- Joined
- Jun 19, 2024
Can you guys recommend me a video editor that works on linux? I used to use sony vegas but it is either incompatible with linux mint or I am too retarded to correctly install it
Kdenlive as others have said or DaVinci Resolve.
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Can you guys recommend me a video editor that works on linux? I used to use sony vegas but it is either incompatible with linux mint or I am too retarded to correctly install it
It was definitely a shitpost, just them declaring that they managed to make Xlibre work on one of the tranny OSs (I don't recall which one)Cmon nigga the libxtrans screenshot is absolutely an ironic shitpost. All of those other bits sound perfectly rational.
You're thinking of NixOS. I lament the fact that there is no non-systemd fork of Nix, declarative OSes are a hard drug to get off of once you take that first hit. If only it wasn't cut with SystemDalit...It was definitely a shitpost, just them declaring that they managed to make Xlibre work on one of the tranny OSs (I don't recall which one)
FreeBSD >>> OpenBSD in terms of pure usability. You should look through my post history in this thread for “FreeBSD” so that you can see my rundowns
I need to atleast try a fedora setup because I was exposed to the package manager via https://www.openmandriva.org/ and any time i needed to edit a package I had to use the fedora docs as a syntax refrence.Fedora Xfce
This is a seporate thought but can somone explain how immutable OS's dont run into issues with file handles and overhead due to all the layers? While I know its probably not hitting syscalls all the time, it still must have some overhead that can appear under heavy load conditions.
Longer answer: There is no value in “atomic” or “immutable” distributions if you’re a home user. All the perceived benefits are overridden by:
Moral of the story? Don’t fucking bother with atomic/immutable distros if you’re not some turbo dork sysadmin spinning up hundreds upon thousands of instances and need uniformity across all those environments. In a home user context, the consequences outweigh any supposed benefits by a million orders of magnitude.
Hard disagree. They’re absolutely perfect for your grandmother or boomer parent who’s just going to use Chrome and maybe Thunderbird and VLC or normies who are really just looking for Chrome and Steam to run perfectly.
Run perfectly for a little while then shuts the bed because a big update requires manual intervention. If you love grandma you'd set her up with Linux Mint.Hard disagree. They’re absolutely perfect for your grandmother or boomer parent who’s just going to use Chrome and maybe Thunderbird and VLC or normies who are really just looking for Chrome and Steam to run perfectly.
Counter argument: Linux Mint because it’s frictionless and you could just set yourself up as an administrator with SSH and VNC access while giving your boomer parent or befuddled grandparent a standard user account.
As to the normies who just want Chrome and Steam? Linux Mint offers that too. Let me reiterate: there is absolutely no conceivable value that atomic/immutable distros have to offer to a home user context. It’s all enterprise and cloud bullshit being thrust upon end users because it’s convenient for developers.
Imagine requiring an internet connection to do any low-level maintenance, even things that don't/shouldn't touch the internet.
That's the scariest part about these atomic systems.
A bug in the fix for CVE-2024-27297 (a) allowed for arbitrary overwrites of files writable by the Nix process orchestrating the builds (typically the Nix daemon running as root in multi-user installations) by following symlinks during fixed-output derivation output registration. This affects sandboxed Linux builds - sandboxed macOS builds are unaffected. The location of the temporary output used for the output copy was located inside the build chroot. A symlink, pointing to an arbitrary location in the filesystem, could be created by the derivation builder at that path. During output registration, the Nix process (running in the host mount namespace)would follow that symlink and overwrite the destination with the derivation's output contents.
In multi-user installations, this allows all users able to submit builds to the Nix daemon (allowed-users - defaulting to all users) to gain root privileges by modifying sensitive files.
daroc said:I don't believe it does impact Guix. The bug was introduced in a commit (a) that was made after Guix separated from Nix, and which does not appear in the Guix repository (a).
Why would I setup SSH and VNC access when I can install two flatpaks and never worry again about them fucking it up?
Bazzite Linux is essentially rolling.
The vidya consumers can never worry about touching their system again until it’s time to buy a new one.
If a bad update gives their rig a pozz load they can rollback a snapshot and wait a week until the next one patches.
These distros aren’t for everyone - but they serve a purpose.
You very specifically brought up the notion of using an atomic/immutable distro in the context of giving a boomer parent or a grandparent a distribution that, in your opinion, would be easier to handle than a garden variety Linux distro with a standard, mutable filesystem. If you're already in the position where you have the leverage to decide a parent or grandparent's operating system for whatever computer you set up, remote access is a requirement unto itself unless you wanna constantly rush over to their aid whenever shit goes tits-up; not "if" but rather "when".
SSH - remotely update your parent or grandparent's computer so that they don't have to manually trigger updates on a user account and invoke admin privileges.
VNC - remotely take control of your parent or grandparent's computer graphically so that you get a birds-eye view of what precisely the relative in question is troubled by.
Uh... have you seen how awful this economy is? Have you tried negotiating with used parts sellers on eBay for auctions? Have you tried rolling the dice with Facebook Marketplace? Spoiler alert: AM4's massive longevity, even continuing into 2026 with SKU refreshes on the 5000 series despite "officially" going EOL in 2022, basically means that people are clinging to their older hardware for much longer. Ain't no one out here buying a wholly new, top-of-the-line AM5/AM6 X3D system with maxed out RAM and all the bells and whistles such that they'd actually stand to benefit from all those obscure tweaks, patches, parameters, flags, and so on.
