you would also have to upgrade Mesa, which is not as easy on Mint.

    Personally in this case, for a truly stable distro, I’d install Debian Stable and install a backports kernel and backports Mesa, which are both currently versions that should support RDNA4 GPUs like OPs just fine. This involves two simple steps after installing:

    1. Enable the Debian Backports Repo (see https://backports.debian.org/Instructions/). It’s like, one file.
    2. Install the packages with something like sudo apt install -t bookworm-backports linux-image-amd64 mesa-va-drivers and reboot.

    Before you take these steps, you probably won’t have hardware acceleration, but will still get video output so you can perform the steps and reboot.

    This is definitely a weird suggestion, and other people’s suggestions might be less work out of the box. I just like Debian, and stability+backports+testing is part of what makes it possible for it to be my everything distro.

  • At least they have two whole seasons to wrap stuff up and know about the end ahead of time, unlike Lower Decks, which got the memo in the middle of season development.

  • If only Cycles would ever work on AMD Polaris…

    Though honestly, I’ll probably get around to a GPU upgrade eventually. Rocm packaging looks to be pretty much done on Debian, although they still seem to need time on the problem of keeping it reasonably up to date in Testing and Sid - momentum will probably pick up after Trixie leaves hard freeze and goes stable.

    Honestly, it’d be kind of nice to have a project with a repo that does nothing most of the time except during the Testing freeze, in which it would deliver package updates and keep Testing as a rolling release during that time.

    I get why Debian doesn’t do this themselves - they tried and found it hell to both prepare a stable release and package new versions.

  • Two things:

    • What input device(s) are you using? Are you using the built-in laptop keyboard, or a gamepad of sorts. (By Balatro, I'd assume it might even be happening with mouse.)
    • Are you running these games on a platform like Steam, or are you running another way? (I'm assuming the answer is yes to Steam, by Balatro and Stardew.)

    For Steam, try messing around with Steam input settings and see what happens.

  • Although Wesley’s acceptance occurred only months after Wolf 359 - it’s possible that event caused Starfleet to more easily accept cadets (including Wesley), and just happened to benefit Nog’s chances.

    The Dominion tensions around the time of Nog’s admission may have also put Starfleet on edge and caused them to continue Wolf 359 era admission policies.

  • Oh yeh. The font menu is crap. I can’t argue with that.

    It’s one of those mysterious annoying things that’s up there with the GTK file picker in some apps taking 10 seconds to load.

    But I also don’t change fonts that often. Still, that has much room for improvement.

  • Debian Stable actually updates Firefox ESR through the typically on by default security channel.

    The current ESR version in there is 128, which is about a year old, which replaced the 115 that came with Debian 12 by default.

    The newest ESR, 140 just came out 2 weeks ago. 128 still has 2 months of security updates, and 140 has already been packaged for sid. I have no doubts 140 will come before those 2 months are up.

    Now the KDE thing actually sounds like it sucks.

  • As with others, I love Debian Stable.

    Most packages have sane defaults, and it's so stable. It's true that it sometimes means older software versions, but there's also something to be said for behavior staying the same for two years at a time.

    If hardware support is an issue, using the backports repo is really easy - I've been using it on my laptop for almost a year with no problems that don't exist on other distros. If you really need the shiniest new application, Flatpak isn't that bad.

    It also feels in a nice position - not so corporate as to not give a darn about its community, but with enough funding and backing the important stuff gets maintained.

  • The "Harry Kim" thing was mostly just a joke. I guess the more literal phrasing of my question is how did someone, over less than three years, go from seemingly severely inadequate education to being accepted into Starfleet Academy and becoming an effective officer.

  • What do you mean by "window roll-up"?

    Also, the settings menu thing is weird - mine takes less than a second to load, and I'm on a machine with a 7 year old processor at this point. I almost worry that if that takes a long time KDE will be more miserable performance-wise, unless you've already tried it on here.

    By the way, what distro and XFCE version are you running - just for good measure.

    The outdated sentiment is probably based, honestly. I think it's gotten better, but there are rough edges. In the end, do what works for you.

  • I feel like a lot of your points were true at one point, but are becoming lest relevant.

    For one, at least with XFCE, I found myself not really running into DE bugs.

    Also, I don't think two years is as obnoxious anymore. During the era of the GTK 4 transition a couple, it drove me nuts, but now that a lot of APIs like that have stabilized, I really don't notice much of a difference between Debian Testing and Stable. I installed and daily drove Bookworm late in its lifecycle on my laptop, and in terms of DE and applications, I haven't noticed anything. I get the feeling Debian's gotten better at maintenance in the past few years - I especially see this with Firefox ESR. There was a time where the version was several months behind the latest major release of ESR, but usually it now only takes a month or two for a new ESR Firefox to come to Debian Stable, well within the support window of the older release.

