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Cake day: April 12th, 2024

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  • make the most use of the hardware

    All distros should do this equally well, and better than Windows

    let me play the most games

    All distros will be more or less the same. Games generally work or they dont. Check ProtonDB to see which games work and how well.

    easiest to use

    lowest maintenance possible

    This is how distros actually differ.

    Some common suggestions:

    Ubuntu LTS:

    • Upgrade your OS every 2 years
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • GNOME shell environment is very beautiful and fast, but very different from Windows

    Kubuntu LTS:

    • Upgrade your OS every 2 years
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • KDE Plasma Desktop is like all the best parts of windows 95/xp/7/10/11 + os9/OSX/macOS combined, improved, and made super customizeable

    Ubuntu/Kubuntu current:

    • Upgrade your OS every 6 months
    • Newer software than LTS
    • Otherwise same as LTS

    Linux Mint:

    • Upgrade your OS every 2 years
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • Cinnamon Desktop is a better looking and faster implementation of a Windows 7 style desktop

    Fedora

    • Upgrade your OS every 9 months (or else)
    • Proprietary codecs need to be added after install to play some video and music streams in your browser. It’s like 3 commands copy/pasted into the terminal
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • Choice of several desktop environments (Fedora spins)

    Pop!_OS

    • Fun to spell
    • Upgrade your OS every 2 years
    • Proprietary drivers are there if you need them (Nvidia is the only GPU that needs them)
    • Pop_shell makes you feel like a hacker from the future, but is very unlike Windows

    I do not reccomend Bazzite, Kali, Arch, Manjaro, Garuda, Debian, or Slackware. They are all great distros for specific use-cases, but they are all significantly more work to configure and/or maintain than the suggestions i’ve outlined.

    I haven’t tried Nobara so i cant recommend it, but from the outside it looks fine for a gaming desktop.



  • I’ve mainly used an iPhone 13 and a Pixel 7 pro for comparison, but both have consistently worse cameras than the 6T.

    I mostly take close-up photos of plants for iNaturalist, and with both the iPhone and the Pixel i have a very hard time getting it to focus on the right spot long enough to get a good photo. The 6T is much better at maintaining the correct focus IME than either newer phone.

    Both the Pixel and the iPhone will frequently try to refocus on something in the background just as I’m framing the shot. I have a third-party camera on the pixel with “manual” focus, but it’s not as easy to use as the OP6T. The iPhone is less bad about random focus changes if i’m taking a picture of a flower in good light, but leaves and stems frequently give me trouble.

    I also prefer the color balance on the OP6T to that on the Pixel or iPhone. Much more true to life IMO



  • Sorry to be off-topic but I’m curious:

    How/why do people use proton-ge?

    Are you using it standalone? Through Lutris or Steam? Something else?

    What are the situations you’d need it over vanilla proton? Do you keep both vanilla and ge installed?

    Also, do improvements generally get added to vanilla, or is ge an increasingly-divergent fork?

    I’ve been gaming primarily on Linux for over a decade and since it’s been an option I’ve used proton on steam extensively, but I’ve never tried ge


  • I built a backup server out of my old desktop, running Ubuntu and ZFS

    I have a dataset for each of my computers and i back them up to the corresponding datasets in the zfs pool on the server semi-regularly. The zfs pool has enough disks for some redundancy, so i can handle occasional drive failures. My other computers run arbitrary filesystems (ext4, btrfs, rarely ntfs)

    the only problem with my current setup is that if there is file degradation on my workstation that i dont notice, it might get backed up to the server by mistake. then a degraded file might overwrite a non-degraded backup. to avoid this, i generally dont overwrite files when i backup. since 90% of my data is pictures, it’s not a big deal since they dont change

    Someday i’d like to set up proxmox and virtualize everything, and i’d also like to set up something offsite i could zfs-send to as a second backup


  • i never liked the inconsistent window management though.

    On 8, (i dont remember for 8.1) there were some apps and menus that forced “tablet mode” and could only be interacted with in fullscreen. Other applications would open in what looked like tablet mode by default but you could break them out into desktop mode, after which they behaved normally.





  • I don’t think the snap argument is without merit, I just think it’s an argument only had by a very technical subset of users. I think your comment illustrates that.

    I don’t agree that anybody would be left “orphaned” on Ubuntu. LXD vs Podman is again a very technical question for a specific subset of users.

    I also don’t agree that SteamOS is the goal for compatibility and support. Compatibility is best with Ubuntu, it’s the most widely deployed and used desktop distribution by far. Most other desktop distros are a rounding error when compared to Ubuntu user-wise.

    I’ve also personally had a buggy experience with SteamOS. I wouldn’t use it as a desktop in its current state, but I’m aware some folks do just that.

    For someone new to Linux who just needs to get on with their desktop work, Ubuntu is the best distro there is (flawed as it may be). Mint is also a good choice for the same reasons.




  • Hardware support is also two-sided.

    For example: game controllers.

    On Linux, any first-party Switch, Playstation, or Xbox controller works out of the box. Most 3rd party controllers also work out of the box. Even Wii remotes work once paired over bluetooth (and the pointing works but takes some setup).

    On windows, xbox controllers work out of the box, except for very old ones which require a driver. 3rd party pc controllers will tend to work out of the box (or sometimes with a driver), but wired Switch and Playstation controllers need hacky workarounds to work or to get full functionality. Wireless controllers can often be paired with bluetooth, but I’ve had hit and miss luck with windows and first party Sony/Nintendo controllers


  • Peasley@lemmy.worldtoLinux@lemmy.mlIs Linux (dumb)user friendly yet?
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    2 months ago

    Don’t use an immutable distro like endless or silverblue. It’s a whole new paradigm to learn (in addition to learning Linux basics). You should get your feet wet with something more user-friendly first.

    My big recommendation is Ubuntu. Normal ubuntu. Not one of the flavors or derivatives. It’s got everything you need, plus very easy to troubleshoot if something goes wrong. Try to avoid using the command line when following guides online, there is nothing on Ubuntu you actually need it for and the graphical tools are very good.

    Don’t listen to the complaining about snaps. You won’t notice them, they won’t affect you negatively, they are designed to just set and forget. The complaints come from a highly particular and technical subset of the Linux community.

    If you really don’t like the look of Ubuntu, then I’d second all the recommendations for Mint. Those two distros have the most number of non-technical users in their communities because they are both very user-friendly and well-tested. I’d recommend against trying anything else until you’ve gotten comfortable with Ubuntu or Mint.