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Users of all levels are welcome to ask questions about GNU/Linux and share experiences.
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$ man %command%
$ info %command%
$ %command% -h/--help
$ help %builtin/keyword%
Don't know what to look for?
$ apropos %something%
Try a random distro:
https://distrosea.com
https://distro.moe
Check the Wikis (most troubleshoots work for all distros):
https://wiki.archlinux.org
https://wiki.gentoo.org
https://wiki.debian.org
/g/'s Wiki on GNU/Linux:
https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Category:GNU/Linux
>What distro should I choose?
https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Babbies_First_Linux
>What are some cool programs?
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/list_of_applications
https://directory.fsf.org/wiki/Main_Page
https://suckless.org/rocks/
>What are some cool terminal commands?
https://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/browse
https://cheat.sh/
>Where can I learn the command line?
https://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashGuide
https://www.grymoire.com/Unix/
https://overthewire.org/wargames/bandit
https://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/Bash-Beginners-Guide.ht ml
>Where can I learn more about Free Software?
https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/philosophy.html
>How to break out of the botnet?
https://prism-break.org/en/categories/gnu-linux
GNU/Linux Games:
>>>/vg/lgg
Previous thread: >>107986853
315 RepliesView Thread
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I've got a question after being off /g/ for some time (5 year GNU+Linux user).
Looked at Distrowatch for the first time in many moon cycles. Notice CachyOS is well over 4k hpd. MX Linux & Mint follow, distantly at over 2k, BUT MX & Mint were always around 2k in the number 1 & 2 slots.
Is this Win11 at work?
Is this "The Year" ?
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>>108005559
There's a new massive wave of new Linux users. CachyOS is just a popular pick since it's marketed as a "high performance distro", a "gaming distro" and a "distro for power users".
>Is this Win11 at work?
Pretty much yes. But also partially Valve/SteamOS. CachyOS is based on Arch just like SteamOS and techtubers have promoted it as a good alternative to SteamOS which many gamer normies want to try out or use. The other one being pushed is Bazzite.
>Is this "The Year" ?
Could be, at least to some extent. Especially since Steam Machine is being released. So there's finally a more mainstream Linux-only pre-built PC.
But there's a high chance it will become irrelevant in 5 years just like Manjaro did. Pic related.
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>>108005559
Influencers are doing their thing. It won't stick. Problem to a new cummer is that there is too much choice and if one thing gets promoted as the gayming distro...
In reality they would be better of with some standard redhat or debian.
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>>108005569
It seems like a pretty significant bump. If I remember correctly (probably not) the number 1 & 2 HPD's were usually around 2k each. I probably need to look back at those numbers and see. Even if the HPD's are are on the rise; I suppose you're right about "the Year", it's not.
>>108005657
Steam Machine is being released? Interesting.
>>108005681
>better of with some standard redhat or debian
Maybe Fedora for a while before CachyOS? I don't Arch so I can't really speak to that.
>it won't stick
We'll see, the hate for win11 seems pretty strong. Many tech Influencers have been posting at least occasionally for GNU/Linux for years, so win users finally saying win11 is too far can step into Linux with a lot more assurance than the win7-10 jumpers had.
I'm not sure that made any sense.
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>>108005681
>Start my fedora installation
>Nothing proprietary is allowed to be installed by default
>Sounds fine
>Turns out youtube videos and webm don't play
>No nvidia drivers by default too
>Try to use report program to report something
>Retrace failed every single time
>Look up fedora stack for something
>It was written 10 versions and there's no note if it works on current
More nerd shit for people who spend more time ricing their computer than actually using it. Sasuga.
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use case for ads in my fucking notifications?
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>>108002979
>>108002992
Have the same issue on https://riceballman.web.fc2.com//frame.html
When I opened the Inspect I noticed the website has a custom priority list for which font it wants you to use, so it overrides whatever you choose for it
>FontAAB
>font-family: "Mona","IPA モナー Pゴシック","IPAMonaPGothic","IPA mona PGothic","IPA MONAPGOTHIC","MS PGothic AA","mona-gothic-jisx0208.1990-0","MS PGothic","MS Pゴシック", "Saitamaar", sans-serif;
It doesn't seem to be working very well though. I think its supposed to set the font to the one with highest priority one first, which should be Mona, but due to a mistake it sets the font to sans-serif?
Not sure if that applies to your website too though.
What IS useful is that I just used some addon to override the font manually, I think stylebot. Its a bit tricky to use though.
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>>108006389
Yes but not in the control center. You need dconf-editor
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>>108006483
Typical GNOME.
>We need a way for power users and enterprise customers to disable this nag
>Do we put it in the settings?
>Hell no! That would be too confusing. Let's make the user type out some magic dconf command to disable it instead.
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>>108006486
Do you think CachyOS is currently a botted number? win11 hate might really be that strong AND hardware prices might be pushing win users to GNU+Linux with very capable win10 machines. I don't game so I have no idea what win11 game compatibility looks like.
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>>108006699
Yeah, sorry about that comment/question. The 2019-21 reference to MX had me thinking briefly there was some scandal I missed (my first dive into GNU+Linux was in '21 with a C2D laptop with antiX, later bodhi Linux).
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>>108007185
>Ragebaiting for tech support
Its a explanation on why suggesting Fedora to a newcomer is retarded. It actually contributes to the thread, unlike your shitposting.