    Also, I don't think Flatpaks are a huge dealbreaker anyway - no matter what distro you're using, you're probably going to end up with some of them at some point because there's some application that is the best at what it does and is only distributed as a Flatpak.

    Frankly, I probably am a terrible reference for gaming, as I'm a very casual gamer, but I've found Steam usually eliminates most of these issues, even on Debian.

    Also, the official backports repository has gotten really easy. My laptop had an unsupported Wi-Fi chipset (it was brand new), so I just installed over ethernet, added the repo, and the install went smoothly. There were a few bugs, but none of these were specific to Debian. Stability has been great as ever.

    In conclusion, I think right around Bookworm, Debian went from being the stable savant to just being an all-around good distro. I'll elaborate more on why I actually like Debian in a comment directly replying to the main post.

    I might disagree with 99.999% like you - maybe I'd put it in the 50-75% range.

  • Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    How did Nog go from not literally being able to read to outranking Harry Kim?

    Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    How did Nog go from not literally being able to read to outranking Harry Kim?

  • Before you give up on XFCE and/or Chicago95 - have you replaced the default menu with Whisker Menu? For me, Whisker Menu is a must-have for any sane XFCE user. When I used it with Chicago95, I found I could have a Windows 7 style interface with Windows 95 aesthetics.

    Honestly, even if Chicago95 is aesthetically not what you want, I'd recommend trying an alternate theme on XFCE - I currently use modified DesktopPal '97 combined with a pack of Haiku-style icons.

    Overall, I'd be interested to know more about your qualms with XFCE and see if customization can help you overcome them. A lot of distros have annoying defaults for XFCE, but I changed a few simple settings and have a desktop I rather enjoy using. It is totally fine if it still isn't the thing for you after any potential discussion, but I just want to make sure you really know what XFCE has to offer before you move on.

  • I spent 4-6 hours the other day trying to figure out the equivalent of Hello World for a MediaWiki parser function extension.

    In theory, they have a quick start guide, but that documentation has so many errors, and I spent ages jumping between PHP and a JSON configuration file I barely understood.

    At least it's working now. Now time to figure out how the heck to properly interact with the MediaWiki database!

    (Perhaps once I'm a bit more confident in MediaWiki development, I'll see if I can tidy up some that documentation.)

  • Yeh. They really did C++ unnecessarily dirty.

  • I'd take a well-maintained native package for my distro over a Flatpak, but sometimes, a Flatpak is just the the easiest way to get the latest version of an application working on Debian without too much tinkering - not always no tinkering, but better than nothing.

    This is especially true of GIMP - Flatpak GIMP + Resynthesizer feels like the easiest way to experience GIMP these days. Same with OBS - although I have to weather the Flatpak directory structure, plugins otherwise feel easier to get working than the native package. The bundled runtimes are somewhat annoying, but I'm also not exactly hurting for storage at the moment - I could probaby do to put more of my 2 TB main SSD to use.

    I usually just manage Flatpaks from the terminal, though I often have to refresh myself on application URLs. I somewhat wish one could set nicknames so they need not remember the full name.

  • Risa @startrek.website

    You Probably Get That A Lot

    Risa @startrek.website

    To his credit, Tom Kenny has done good stuff for Trek before

    Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    How was T'Ana able to recognize the era of Earth by smell (or did she)?

    Risa @startrek.website

    So it's a prequel, then?

    Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    Why did they revive Nova squadron in the 2380s?

    Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    Interesting Observation of Ferengi Gender Roles in Nagus Rom Era

    Risa @startrek.website

    I think this format has a lot of potential.

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    FYI: Audio Crackling Bug with Pipewire 1.4.1 + FluidSynth in Debian Testing/Unstable and Work-Around

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Will SNW (or any future Trek) Retcon Mojave, California?

    Risa @startrek.website

    They Might Be Giants - Why Did You Grow a Beard - Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 5 Fan Music Video

    Risa @startrek.website

    Honestly, I haven’t watched Severance, but I couldn’t not do this.

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    My Attempt at Jellico circa 2381

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Has Anyone Else Noticed Jellico's Face Constantly Changes in Prodigy?

    Risa @startrek.website

    Gul Donal Wants a Statue

    Risa @startrek.website

    Don't Worry, guys! I've Gone Trek in a They Might Be Giants board as well!

    Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    Las Vegas, Nevada in the 24th Century?

    Risa @startrek.website

    Make a Little Birdhouse in Your Warp Core

    Risa @startrek.website

    You're not the boss of me now!