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  • I myself have been using linux for 15 years and disagree with what you've said.

    1. Learn how to install and update on Endeavor and you won't have to worry about much - it just works, on any hardware.

    Fedora always breaks on me, whether it be nvidia or amd. I used to love Fedora but found it breaks far more than otherwise.

    The Linux vernal is designed to work on up to current gen hardware. If anything the current gen nvidia stuff is rough (40 series). I've had no issues with 30 series or 7000 series amd GPUs.

    1. Why? Nothing wrong with using extensions. They're usually updated within a week if Gnome or KDE breaks them. With gnome I've had 10+ extensions with 0 issues across multiple computers.
    2. Not true. My dual boot has never broken on multiple computers. Whether is be Debian, Ubuntu, fedora, or arch.
    3. Also not great advice. I found Endeavor OS, which is Arch to run the best. PopOS was the only other one that just worked.
    4. This I do agree with; hyprland, i3, etc take a long time to fine tune. While tiling managers do help with productivity, setting them up takes a while.
    5. Flatpaks should not replace system packages. They tend to be updated much slower and scaling can be weird on them.
  • I own the Kobo Libra H2O and the Boox Air 2, both are amazing for different reasons.

    Kobo is small and portable, fantastic for reading in bed.

    Boox Air 2 has pen support and runs android. Fantastic for note taking, large PDF files, and so. It is a bit big at 7in screen, pretty much a tablet.

  • I use hyprland with KDE as my fall back.

    My hyprland config is 95% stable but some apps give me a hard time, so I'll just run them in KDE.

    I find KDE just works. With a baby, things need to work more often than not.

  • I use florisboard beta, missing some features but nothing I don't need.

    Spell check is there, but only after you finish typing the word. (No predictive text yet)

    Edit: I am trying Heliboard and so far its pretty good.

  • I use lsposed + hidemyapplist. Sometimes apps look for magisk, or other signs of being rooted. That will hide them all.

    I also have magisk hide and sulist enabled. They also help hide root by preventing apps from requesting root unless explicitly allowed. It also hides magisk, which bank apps usually look for.

    Edit: A bit redundant now that I think about it, but I haven't had any issues.

  • I practice Northern Long Fist KungFu and Shaolin KungFu. I have also practiced Uechi-Ryū in the past.

    I chose these styles because all have practical applications in combat and have been used for combat at one point during their existence. To me, this alone proves they're useful to learn.

    I also spar and have applied what I've learned to matches. So I do believe these styles are worth looking into and learning.

    To bring it back to your post. Self defence is great to know wherever you live, even if you'll never use it. Most teachers are very loud and use visuals for teaching, I don't think you'll have any issues.

  • My servers are on 24/7, currently they use about 100watts each (I have 2 running), which adds maybe $20 to my electric bill. I also have stuff such as mailcow, nextcloud, and mattermost running, turning off every night would make those applications useless.

    I have a shit APC desktop UPS. It keeps them on for 10-15 minutes at best.

  • I came from vscode and nano. I wanted something within the terminal as powerful as vscode. I tried doom emacs and vim but they didn't feel right.

    Reasons I use it:

    • I found it easier to learn than vim/emacs in my opinion
    • Written in rust
    • Pretty easy to get language servers running
    • config is super easy