>>108007206
I'm fine, but thanks.
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>>108007136
I've had the same 'crap' on my machines (2 dtops, 3 laps) for a quite a while now, so not crap and no MSwins for 5 years. I haven't posted here in almost a year so prolly not the same shitposters. Anything else?
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Why does compiling from source feel so good bros?
I really like when my terminal shits text on the screen and goes brrrr... haha
And when it's done I get to enjoy a great piece of software compiled to my own liking
Thank you RMS for giving us this wonderful gift
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when i log in to my cachyos install, i get a black screen for about ~2 seconds before my desktop appears, though i can still type things so the DE is definitely loaded behind it. the input selection icon (hdmi 1) appears on my monitor's osd so i think the monitor is actually losing signal when this happens. i'm still using sddm, might switching to the new plasma login manager that ships with the latest iso fix this? not a big deal but it'd be nice to have the login as instant as everything else seems to be on linux.
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I want to host a server somewhere like a VPS basicallly whats decent nowadays? I switched from linode to digital ocean but then DO went down the fucking shitter. What a pile of trash. I just want to host a basic ass go website and not have it be slow as fuck.
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>>108007897
that isn't true though
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>>108007749
I'm using Vultr for a prod web app. I investigated Hetnzer recently because they give you about 2x the hardware for 1/2 the price, but testing what they give you the 1vCPU on Vultr outperformed the 2 vCPUs on Hetzner. These are dedicated VPS. I would think that any dedicated VPS would be plenty for just a website, though. Probably 10s to hundreds of websites depending on traffic.
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I’ve have this old but reliable Alienware 17 R3, and after falling for the “Windows 10 is going EOL” meme, I decided to install Bazzite. Everything works great except for Bluetooth on the Intel Killer 1535—it doesn’t seem to understand LE and always defaults to BR/EDR. My DualShock 4 and Steam Controller pair fine initially, but if I turn them off and back on, they won’t reconnect. The same happens with my SteelSeries Arctis and DeathAdder. Every time I use Bluetooth, I have to delete the devices, restart the systemd Bluetooth dæmon, and pair them again. I’ve spent 40 minutes troubleshooting with no success. Is there a fix for this, or is it just how it is? If I can’t get Bluetooth working on Linux, I’ll go back to Windows 10 LTSC. The annoying part is that I just transferred most of the stuff from my mechanical 1TB drive to the NVMe just to reformat said drive from NTFS to XFS... and if I switch back to Windows 10, I’ll have to do it all over again.
Is not a rant about Linux; its great, but I'm not buying a new wireless card.
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>>108008008
If by including drivers you mean module files, those modules won't load unless the device is there. Or if the "feature" isn't there, like using a filesystem only takes the module when needed.
Although there's stuff like virtualisation support you could ditch and save memory. And firewalling, that seems to load no matter what.
>>108007440
Use some super old kernel branch. Define maximum CPUs to the number of cores you currently have. Disable virtualisation unless you use it. Disable the '64-bit kernel' option.
You can spend days or even weeks neckbearding with that shit, I've done it.
>menuconfig
Isn't nconfig better?
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So I just got a new hard drive for my old gaming pc and I want to use it as a testing rig to try out different distros and experiment with them.
Right now on my main pc I use Mint Cinnamon, but I’ve heard other distros, like fedora, are better. What actually is the best distro for gaming? Other than Bazzite. Is CatchyOS good?
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>>108006183
>>Turns out youtube videos and webm don't play
I use to have that problem until I typed this in the terminal
>sudo dnf swap ffmpeg-free ffmpeg --allowerasing
Now webms/mp4s work on /wsg/ without a problem
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>2026
>still not a single fucking linux distribution that just works as a desktop with an appstore
Holy shit, when will linooox ever be usable. KDE is the most windowsesque you could say in its design, requirements and function and it still fails.
Your choices are kubuntu with snaps or manual installation with debian/arch. You could use MX linux but parents cant use that since theres no easy app store.
How hard is it to just fucking make a debian distribution with discover flatpak. For gaymers they can
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>>108007440
Disable CPU vuln. mitigations.
>>108008840
>Is CatchyOS good?
Yes.
>>108009298
>Your choices are kubuntu with snaps or manual installation with debian/arch
CachyOS, Bazzite, Aurora
>How hard is it to just fucking make a debian distribution with discover flatpak
Oh so you just want debian? It's not really made for KDE unless you use the rolling release version of Debian.
>For gaymers they can
Most "gaymer" distros are also good multipurpose distros. You don't need to play games or keep stuff like Steam installed or enabled.
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>>108009668
Snap infested shit, although I will say kubuntu is the least shit out of all preinstalled KDE desktops if you choose the minimal option. That's what I'm using.
Now to a new user snaps may not be a big deal but flatpak is much better. Debian with the latest. Some kind of immutable arch distro with regular apps and discover flatpak as the main app store would be perfect. SteamOS fills that requirement but its not available and is too corporate.
Bazzite is unusable because everything is a flatpak which is absolutely retarded because its destroys load times on applications like your media player or opening images. Makes your PC feel slow and random. Sometimes it opens near instant, sometimes it takes a second, sometimes it takes 2 seconds to open an image.
>>108009708
Broken for new users, no codecs, basically unusable and they have their own retarded flatpak repos that consistently break flathub when you add it to discover.
