I always go LVM + BTRFS these days. I simply love the versatility.
One of the silliest of all time.
I always go LVM + BTRFS these days. I simply love the versatility.
Installing KDE Plasma on a Gnome installation breaks so much shit it’s not funny, but most of this seems to be a problem with the command line because doing it with YAST seems to prevent things from breaking.
To each their own, but Ubuntu’s repos are a bit fuller than Debian’s.
As someone who frequents the laptop market, I’ll throw in my two-cents.
If you’re looking for value, don’t compromise on performance, buy refurbished.
While I’m certain it is definitely different from country to country, a refurbished laptop typically has more life to give in them.
I’d recommend business laptops, such as the Dell Latitudes or the Lenovo Thinkpads, but an M1 MacBook Air provides an absolutely shocking amount of performance for the price.
Checking sites like eBay or the pages of hardware resellers rather than big box stores is definitely where I’d go.
My go-to cross platform trio right there.
I’ve seen many different ways of arranging a desktop before, and never have I seen a center clock on a bottom bar. Still, I do like it. 🎉
I have no clue how helpful this is because I was just looking stuff up, but the Arch wiki has an article on notifications that could help point you in the right direction if you haven’t looked at it already.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Desktop_notifications#Notification_servers
Damn, those are all winners in my book!
After one gets picked as the new default, will the others be available as options?
Thought experiment; shut the fuck up.
It’s a highly optimized cloud focused immutable Linux distribution.
That’d be based, but I don’t think there’s anything in that for them.
It’s not really that I dislike Snap, but the little petty war against Flatpak that Canonical has started is just an 'ick to me. Besides that, switching was a no brainer for me I like bleeding edge software, and I own an Intel Arc card, which benefits from the improvements found newer versions of Mesa.
I did the same thing, actually. 😅
Ubuntu drama, switched to Fedora
Red Hat drama, switched to OpenSUSE.
But now I have to learn everything because I’m still stuck on APT. I like Zypper and OPI, though. I just wish it wasn’t so freaking slow.
Adobe Illustrator - No way to use it on Linux without jumping through hoops like a circus poodle, but my school pays for it, and I don’t know how to use Inkscapes at the level that I know how to use Illustrator.
Because I’m stupid and like to run my partitions across multiple drives. 😅