- Joined
- Mar 30, 2023
Nobody has, Wayback isn't functional yet, and even the version they're working on is just xwayland in a trench coatHasn’t Alpine switched to Wayback or has that not happened yet?
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Nobody has, Wayback isn't functional yet, and even the version they're working on is just xwayland in a trench coatHasn’t Alpine switched to Wayback or has that not happened yet?
#!/usr/bin/env python3Pretty insightful stuff.This talk focuses on that evil little term “UX/UI,” which is responsible for so much confusion and tension in open-source projects. Not only does it unnecessarily pit programmers against designers, but it also limits our vision of what we could be doing. In this talk, Scott Jenson gives examples of how focusing on UX -- instead of UI -- frees us to think bigger. This is especially true for the desktop, where the user experience has so much potential to grow well beyond its current interaction models. The desktop UX is certainly not dead, and this talk suggests some future directions we could take.
I think they tried that with Project Lookign Glass, and I vaguely recalls something for Mac OS X or something that turned your desktop into a room where you could throw your files around and make piles and such with them.
Pretty insightful stuff.
Fair. Plus I checked and the Cinnamon version is only available in Spanish. I tried CuerdOS which is based on Debian and has systemd and Xlibre, and it's kind of nice. the software manager seems to mimick something from Arch and it comes with vilvaldi as the default browser, and it is very, very snappy.It’s decent but I personally don’t like Devuan because things just always break and fuck up in my experience, packages for the normal distribution (Debian) often don’t work properly and you NEED said package as a dependency for some programs. This isn’t just me complaining that some things fuck up without systemd, it’s just that these systemd-free distros that are based on systemd distros just do not work well at all. Distorts that are actually designed to be systemd-free always work better because everything is compatible with each other, even if there aren’t as many packages.
I’ve never seen someone censor the word W*yland, we are not massive faggots.more of the same thing I see here every day, but on the other side of this gay retarded battle.
I just keep downloading the python-is-python3 package because I’m a massive retard-faggot.
Okular is a good example of that. I really like the program itself but it pulls in half of KDE and that kwallet shit with it if you try and install it thru dpkg and friends.Lots of KDE programs on binary distros will pull in kwallet even if you don't need it because they're built with all options included. This is why I dislike using software made for major DEs (Gnome, KDE, XFCE, etc.) - install one thing and it pulls in half the environment with it.
1. there needs to be a standardized way to report missing dependencies and offer to install them automatically if they're found in the distro's repositories
I never looked at KDE on the code level, but the dependencies make it seem a lot like Gnome. Everything is done with their own, in-house libraries and is very interconnected as a result. Seems a lot like trying to decouple anything made by footfags from glib and their GObject dogshit.Someone more skilled and with more time to spare than me should fork some of these programs into being DE agnostic..![]()
Doom Emacs is what you're looking for. Its Emacs with Vim bindings & self contained, super intuitive package/plugin management. I was on the fence about jumping ship as well, but within a day or two of use I had the same speed as I do on (neo)vim.What a pile of dogshit! Makes me seriously consider Emacs.
I'd recommend yoinking Doom Emacs packages piecemeal as opposed to using it straight up personallyDoom Emacs is what you're looking for. Its Emacs with Vim bindings & self contained, super intuitive package/plugin management. I was on the fence about jumping ship as well, but within a day or two of use I had the same speed as I do on (neo)vim.

It's been over a year Windows free now. I feel I should post a review for any Linux-curious fags, but mostly for myself.just bricked my windows install, any distros good for gayming I should try before inevitably re-installing windows 10?
"gaming distros" are just redditor bait for retards. It's easier and better to start with a minimum featureset and install what you need.It's been over a year Windows free now. I feel I should post a review for any Linux-curious fags, but mostly for myself.
I distro-hopped for a while before getting bored and settling on Fedora KDE Plasma. Just a few tweaks (made through the GUI), and it felt close enough to my old tuned Windows 10 setup while having better features without 3rd party bloat. Except for an update in April that temporarily disabled the ability to go into sleep mode for a week or two, I've had literally zero issues I can blame on the OS. And aside from official World of Warcraft, all games I've tried have worked flawlessly through Lutris or Steam with no headaches or searching for 'how do I maek X gaem werk on Fedora.
Honestly, there's not much else to add. I haven't had to open the terminal in months, and when I did, following AI/chatbot instructions was infinitely better than following old forum posts like I did when I tried Ubuntu 7–8 years ago. I still have no idea what 90% of the posts in this thread are talking about, nor have I felt a compulsion to wear thigh high socks or derail a conversation talking about how Linux-GNU is superior.
TL;DR it just werks, fedora gud for braindead tards leik me.
The Arch forum is still an active forum and helps newbies out, you don't have to specifically use Arch to ask questions, general Linux questions (which are the majority of questions you'll probably ask) are allowed too. My guy seth has like 10k posts spanning 10 years actively, it's best to ask someone like him rather than copypasting code from mister GPT if you don't know what you're doing. You'll also help others who are looking for solutions too in the process.Following AI/chatbot instructions was infinitely better than following old forum posts like I did when I tried Ubuntu 7–8 years ago.
Honestly, I wouldn't have much thought for those if they were literally just collections of preinstalled packages, configs and maybe a tuned kernel. But something like CachyOS also recompiles the entire repo with -O3 and LTO, and introduces its own patches, potentially incompatible with upstream, which is especially dangerous for Arch (see fucking manjaro and its problems over the years). And when your idea is to be a le gaming distro accessible to normies that really seems off."gaming distros" are just redditor bait for retards. It's easier and better to start with a minimum featureset and install what you need.
Doom Emacs is what you're looking for. Its Emacs with Vim bindings & self contained, super intuitive package/plugin management. I was on the fence about jumping ship as well, but within a day or two of use I had the same speed as I do on (neo)vim.
I'd recommend yoinking Doom Emacs packages piecemeal as opposed to using it straight up personally
I think my problems were fairly common "how do I mount secondary disks at start up" " how do i set up the server for openRGB" it's just gonna pull the most copy/pasted answers and they worked.I've tried to use mister GPT again today and it wasn't helpful in the slightest, all it did was tell me to install packages and hope for the best. My problems are always obscure
AppImages are so lovely, at least for emulating retro vidya because I can consolidate all my binaries into a single folder and drag/drop between other distros I'm testing