>>108009709
CachyOS is a flavor of the month based on arch with the worst installer known to man, bazzite see above, aurora. I guess there's ultramarine that takes fedoras retardation and fixes it.
Arch+Immutable with flatpaks as the main source with a non retarded app store is the future but there's none.
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>>108009718
>Broken for new users, no codecs
Well true, but other than that I would say its closest to your requirements. Don't know what you mean with the Fedora flatpaks, I don't really use flatpaks that much. It looks like you can remove them easily from Settings.
Fedora KDE, Debian + KDE and Kubuntu all seem like they would fit your requirements of "easy KDE distro with GUI installer".
I like Arch and it would probably be my second choice but, I just don't want to check archlinux.org before updates or use the AUR at all.
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>>108009718
>Arch+Immutable with flatpaks as the main source with a non retarded app store is the future but there's none.
It's called SteamOS. You can install Bazaar if you dislike Discover. It will be "available" as soon as the gabecube is released. "KDE Linux" would be another option I guess.
>Bazzite is unusable because everything is a flatpak
This is just false. It has a package manager unlike SteamOS. So there's nothing forcing you to use flatpak. "rpm-ostree install mpv" work fine. rpm-ostree is basically dnf that applies changes in the form of system images. And bazzite itself comes with brew and distrobox/distroshelf as options for your CLI and non-fedora packages.
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>>108009818
Well here is your ~700K kernel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2Juz5sQyYQ
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I don't think linux desktop will ever be perfect compared to windows 10. Windows 10 I never have to change much besides just switching to dark theme.
KDE is the closest to windows and even then I have to do so many changes to make it function.
Add flatpak and flathub to discover
Turn off screen edges fully
Change the default color to materia dark
Change the accent color back to breeze blue
Turn off floating taskbar
Turn off mouse cursor feedback
Change keyboard speed
Not a huge deal just noting this.
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>>108005569
Why do people keep insisting CachyOS is a meme distro? Out of the box it provides you Btrfs snapshots totally preconfigured, along with Zram and other niceties. Until other Arch-based distros default to these, CachyOS is well and truly the definitive Arch experience.
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>>108010586
Firefox is perfectly good to use. Some posters here like Librewolf, Brave, and Vivaldi. Out of those I only really like Vivaldi but I use Firefox because I’m used to it. I recommend that you explore your options, but you may (or not) just return to Firefox.
And welcome!
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>>108010605
>>108010616
Thanks anons. I'm still tinkering with the system (mostly getting used to terminal commands) but I've been pleasantly surprised so far, will probably put Linux on my daily driver too.
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>>108010586
Brave, Chromium or anything else using the Blink/Chromium engine. It's overall noticeably faster than Firefox. Sadly all the modern browsers are resource hogs so might as well use whatever is the fastest.
>>108010640
Do it or else.
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>>108011064
>>108011066
What's the difference?
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>>108011051
Ubuntu is based on a snapshot version of Debian Unstable. So usually when Ubuntu gets released it's more up to date.
>>108011196
Different repositories are used, different versions of packages. They don't have the exact same ABI compatibility due to how Linux works. Something working on Debian is not guaranteed to work on Ubuntu and vice versa.
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>>108011256
This is a bit simplistic though. Copilot slop made this research paper you should read:
https://copilot.microsoft.com/shares/pages/AAQgokemC8HA7poABshvs
>>108007440
The crux is you can boot with the mem= boot parameter which will force the kernel to assume that there is less RAM in the system. Why you'd want to do this beyond testing I'm not sure. But there's a mechanism to do it.
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>>108011402
It doesn't really do anything for you if you're not running any services though.
The main thing it'd do for you is if you ever got infected with malware and that tries to open a port for a service then you'd be protected.
(Except not really, because a) you've got some virus or malware on your system, all bets are off, and b) this isn't really how command and control systems, etc, work, they establish outbound connections and can bust through NAT, possibly use P2P services, etc)
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>>108011413
Ufw allows established connections (i.e, inbound connection initiated as a result of an outbound connection). This is how most firewalls work.
You don't really need it but if it makes you sleep nicer then have at it.
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>>108011441
As long as you aren't blocking ICMP and ICMPv6 (you shouldn't be ) then that will work fine. The Linux kernel also has its own probing for TCP which you should probably turn on.
MTU discovery is mainly important for retards that use a smaller or larger MTU than the suggested 1500 (because of crap like PPPoE and tunnels mainly. This ugly crap existing causes issues for people using standard 1500 MTU on the Internet when the receiver has a lower MTU)
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>>108011451
Specifically this.tcp_mtu_probing (integer; default: 0; since Linux 2.6.17)
This parameter controls TCP Packetization-Layer Path MTU
Discovery. The following values may be assigned to the
file:
0 Disabled
1 Disabled by default, enabled when an ICMP black hole
detected
2 Always enabled, use initial MSS of tcp_base_mss.
The default is 0 but I have it set to 1.
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>>108011513
Some of them are, that's why so many services take an anti-VPN stance and block them. Yeah, if you're using your corporate VPN or VPN to your home you're probably not going to be seen as a threat but when you're using some shared service for privacy that hundreds and thousands of other "users" are also using it can be a bit difficult for them to sort through the traffic and block the bad guys whilst letting the innocent people through.