Spoiler alert: the only "purpose" they're valid for are in obtuse enterprise and cloud deployments where dozens upon hundreds upon thousands of systems get deployed and only a handful of people are there to manage them all during the standard M-F 9-5 business cycle. To reiterate for basically the third fucking time: there ain't any value to Fedora Atomic and assorted variants in a home user context. Any hypotheticals about old people or normies are already better served by standard, mutable distros with transactional package managers
Except I actually have installed Fedora Kinote onto two helplessly normal people’s machines and over the course of nearly two years ran into exactly zero issues. I couldn’t ask for better stability from those machines if they were Chromebooks.
Literally what’s your point? These atomic distros will serve the terminal normies perfectly fine when and if the hardware market corrects itself. This is an irrelevant tangent.
Yeah, I don’t feel like having to remember to ssh in (hoping their computer is on) and typing “sudo dnf upgrade — refresh” every couple of weeks when I can give them a system even they can maintain.
sudo dnf --refresh update -y manually if there's already a graphical means to achieve that exact outcome, and if that graphical means pings them with a notification saying "oi m8 u gotta update," right?You act as if these are some sort of existential threat to your hobby. Nobody’s taking Gentoo and NixOS from you.
The whole point of Linux is there’s three hundred distros that serve to interest or use case for you.
1. They don't updateOkay, I'm genuinely curious: how the hell did you manage to sidestep the rebasing problem with Fedora Kinoite? You do realise that Fedora Kinoite does not ship with mutlimedia codecs, hardware acceleration, let alone any proprietary graphics drivers in the first place, right? This is stuff that you must necessarily download via RPM Fusion, and layer on top via rpm-ostree. At that point, the "helplessly normal people" that you set up Kinoite for would necessarily have modified images that they'd have to rebase to after upgrading from say, Kinoite 42 to Kinoite 43. Did you completely avoid setting up anything from RPM Fusion, and those normies just completely lack multimedia codecs, hardware acceleration, and all the other multimedia stuff? Did you set everything up via RPM Fusion and they just stayed on that Fedora Kinoite image for the last two years without them ever directly intervening to update or otherwise upgrade their systems? Are you actually upgrading and rebasing the system on their behalf and you just neglected to mention it?
Okay, I'm genuinely curious: how the hell did you manage to sidestep the rebasing problem with Fedora Kinoite? You do realise that Fedora Kinoite does not ship with mutlimedia codecs, hardware acceleration, let alone any proprietary graphics drivers in the first place, right? This is stuff that you must necessarily download via RPM Fusion, and layer on top via rpm-ostree. At that point, the "helplessly normal people" that you set up Kinoite for would necessarily have modified images that they'd have to rebase to after upgrading from say, Kinoite 42 to Kinoite 43. Did you completely avoid setting up anything from RPM Fusion, and those normies just completely lack multimedia codecs, hardware acceleration, and all the other multimedia stuff? Did you set everything up via RPM Fusion and they just stayed on that Fedora Kinoite image for the last two years without them ever directly intervening to update or otherwise upgrade their systems? Are you actually upgrading and rebasing the system on their behalf and you just neglected to mention it?
ain't no one here a faggot tranny who uses NixOS
These shitboxes are intel integrated graphics machines that work flawlessly out of the box.
Doing it on newer hardware I’d just go with a Bazzite image that has the appropriate drivers.
As for codecs? Normies don’t need them - if they can’t run a media file with Chrome or VLC they don’t need it.
ffmpeg-freeworld because the stock ffmpeg that Fedora ships with is deliberately gimped for legal reasons. Not to mention that you're deliberately eschewing hardware acceleration, which necessarily forces everything to run in software mode. Intel iGPUs are more than capable of media transcoding with hardware acceleration, but you still need to enable RPM Fusion and download mesa-freeworld because the default Mesa in Fedora is deliberately gimped.ffmpeg-freeworld.As for updates, they can keep clicking the button for updates until I show up at minimal once a year. Worst case scenario they can copypasta what I send via email or telegram to rebase the system. Even if the system gets long in the tooth - Chrome for updates via Flatpak - not worried about it in the short term.
Bazzite is fucking worthless dude.
Uh... what?! That's the most terrifying statement I've ever read coming out of a man who admits he set up computers for allegedly helpless normies. Chrome can't play certain file formats online withoutffmpeg-freeworldbecause the stock ffmpeg that Fedora ships with is deliberately gimped for legal reasons. Not to mention that you're deliberately eschewing hardware acceleration, which necessarily forces everything to run in software mode. Intel iGPUs are more than capable of media transcoding with hardware acceleration, but you still need to enable RPM Fusion and downloadmesa-freeworldbecause the default Mesa in Fedora is deliberately gimped.
Also... just putting this out there: who the hell are you to decide what normies do or don't need? You do realise that multimedia playback was a huge bottleneck for Linux historically due to the messy patent situation that codecs and formats like MP4, H.264, and so on had for decades, right? MAYBE, and I'm more than willing to put myself on the chopping block here, I'm just a Linux boomer stuck in 2012 mentally... but hearing someone saying "As for codecs? Normies don't need them" while saying that anything that Chrome and VLC can't handle is something a normie doesn't need in the same sentence sends shivers down my spine. What kinda maniacal psychopath are you? VLC ain't flawless either considering how there are still pitfalls in VLC that other media players like MPV sidestep entirely... with the aid offfmpeg-freeworld.
1. They don't update
2. They don't go back to him for technology advice
