- Joined
- Jun 25, 2020
Did you ever go wtih xFeces? I prefer LXDE, or KDE if i have enough ram, shes a hungry bitchLinux Mint with Cinnamon. I need to try out XFCE again.
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Did you ever go wtih xFeces? I prefer LXDE, or KDE if i have enough ram, shes a hungry bitchLinux Mint with Cinnamon. I need to try out XFCE again.
I'm currently using 3 GB of RAM with a browser and 10+ tabs, spotify, discover, syncthing, mulvad gui, a couple dolphin file manager windows and a few terminals open. KDE isn't what it used to be.or KDE if i have enough ram, shes a hungry bitch
Try KDE again. I had issues with frame tearing, compositor borking with nvidia drivers, text and dpi issues on a 1440p monitor and the like. With the latest version all those seem to be fixed and it's basically and turn key DE.The last time I tried KDE a few years ago I had a bunch of issues with it. All of them I looked up and were known issues. First is with a second monitor in which the taskbar randomly disappeared. Also sometimes the taskbar will resize itself and it's unintuitive to use compared to the simple windows of Gnome.
I think I tried XFCE even longer ago and I don't remember what I thought of it.
My current machine has 24 GB RAM (I had 8 extra lying around) so I'm not very concerned with RAM usage.
Maybe sometime. I don't really switch DEs unless I'm doing a new system installTry KDE again. I had issues with frame tearing, compositor borking with nvidia drivers, text and dpi issues on a 1440p monitor and the like. With the latest version all those seem to be fixed and it's basically and turn key DE.
I think it mostly got its bloated reputation from akonadi (the indexing daemon) since its RAM and I/O usage was absolutely ridiculous around the KDE 4 era.I'm currently using 3 GB of RAM with a browser and 10+ tabs, spotify, discover, syncthing, mulvad gui, a couple dolphin file manager windows and a few terminals open. KDE isn't what it used to be.
Akonadi is still around and still awful.I think it mostly got its bloated reputation from akonadi (the indexing daemon) since its RAM and I/O usage was absolutely ridiculous around the KDE 4 era.
These days it runs pretty well even on potatoes.
I'm a big fan of Openbox+LXQt. If you install justThank god I'm testing the waters with floating window manager only setups, gnome is painful.
lxqt-*
without the lxqt
metapackage you get a very nice Win95-like desktop environment with no bloat.Well, if the shoe fits...This is you:
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Blurry text everywhere in GTK4 (#3787) · Issues · GNOME / gtk
Steps to reproduce Open any GTK4 application. Current behaviorgitlab.gnome.org
Gnomefags eternally BTFO.
soystem-d fags on suicide watchApparently Debian 11 is walking back toward "init diversity" somewhat, and providing some level of support for non-systemd inits:
Diff for "Init" - Debian Wiki
wiki.debian.org
It sounds like actually operating without systemd on Bullseye would still be something of a stilt-walking shambles though.
Still on Debian 10 here. 11 looks nice but I tend to wait about 6 months after a release to make sure they fix all the initial fuckups. Before doing major version upgrades I like to boot off a CloneZilla USB stick and image all of my boot drives so I can dd them back to how they were in the event of a disaster. I have a cron job that runs rsync on certain directories once a week but those backups aren't bootable.Now that it's become stable, has anyone tried Debian Bullseye yet? What are your first impressions?
Which underlines the entire problem with the push to systemd in the first place. It is heavily integrated into a bunch of otherwise unrelated components. That level of tight integration prevents user choice, which debian was supposed to be about from its inception.It sounds like actually operating without systemd on Bullseye would still be something of a stilt-walking shambles though.
Good to see. Although, this is only happening because the Devuan folks are shaming them for their crimes.Apparently Debian 11 is walking back toward "init diversity" somewhat, and providing some level of support for non-systemd inits:
Diff for "Init" - Debian Wiki
wiki.debian.org
It sounds like actually operating without systemd on Bullseye would still be something of a stilt-walking shambles though.