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>boot up a Linux router
>network configuration done via systemd-networkd
>network configuration involves a bridge device that enslaves everything that's Ethernet or Wi-Fi (a wired Ethernet card and one wireless USB dongle) and a WAN interface that gets its IP from the ISP using DHCP
>nftables fails to start as there's no bridge device
>hostapd fails to start as the USB Wi-Fi adapter is apparently not there yet on the very early boot
>start nftables and hostapd manually
>router works as intended
So. There's a race condition or whatever. What's the correct (or "clean") way to fix this? Was thinking of creating the service units manually and add an appropriate "After=" line to the configuration.
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>>108011634
>enslaves everything that's Ethernet or Wi-Fi and a WAN
You never bridge the WAN device with LAN devices. A bridge is a software switch, if you place a bare switch between the WAN and local nodes your local machines are directly exposed to the internet.
>>nftables fails to start as there's no bridge device
Create and configure the bridge device earlier. systemd-networkd uses the same ordering scheme for configuration files as other parts of systemd. Also set ConfigureWithoutCarrier=yes and IgnoreCarrierLoss=true in the [Network] section on the bridge's .network file.
>>router works as intended
Probably only because you have forwarding enabled. Everything else is misconfigured and likely insecure.
>>108011641
systemd-networkd is lighter than dhcpcd, radvd and all the other shit a non-systemd router needs.
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dumb question from a somewhat noob: I'm using Ubuntu Server 24.04, which is an LTS release. Why is this LTS release using the kernel version 6.8.0, which is not a kernel LTS? In fact, from pic related, it seems like kernel 6.8 is not even supported anymore. Does this even matter?
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>>108011833
>Ubuntu choosing a non LTS kernel for their LTS release is a pretty damn big stupid move from them.
this is what I mean, why choose this when you could have chosen an LTS kernel just the same? Which would have been kernel 6.6, released just a few months before
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>>108009869
100mb is still bloated as hell
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>>108011694
>You never bridge the WAN device with LAN devices.
Forgot to mention the bridge excludes the WAN interface. The whole setup involves a specially named bridge and specially named WAN interface and *the rest* automatically goes under the bridge device.
>Probably only because you have forwarding enabled
Bridging wouldn't involve routing ;)
>ConfigureWithoutCarrier=yes and IgnoreCarrierLoss=true in the [Network] section on the bridge's .network file
Cool, thanks.
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>>108010278
>Turn off screen edges fully
>Change the default color to materia dark
>Change the accent color back to breeze blue
>Turn off floating taskbar
Anon this isn't broken, its customizing the desktop environment to your personal preference. Do you wish it came preconfigured or what?
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>>108012135
Have you tried telling apt not to install recommended packages? it pulls a lot of extra dependencies which are not needed most of the time, either use
>apt install --no-install-recommends ...
Or to stop apt from doing it globally you can put this line
>APT::Install-Recommends "false";
in some file in /etc/apt/apt.conf.d
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I use a Tecknet keyboard it is RGB I want to be able to change the RGB the controls on the keyboard are limited I use openrgb for mouse but it will not detect keyboard.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/TECKNET-All-Metal-Illumination-Anti-ghosting- Resistant/dp/B0C39ZT2QF?th=1
Link related.
I know it is chink shit I don't expect a solution but I figured I'd ask, I tried asking AI and it just spouts a load of shit.
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>>108012178
>>108012294
idk about the Raspberry project but they rarely see all that trouble, it's likely just a generic 64bit ARM system.
Doesn't Raspbian pull its packages from a Debian source?
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isn't asahi mostly pointless for end users that want to run linux on macintosh since you can already do that today using free as in cost software by just fullscreening a linux VM while getting better performance and functionality (thunderbolt, external displays, usb, sound, battery, etc)? it's a pretty safe bet that 2 years from now asahi will still be behind in every aspect to just downloading vmware fusion
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>>108012607
https://pi-apps.io/install-app/install-wine-x64-on-linux-arm-device/
this not work?
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>run dnf update on my Fedora 42 machine
>all of my VFIO scripts are denied by selinux now
>Some fucktarded regression in linux 6.18 prevents me from doing anything related to single GPU passthrough
>it worked for years btw
I fucking hate Red Hat.
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>>108012659
>battery
asahi consumes anywhere from 1.5% to 2% battery on standby, compare that to 0.1 to 0.3% per hour
for active use asahi gets around half the battery life compared to macOS on the same hardware, as you might imagine just running vmware will not halve your battery lol
>ram
unused ram is wasted ram
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>>108012744
It was okay-ish. Drivers and codecs in the RPMFusion repo broke updates sometimes (Fedora was too slow to update shit) and fwupd is broken but apart from that it was fine.
>>108012763
I used ubongo for years but I despise the Ubuntu Pro fuckery (some updates are locked behind a subscription). Bonus: Some packages I depend on are broken on debian and ubuntu (qwt, and qwt6.3-or-later is missing :^) )
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>>108012788
ubangoo pro is free for personal use, you just make an account on ubuntu.com and run "sudo pro attach [token they give you there]"
scummy, yeah, but i'm basically locked out of other distros since i need vendor-reset for my amd gpu and older kernels since newer ones break it
>qwt
idk anything about that good luck breh
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I have an endeavoros install that I update with yay, but it shows outdated extras,2 extra/yt-dlp-ejs 0.3.2-2 (51.7 KiB 168.7 KiB) (Installed)
External JavaScript for yt-dlp supporting many runtimes
1 extra/yt-dlp 2025.12.08-2 (5.0 MiB 32.7 MiB) (Installed)
A youtube-dl fork with additional features and fixes
My normal endeavoros install works fine.
