The Linux Thread - The Autist's OS of Choice

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It's also the good old GNOME stink, Zorin can't fork enough of that shit to fix the otherworldly inconsistent font scaling there, even if they did fork anything of the project.
With all the shilling I hear for Zorin and Mint about how plug and play they are, it makes me really wonder how many people use scaling. I have vision issues, but I still find it hard to believe that people can comfortably use any computer 1440p and above without scaling. Shit just looks way too small to me.
 
With all the shilling I hear for Zorin and Mint about how plug and play they are, it makes me really wonder how many people use scaling. I have vision issues, but I still find it hard to believe that people can comfortably use any computer 1440p and above without scaling. Shit just looks way too small to me.
I have no intention of ever using a monitor with a resolution higher than 1920x1440 (RIP that $20 21" Trinitron I so unwisely discarded just because it weighed 90 pounds) but could you not just change your theme settings to make the sizes of fonts and UI elements larger? That's what worked just fine when I was running that high resolution CRT with KDE3 back in 2007 or so. Now everything is sized right for 1080p so there's no reason for me to do that, but there's no reason for the Linux desktop to have gotten LESS capable in 20 years, right? RIGHT?
 
With all the shilling I hear for Zorin and Mint about how plug and play they are, it makes me really wonder how many people use scaling. I have vision issues, but I still find it hard to believe that people can comfortably use any computer 1440p and above without scaling. Shit just looks way too small to me.
I have a laptop with 1440p and use 150% scaling and it works fine, I haven't really tried 125% scaling though but I would imagine it's a little more computationally heavy
 


2x4GB DDR4 DIMMs are about $25 on ebay. SODIMMs are cheaper, surprisingly.

With all the shilling I hear for Zorin and Mint about how plug and play they are, it makes me really wonder how many people use scaling. I have vision issues, but I still find it hard to believe that people can comfortably use any computer 1440p and above without scaling. Shit just looks way too small to me.
I've only tried Zorin on 1080p screens. I use 720p often, have no 1440p, and haven't tried it with a 4K TV yet.
 
With all the shilling I hear for Zorin and Mint about how plug and play they are, it makes me really wonder how many people use scaling. I have vision issues, but I still find it hard to believe that people can comfortably use any computer 1440p and above without scaling. Shit just looks way too small to me.

You have the worst luck with hardware than anyone else in this thread and that's not to discredit your struggles, genuinely sucks, sometimes the hardware simply wasn't meant to be. I don't have anything remotely remarkable just a cheap mini pc and a cheap ass single monitor set up. Hopefully you can find a good middle ground in all this.
 
With all the shilling I hear for Zorin and Mint about how plug and play they are, it makes me really wonder how many people use scaling. I have vision issues, but I still find it hard to believe that people can comfortably use any computer 1440p and above without scaling. Shit just looks way too small to me.
I use a 32" 4K screen at 200% scaling, and I have no idea how people can seriously stare at anything scaled smaller.

And BTW, I've sperged about this before: The graphical installer most Linux distros use nowadays is horrendous with regards to themeing and scaling, to the point it can be impossible to get through the installation for some, especially when you happen to be on a Laptop.
 
With all the shilling I hear for Zorin and Mint about how plug and play they are, it makes me really wonder how many people use scaling. I have vision issues, but I still find it hard to believe that people can comfortably use any computer 1440p and above without scaling. Shit just looks way too small to me.
I've never used scaling. I don't think I've even tried it. I've always just changed the font size. It just seemed like the most reasonable solution to the font being too small. Because generally everything else is the size I want it to be at the normal scaling.

I also tend to only use one toolkit for the gui apps I use, except the few rare cases where I need something with qt. like kdenlive, or obs. Which I think are actually the only two I use. So it's simple for me to set the font across my gtk stuff, set my theme, and everything is matching, and uses the font/font size I want. Otherwise a lot of the stuff I'm doing is either in the terminal, usually in an editor. Or a tui. and my suckless stuff, which are gui programs technically.

I know most people probably wouldn't want to use the set up I have. But it works well for me. I would imagine for a desktop. If the toolkit is consistent it should be fairly easy to get similar results though. Although I admittedly haven't tried, so it's just an assumption.

I use a 32" 4K screen at 200% scaling, and I have no idea how people can seriously stare at anything scaled smaller.
ok I have to ask.

Why the fuck do you people buy these high resolution monitors if you have to scale the image up like this for it to be functional? It seems a bit ridiculous. I seriously don't understand it. It seems worse in every sense. You have to deal with scaling for one, they're more expensive usually. And I've never looked at a 1080 video and thought the video was too low quality. it literally looks fine.

Is there something I'm missing? It really just seems worse than using 1080 what do you actually get from using a 4k monitor and how does it offset everything else?
 
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And I've never looked at a 1080 video and thought the video was too low quality. it literally looks fine.
I really don't understand why so many people nowadays act like 1080p is shit. Just because something better exists doesn't make the quality *bad*. For most applications and use cases you really do not need 4k.


I can remember 240 being standard. 1080p is beyond fine.
 
