Skip Navigation

User banner
Posts
0
Comments
244
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Obviously Glenda. You can tell by the lack of hat.

  • No, I'm with you. $120 a year is too steep for searching for me. I like what they are trying to do but I don't think the average person will spend that much.

  • I'll second this, stupid good battery life but a fairly simple watch. Doesn't do apps but it does health tracking and notifications and it's pretty good at looking like a watch instead of a toy.

  • Those are my favorite blades

  • That's fair. I don't think I personally use ligatures anywhere and I'm not experiencing any issues with foot after using it for a few years so I might just have to stay blissfully ignorant on this one ;)

    What do you use ligatures for?

  • Scribus has been around for a while, their UI looks like older versions of Microsoft Office. If you hover over the icon it will tell you what it does.

    Maybe I'm older than you but scribus feels like comfort food, it isn't loud and flashy and lets me focus on my work. I really don't like the gigantic touch friendly buttons on desktop apps personally, so I hope they don't go that way.

    I cannot see any settings to change the toolbar size but I'm not a scribus wizard either.

  • What distro ships my favorite term foot?

  • I remember

    Jump
  • I want one

  • That's actually pretty awesome. Bluetooth speakers are getting to the point where new features aren't really being released, so features like this actually helps a brand stand apart.

  • Let's break up both of their monopolies!

    Both of these companies played dirty to get on top, both hide money in tax havens. They both stiffle innovation.

  • If you base your opinion of vim from memes you are missing out. Anyone who can't take 10 minutes to type vimtutor in their terminal is not someone to base an opinion on. These memes come mostly from impatient people that can't read the docs. It's a fantastic text editor.

    That being said, it's not meant to be used for written words it's meant to write code and config files. You want to look for a word processor.

    Abiword, etherpad, focuswciter are probably the next 3 biggest on Linux behind libre and open office.

    Personally I prefer markdown for most things these days but it's not exactly meant for word processing either.

  • This is the big thing that all these Nvidia comments miss. It's not up to Wayland to support a given GPU. Nvidia is actively hostile to Linux users. If you aren't making money with cuda there are zero reasons to choose Nvidia on a Linux machine over the competition. I've been on Wayland for almost a decade now and there's no way I'm going back to X at this point.

  • I love the idea of gog but they need to invest in their own store. They need to make a client that's worth a damn, or make the website work better, or both. I routinely forget that gog exists, if I had a client on my computer with a store that worked I would probably give them more money. Getting old games from gog working on Linux is usually fine but new releases are often a shit show. Lack of steam deck support really kills my willingness to buy from them. I will never enjoy downloading X amounts of 4gb files to run a game, just use a better protocol like BitTorrent or something. I don't think it's fair to consumers that the best gog clients are 3rd party, unsupported and receive zero funding from CPR for making gog a usable platform.

    I don't like monopolies, but it's hard to argue that any other service offers the same value to the end user.

  • I cannot think of anything more French than this.

  • I somehow played Mario is missing on dos and SNES when I was a kid.