The out of date one says everything is up to date:: Synchronizing package databases...
endeavouros is up to date
core is up to date
extra is up to date
multilib is up to date
:: Searching AUR for updates...
:: Searching databases for updates...
there is nothing to do
Any idea whats going on here?
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>>108012702
Update: selinux is working fine, it's a kernel regression.
>https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.18-VFIO
>While there was recently talk over marking the generic VFIO platform driver as deprecated with plans to eventually remove it from the mainline kernel, at least for now it's been saved. Some developers have stepped up to maintain the vfio-platform driver for now to avoid its deprecation/removal. Mostafa Saleh and Pranjal Shrivastava are the developers committing to maintaining the vfio-platform driver code.
>mujeet and pajeet
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
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>>108013210
Well, Bazzite is the most politically deranged distro. Yes, more political than "lets rebase to a copy of our codebase from 2 years ago because I don't like this guy" Xorg. Only a matter of time till it breaks.
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>>108013199
Problem is this: there is zero need to update your kernel every two weeks or something whenever there is 0.01 update. It's somewhat strange how most distros are normalizing this behaviour.
It's abnormal.
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>>108011993
This. Tiny Core has a somewhat working GUI uses 80MiB in total when idling.
>>108013240
Take your meds.
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>>108014125
I'd still ask why newcomer friendly distros do it, knowing there's a chance something might break every update.
Shit like manjaro where the tagline is "Taking the raw power and flexibility of Arch Linux and making it more accessible for a greater audience." still does it, and when you look at the forums every update has people complaining that something broke.
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>>108014170
You get a new kernel regardless, whether it's bug fixes or a new release.
>>108014162
Arch is the outlier really for only keeping one kernel version installed. Most distros keep multiple kernels. Fedora, for example, definitely does that so the person with that VFIO regression can just boot the older kernel until it gets fixed (assuming they don't want to build their own)
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>>108014203
and since those bug fixes don't change much, there is like 0 chance of something breaking.
I mean sure, a major or minor bump could come with some regressions, but bumps on the patch level? They're kinda safe.
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>want to try linux
>install fedora xfce
>open mw works but the mod package installer doesnt
>their page says debian supported
>install debian kde
>open mw not supported pn debian
>install xubuntu
>it finally works
>takes 4 hours to download and install complete-overhaul
>runs on my t14 at 720p playably
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>>
Currently running OpenSUSE TW but I'm wondering if the grass is greener in another distro.
Don't like their pride politics, and not every program runs on it. Other than that I can't say I've had any issues at all...
Anybody had experience with TW and can recommend either staying or switching?
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>>108014462
Somehow Jake the retard is less of a retard than Linus from LTT. That went surprisingly well.
Only major issue he had was AppImages being a steaming pile of crap (Davinci developers what the fuck are you doing? Make a Flatpak. It was meant for people like you. You can self-host your own repo).
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>>108014630
It would be better if davinci did appimage instead of flatpak since they wouldnt have to bother dealing with the mess of flatpak permissions.
Or even better just one static linked binary built with musl that can self-update on its own so that they wouldn't have to deal with fuse2
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>>108014739
It was an AppImage he was using. If you want to avoid the mess of Flatpak permissions then you just set all the permissions by default. Not terribly secure but whatever. Power users can lock it down if they want.
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>>108014765
Which appimage? For the record i run openra using their official appimages and dont really run into any issues with them. They also don't recommend the flatpak for some reason but i don't remember why.
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>>108014800
The .run file from their website I think and yes, I know it's possible to make a portable AppImage if the developer knows what they're doing. The Davinci developers evidently don't. Flatpak was built for developers like them because it's impossible for them to screw it up.
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>>108014889
No idea. I doubt they abandoned the RPM packaging. The Appimage is probably an attempt to make it work better on more distros but they probably built it on some random Ubuntu distro and are too retarded to make it work properly in a portable fashion since the AppImage tooling does nothing to force that and it's easy for retarded developers to fuck it up.
Meanwhile Flatpak Builder can be confusing but makes something that will run on every distro no matter what because the sandboxed runtime ensures that it's running in a consistent runtime environment no matter what.
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>>108014889
Nobody said there was an appimage for resolve. There is a fatpak option if you build it yourself:
https://github.com/pobthebuilder/resolve-flatpak
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>>108014889
>When did they switch to appimage?
Never. They're still distributing it as a .zip file. The cross-distro solution to running it are either the flatpak which you build yourself (https://github.com/pobthebuilder/resolve-flatpak), or the distrobox (https://github.com/zelikos/davinci box)
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From: ashley
To: bug-bash@gnu.org
Subject: [50 character or so descriptive subject here (for reference)]
Configuration Information [Automatically generated, do not change]:
Machine: x86_64
OS: linux-gnu
Compiler: gcc
Compilation CFLAGS: -g -O2 -Werror=implicit-function-declaration -fstack-protector-strong -fstack-clash-protection -Wformat -Werror=format-security -fcf-protection -Wall
uname output: Linux devuan 6.12.67-gnu #1.0 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Tue Sep 27 12:35:59 EST 1983 x86_64 GNU/Linux
Machine Type: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
Bash Version: 5.2
Patch Level: 37
Release Status: release
Description:
you suck nigger balls
Repeat-By:
breathing
Fix:
wontfix
Let's get fishy
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>>108014921
Maybe one day they will at least opensource their build system so that people can help them fix it. Can't imagine they would have a lot more windows or mac os users compared to linux users when there's other paid video editing software those people could use while davinci is like one of the only options on linux.