I also tend to only use one toolkit for the gui apps I use, except the few rare cases where I need something with qt. like kdenlive, or obs. Which I think are actually the only two I use. So it's simple for me to set the font across my gtk stuff, set my theme, and everything is matching, and uses the font/font size I want. Otherwise a lot of the stuff I'm doing is either in the terminal, usually in an editor. Or a tui. and my suckless stuff, which are gui programs technically.
Indeed. KDE has had a way to apply some subset of KDE theme and font settings to GTK/Gnome apps since at least KDE3. Gnome, being retarded, has not. Apparently the KDE implementation is still around, although I wouldn't be surprised if it's a bit broken nowadays. So if you're using some mix of KDE and Gnome it makes sense to use KDE first and configure themes in there.

True... this won't be applied to very traditional Xaw applications like xedit, xmessage, xevil etc, which will look small on an excessively high resolution screen. But you could just use applications that use more modern toolkits. Or a normal screen with a normal resolution.
 
I really don't understand why so many people nowadays act like 1080p is shit. Just because something better exists doesn't make the quality *bad*. For most applications and use cases you really do not need 4k.


I can remember 240 being standard. 1080p is beyond fine.
It's pretty much a question of aspect ratio. 16:9 feels cramped when editing a video, document, image, etc.

Bumping the resolution to 1200p just makes it way more comfortable (newer Lenovo laptops features 16:10 screens, which looks dandy).
 
1080p is fine for video and more cinematic-style games (RPGs, FPS, things like that), but I can't go back from 4k for anything that includes lots of text, such as business applications, or less cinematic games like Rimworld or EVE Online. 1080p just can't compete with that crispness, it makes a huge difference for text and vector graphics.
 
ok I have to ask.

Why the fuck do you people buy these high resolution monitors if you have to scale the image up like this for it to be functional? It seems a bit ridiculous. I seriously don't understand it. It seems worse in every sense. You have to deal with scaling for one, they're more expensive usually. And I've never looked at a 1080 video and thought the video was too low quality. it literally looks fine.

Is there something I'm missing? It really just seems worse than using 1080 what do you actually get from using a 4k monitor and how does it offset everything else?
You are just beyond retarded, if this is the kind of question you have to ask.
 
1080p is fine for video and more cinematic-style games (RPGs, FPS, things like that), but I can't go back from 4k for anything that includes lots of text, such as business applications, or less cinematic games like Rimworld or EVE Online. 1080p just can't compete with that crispness, it makes a huge difference for text and vector graphics.
+1 especially for Rimworld, Terraria and World of Warcraft. Its what prompted me to get a monitor newer than ~2012. Haven't tried gaming on my X11/bspwm setup too much but Way/Hyprland hasn't given me shit so far, at least not on Guix or Nobara.
 
ok I have to ask.

Why the fuck do you people buy these high resolution monitors if you have to scale the image up like this for it to be functional? It seems a bit ridiculous. I seriously don't understand it. It seems worse in every sense. You have to deal with scaling for one, they're more expensive usually. And I've never looked at a 1080 video and thought the video was too low quality. it literally looks fine.

Is there something I'm missing? It really just seems worse than using 1080 what do you actually get from using a 4k monitor and how does it offset everything else?
It's kinda annoying when tech channels telling you to upgrade your monitor(from 1080p to 1440p) first then to upgrade your GPU and CPU.

Like nigga, I want to achieve high frame rates just so I can run any game at 1080p max settings, or play a high demanding game.
 
I'm nearing 40 with shitty eyes and using a 3k widescreen monitor at 100% scaling with no problem. Thanks for making me feel better I guess.

It's kinda annoying when tech channels telling you to upgrade your monitor(from 1080p to 1440p) first then to upgrade your GPU and CPU.

Like nigga, I want to achieve high frame rates just so I can run any game at 1080p max settings, or play a high demanding game.
The argument is pretty sound just because 1440p gaming at medium-high settings is generally much better visually then max at 1080p. You are probably not going to appreciate the difference between 7/10 and 10/10 grass clutter especially given the lower resolution. Also various fake AI frames options are common on new games and moderate use is mostly *fine* even if they are not ideal.
 
+1 especially for Rimworld, Terraria and World of Warcraft.
you know what? thats actually a good point, other than for watching movies i think being able to play terraria on the highest resolution possible is the only good use case ive seen for ultra high res monitors. still a gimmick but now that you mention it i really want to boot up terraria on the nearest 4k screen.
 
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Bootloader has been FULLY implemented to stand on its knees.
Current thing its doing? Waiting for the IR remote to register a POWER button being pressed on a remote to then transition to starting the vmlinux and then move forward. Yes its gotten THAT far.
1768779084678.png
Successfully mounted the NAND. Removed OOB bytes to make it run and then ran it from ram while keeping a FULL copy with OOB and wrote registers to read there whenever it wanted to offically read itself. and then started EXECUTION at everything from ram. Transitioning to the software.

It found what it was looking for and is able to run. Next im going to be making a REMOTE to work in qemu. If anyone wants to see the binaries to try out themselves with a NAND dump message me. If you want to see how it works. TRACKING DOWN these nand dumps was a pain.

One of the most obscure hardware platforms ever to be sold. Undocumented and lost to time. FOUND and reverse engineered. By someone who did not even know what a VMLINUX was 3 months ago or what a BUS was. AND got it running in QEMU.
 
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