I’m curious why the separation between these still exists, because a bunch of distributions symlink all of these to /usr/bin
either way
29 | He/Him | Garlic Bread Enjoyer | Software Engineer
I’m curious why the separation between these still exists, because a bunch of distributions symlink all of these to /usr/bin
either way
If you have reading comprehension of, at least, an 8th-grader, you’ll do just fine. The instructions are all there
Definitely fish. It does everything i need out of the box. To achieve the same with zsh, i needed a dozen plugins on top of a plugin manager. Here, in satisfied with just Starship as custom prompt.
That said, i’ve been trying nushell recently. Don’t really think it’s for me, but it is pretty interesting
I have mine through namecheap too, although the name server is from cloudflare now. The only issue i’ve had was some shitty forums preventing registrations from anything that wasn’t @gmail.com
Define bad.
If you can run native in wayland, run in native wayland. Your performance will be better, and if you need scaling, scaling is considerably better too
Depends on your distribution. Arch packages some electron apps in a way, where they can accept their own flags through a dedicated file. For others, it’s just a plain electron-flags.conf
in your ~/.config
I would recommend visiting either the arch wiki, or tour distributions equivalent for details
Keep in mind that this does not apply to CEF apps, as that’s an entirely different framework
I’ll be honest with y’all. If your decision to not buy something from a hardware manufacturer is based on that they’ve modified their optional Ubuntu install, this hardware wasn’t for you to begin with
No surprise it feels a lot snappier. You only run the shit you have purposefully installed, and not endless layers of telemetry, candy crush silent installs, game bars that somehow make the performance worse, and mandatory online service accounts
deleted by creator
That’s quite huge. Now to see if it works as intended
Why are we monetizing a kernel flag?
I’ve switched to kde-unstable as soon as it was updated, and am quite happy to say, it’s been really damn solid. The only issue I’ve experienced was that Firefox somehow does not support explicit sync, and crashes the parent process of the broken tab near instantly
I wasn’t a fan of it, personally. I’ve only tried it once, because the regular install takes me less than 10 minutes start to full completion, but didn’t really like some of the opinionated choices for the setup here and there. Still appreciate that it’s there though
It’s not even really about how advanced you are. Using something more trustworthy, and something you can depend on, is always better. For arch(-based) distributions, i would always recommend Endeavour. Plain Arch will just do it too, if you can follow instructions as listed
I was once checking out Garuda, because the name popped up a handful of times. Outside of the absolutely repulsive front page, the moment i saw unmarked and unexplained “fun scripts” in the installer, i unplugged the installer
The amount of awesome new stuff being developed for Plasma lately is an absolute blessing. What a great time to be enjoying it
Not outside of what was expected. Worth noting that i am using Kwin on Wayland, so out of order frames, and flickering of CEF and Electron on XWayland apps was an issue. I’m not sure about the latter, but the former will be gone once Plasma 6.1 releases in about 3 weeks. Or if you’re using a different compositor, it could be gone already
Updated through nvidia-tkg. Smooth sailing so far
I wasn’t having many issues to begin with, but with the introduction of explicit sync into Kwin, and driver improvements throughout the 555 beta series, it’s been just about perfect for me.
The only issue i’ve encountered so far is the panel freezing sometimes. Submit a bug report to both KDE and Nvidia, they’re working on it.