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>>108015001
>>108015088
Maybe I was wrong, or it was unofficial. From the video it looked like he was using AppImage for something though and it didn't just work. He also had to do some LD_PRELOAD workaround for Resolve wherever it was he got it from.
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>>108015114
It shouldn't even be difficult to do. They should be able to do so easily themselves yet they don't care to.
The fact that we are still seeing software like that delivered as some opaque binary blob that isn't portable is quite frankly outrageous. It's like they want the Linux desktop to fail.
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>It’s Germ*n and the name is stupid. EndeavourOS is the better choice if you want a simple Arch derivation.
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>>108015143
>It's like they want the Linux desktop to fail.
They probably just don't care but care enough to support enterprise rhel users or something since the rpm originally targeted the latest centos stable. There's like zero communication about it from them as well.
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bros, why is the tooling for selinux so fucking bad? how hard can it be to label an executable and then label the files it can access? I'm starting to see why, even despite issues like fs namespacing, chroots, etc, why ubuntu sticks with AppArmor. this shit is giga aids.
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>>108015476
>how hard can it be to label an executable and then label the files it can access
That's what audit2allow does.
But yeah there's a reason Canonical and SUSE use apparmor even though the shit basically doesn't work. You have to put a lot of work in to write good selinux policy.
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>>108015508
>That's what audit2allow does.
audit2allow is basically a fucking sledgehammer. I've seen what it generates and it doesn't seem like a "good idea" to deploy as is.
like I don't want x to read anything with var_run_t or whatever fucked up fcontext type. I'm just sick of it. the EL guide makes me want to do something else instead.
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>>108015591
According to this Reddit post, yeah:
https://www.reddit.com/r/openSUSE/comments/118twi8/why_is_opensuse_swi tching_to_selinux/
One single big enough client forced them to ditch AppArmor completely.
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>>108015626
You use audit2allow like the other guy said:
https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/audit2why.1.html
General workflow for making an SELinux policy is to:
>Set it to enforce mode
>Run your head against a brick wall
>Use the audi2allow to translate the errors into a usable policy that allows the thing that was previously denied
>Keep running your head against a brick wall until everything works fully
Yes, it sucks. The AppArmor tooling for this is way nicer:
https://man.archlinux.org/man/aa-genprof.8
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I installed Wine through WineHQ, then Lutris via the debian package. Here's a question, when I doubleclick an .exe and open it through Wine, what exactly happens? For example is it running the standard Wine prefix that I have, .wine under Home? Can I just click the exe of shit I know will Just Work and not need configuration, or is there some reason I would need to or be better off adding them as games in Lutris and launching them through it?
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>>108005178
I am back.
The
>KWIN_DISABLE_TONEMAPPING=1
Doesn't seem to do shit. I see no effect.
video players are still the same where adjusting SDR brightness on plasma effects HDR videos.
And SDR brightness affects native HDR video games.
Here is some images as to how the game looks like in SDR(with what I am assuming auto HDR enabled through some system) and HDR(washed out and wrong).
Even though the monitor, the screen, the desktop and videogame settings on launch are all HDR enabled.
How the hell do I stop Plasma from fucking up my NATIVE HDR content?
It's doing a good job on SDR content and auto HDRing it. But that shit fucks up my actual good videogames and videos that have native support for that shit and don't need additional HDR emulation on top.
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>>108015821
and here is how it looks like with videogame ingame HDR on.
Please save me.
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I went from ububtu 10.04 to Win 7 and now I want to go back to Loonix. Hows Noobuntu these days? Is Mint the goto Windows replacement?
Win2k was my favorite OS.
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I upgraded from Ubuntu 24 to 25.10 straight from Ubuntu itself (as in, not a clean install/reinstall) and it feels a bit wonky.
Nothing UNUSABLE but browsers sometimes crash, and Nautilus sometimes doesn't show right click options.
Is it always recommended to do a fresh install when a new version of Ubuntu comes out? Do you think that might be the problem or is Ubuntu 25.10 itself kind of wonky?
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>>108015821
>>108015837
Does the game not provide any calibration options besides On or Off?
That looks to me as if it's not calibrated properly with the correct peak brightness for your monitor (and ideally a lower value for the UI)
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>>108015929
I've used Ubuntu 25.10 very recently as a direct fresh install and had none of these issues. I think that you may have had some complications with your upgrade, because 25.10 is otherwise a very smooth and werking release.
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>>108005178
>install mint cinnamon
>everything is sluggish
why?
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>use mint
>be bored
>install Fedora
>install open nvidia drivers
>install all my basic apps via flatpaks
>setup dev environment in toolbox
>LARP using an immutable distro, but without the drawbacks of one
>everything werks like in Mint, but the DE isn't ugly and packages are fresh
feels gud
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Usecase for changing your scrolling speed? Just trick the system into thinking you touchpad is actually smaller with evdev.
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>>108016669
>How?
>firefox stutters from time to time
>youtube playback stutters on 720p60
>going pages up and down feels slow
>same as the program list on the menu
>animations from the OS are slow too
While on windows everything worked and felt fine
>Ensure you have hardware accelerated codecs
how can I do that?
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>>108017340
>>Ensure you have hardware accelerated codecs
>how can I do that?
Go to about:support in Firefox and scroll down to the codecs.
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Why do I use MX linux?
1. They use XFCE as their main edition, and since XFCE is the only good stable desktop on linux with X11, I will use it. I also just prefer XFCE it never fails me
2. The package manager is really fast and easy to use, allows installation of flatpaks easily and has an easy application categories
3. It has the latest kernel for gaming on 6.18+ with Liquorix Kernel
4. It has MX tools, which has a lot of useful features like snapshots, repo manager, boot options to customize, network manager, locale manager, USB formatter, Even has a nvidia driver installer, although I don't need that I use all AMD.
Basically it's the new opensuse but based on debian and actually good
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>>108016644
>>108017340
>Radeon HD 8570
That thing doesn't have HW decoding for VP9 nor AV1, h264ify
Also you are probably using the old ATI driver instead of AMDGPU, luckily your GPU is GCN 1.0 so maybe in Mint 23 you will get a performance bump.
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>>108015440
Short answer: Nope — it’s not a bad idea at all
On a desktop, disabling Wi-Fi power saving is actually very common and often recommended.
Let’s break it down in plain terms.
What Wi-Fi power saving does on Linux
With NetworkManager, Wi-Fi power saving:
Lets the Wi-Fi card “sleep” between packets
Reduces power usage (mostly useful on laptops)
Can introduce:
higher latency
brief disconnects
lower or inconsistent throughput
On desktops… the power savings are basically irrelevant.
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>>108017421
Not him, but ChatGPT is correct.
>>108015440
Why would disabling the powersaving features "burn up my wifi card". What do you think will happen? It's not like it could make it run out of spec.
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>>108017392
>>108017408
i forced it to amdgpu because i wanted to run something in bottles but it uses vulkan and it crashed with the other driver, now it doesnt crash but also doesnt run kek
>so maybe in Mint 23 you will get a performance bump
why do you think that?
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>>108017457
I forgot the image
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>>108017457
>why do you think that?
If you already forced AMDGPU then you will see no difference, maybe better stability and less bugs.
AMDGPU for old GCN1.0 GPUs will ship by default on kernel 6.19, Ubuntu 26 will ship with kernel 6.20 so will Mint 23.
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>>108017474
Linux mint ruined their desktop. Look at how ugly this shit is LMAO.
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>>108017496
Looks the same as it always did. It was never particularly fancy. Looks are not its strong point. It's just a shit fork of GNOME and they don't have the team to maintain it properly.
Some people like it for whatever reason though. Give me KDE Plasma instead any day though.
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>request some government service
>they make me fill a form on a .docx document
>libreoffice takes more than a second to scroll this 3 page form that consist almost entirely of text and cells
I know word is total dogshit for interoperability but how do I cope with this
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>>108017509
No it doesnt, they ruined it from a clean windows 10 desktop colors to an ugly one
This new theme is ugly and the new menu is uuuuugly. They are destroying their own OS lol
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>>108017554
Just use Word in your web browser I guess. Everything's a web app these days. I'm surprised they'd make you fill that out in a Word document though. Does your government know that there are these things called PDFs and they can contain forms and are perfect for that very use. Every web browser even comes with built-in support for filling them out.
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>>108016644
>radeon hd 8570
:Wilted Flower Emoji: lol
Time to upgrade anon
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I just noticed, after two days of use, that I have some sluggishness on KDE on my Arch install with Wayland.
This is not a fresh linux install, I've been using Hyprland for some months now, so drivers and gpu stuff "should" have been working for a long time, but I started noticing that Emacs, and just now trying out on Sublime Text, are both a little, barely noticeable sluggish, I can feel a slight delay when typing text and the scrolling through lines using the arrow keys seems a little slow, but then I tried scrolling using the mouse scroll on Sublime Text and it was 100% sluggish as hell.
I don't know what could be causing this. Even games run flawlessly. Is this some kind of KDE bug? How do I troubleshoot this? It sucks because I was really getting used to KDE and hoping to adopt it to stop tinkering with hyprland and ricing useless stuff.
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>>108011833
>>108011914
Stability in the distro jargon means 6.8.x will stay at 6.8.x.
And yes, distributions seem to pick the strangest kernel branches.
>>108018064
Were there any actual "issues" with systemd though?
>>108018091
>doesn't know which distro to pick
Could just partition for easy distrohopping: two small system partitions for two Linuxes and the rest of the drive for shared space. (plus EFI system partition if an EFI PC)
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>>108015001
>>108015038
Why does proprietary software have such a horrible time packaging their stuff? Why is it always some .tgz that works only on one distro? This was a lot more excusable before flatpak and appimage existed. Are those somehow busted in some way that's not obvious? Whole teams struggle with this while a lone dev working in his spare time can release something and it works everywhere.
Seriously if they're going to forbid repackaging for legal reasons they could at least release in a sane format wtf
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>>108018164
Bare Arch is more popular.
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I'm sorting out some data from old HDDs. I came across a curious case:
1 TB HDD
I know some of the files that are on there
parted -l reports Error: Unknown partition table
But everything else seems fine.
hdparm reports nothing problematic
hexdumping it:
00010120 d2 4d 80 88 4d 3d 8a de cb c8 62 62 74 72 66 73 |.M..M=....bbtrfs|
looking for known files:
sudo hexdump -C /dev/sdk | grep README
02778020 52 45 41 44 4d 45 2e 6d 64 00 00 00 1e 01 00 00 |README.md.......|
Virtually everything seems fine and I know this disk worked on the box I am on before. Have I correctly identified this as some sort of btrfs or is it a fluke? How to proceed? Could it be that I did something brilliant like putting the partition table somewhere else?
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>>108019424
>>108019112
Also I'm guessing it's fine and you did just install BTRFS to the whole disk instead of making a partition table. This is fine as long as you know what you're doing and correctly matches with:
>parted -l reports Error: Unknown partition table
There's no error here.
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>>108019429
Another words you literally do not have a partition table which is why parted reports "Unknown partition table". You'd usually never install BTRFS to a single disk like this and only do that for systems in a RAID but it's fine and works.
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>>108018337
>Why does proprietary software have such a horrible time packaging their stuff?
>they're going to forbid repackaging
answered your own question, could have let the distro maintainers do it for them, but no, they don't.
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>>108018337
>>108019596
I wonder why distros don't do more outreach. Canonical does a lot of this for Snap, even though I hate the format I can't fault them for trying.
Somebody from Red Hat or Canonical, etc, should reach out to the Davinci developers and say to them "Do you need help? We can give you an engineer to work on packaging. Free of charge. No strings attached"
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What’s the best Linux (Ubuntu) compatible external hard drive available? Preferably 4-6tb to archive my vidya.
I don’t want to buy an external HDD just for it to not work because Linux.
To my knowledge when just archiving stuff an external HDD is the best.
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>>108019731
Is there an external hard drive that's incompatible with Linux?
Just buy whatever you want. Read reviews if you want but unless you're shucking the drive then it's probably a crapshoot how well it'll work anyway.
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>>108019605
RedHat and SUSE do outreach to government and large institutions so they can get contracts and get paid. Canonical precluded themselves from those contracts being incorporated in a tax haven, so they come up with harebrained shit like trying to create vendor lock-in for the 5 guys running MS Teams desktop on Linux.
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>>108019799
I mean to proprietary software vendors, especially those that already have Linux builds available.
We all know the answer is because they don't actually care about the success of the Linux desktop though.
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>>108015724
>when I doubleclick an .exe and open it through Wine, what exactly happens?
>For example is it running the standard Wine prefix that I have, .wine under Home?
Yes. It's running under the default prefix.
>is there some reason I would need to or be better off adding them as games in Lutris and launching them through it?
The point of Lutris is to use it as a game menu so that you don't have to navigate to .exe game launchers manually.
>>108017541
Cinnamon is basically 5-10 years behind GNOME depending on the component. I don't understand why it even exists anymore. It's not like it's any more lightweight than GNOME or Plasma, so using it over Xfce makes no sense. And it's not like it's any more "intuitive" for Windows users compared to a slightly tweaked GNOME (like ZorinOS does) or just the default Plasma.
>>108018164
Distrowatch is not reflective of real users. It's mainly just a couple thousand very specific people who visit it. Take any and all statistics there with a mountain of salt.
For example, MX Linux was at the top of the page hit rankings in 2019-2024 yet almost nobody actually used the distro or even knew that it existed. It was so bizarre that people still believe someone made a bot to push it up.
Mint is definitely popular, but the real most popular distro is Ubuntu and it's not even close.
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>>108019912
>real most popular distro is Ubuntu and it's not even close.
Ubuntu popularity for home pcs has been on the decline, it's not that popular anymore. Case in point, >>108018362
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>>108014518
>Don't like their pride politics
Look anon I'm not trying to be a dickhead here, but what do you think other distros pride politics are?
Arch? Fedora? Debian? All of these big fuckers are waving those flags all the same. Derivative distros get even worse. Seriously do you use the fucking subreddit? Do you give this much of a fuck to distrohop? Because no matter what you find I'll find the troon for you, don't worry.
Worry more about what you can do with the shit you're using. What doesn't run on tumbleweed?
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Anons after using normal ass distros for a long time (Mandrake/SUSE >20 years ago, Fedora, Debian, Ubango and all its siblings and retarded cousins, Arch and derivatives, openSUSE) on and off and on again, I'm getting kind of old here. I really don't want to deal with more bullshit than I would want.
Are atomic distros good nowadays?
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>>108020113
Install Gentoo.
>>108020016
What's a GPU number and where do I obtain one?
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>>108020148
>what's a GPU number
Sometimes my one and only GPU is "device1", sometimes it's "device2". I've only recently switched to Wayland and KDE so I'm guessing it's related to one of those (but I'm a technically inept newfag so what do I know).
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>>108020192
It's nothing to do with KDE. The kernel enumerates devices at boot and with one GPU it should always be the same device. Only thing I can think that happens is the device disappears and then comes back somehow and the kernel thus increases the device number.
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>>108019942
>adding a handful of extensions to GNOME
>somehow this is not a slight tweak
I mean sure, the layout is vastly different, but it's done with just one or two GNOME extensions. Pre-installing a couple of GNOME extensions is definitely a small tweak unless Zorin is doing something I'm not aware of.
>>108019958
That might be the case, but that's still isolated to a specific subsection of desktop users. Gamers who use Steam aren't even 8% of all PC users. You could argue Ubuntu fell off on gaming devices, but it's not really the case outside of that.