• alyth@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      CoconutOS is the one and only true OS and everyone should be using it and everyone else is wrong.

    • dan@upvote.au
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      8 months ago

      This list is accurate except for Debian. Debian can do no wrong.

      • firefly@neon.nightbulb.net
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        8 months ago

        @potentiallynotfelix@iusearchlinux.fyi @dan@upvote.au

        I have to agree with you on Debian as far as stability is concerned. Debian is a top-notch server OS.

        But they removed a few of my favorite desktop programs from their stable repo and that had me fuming !!! I only want to run stable, not testing. They also compartmentalized Python’s pip3 into local user virtualenv, which I do not like since I use sand-boxing to invoke pip apps anyway.

        That said, after many years of trying different distros I always kept coming back to Debian and that is where I’m staying.

        • potentiallynotfelix@iusearchlinux.fyi
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          8 months ago

          I’ve only had bad experiences with debian. First off the installer is broken, second apt is a fucking mess compared to the best package manager, emerge, and third I’ve had bootloader issues(or lack of bootloader issues) when trying to install.

      • lightnegative@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        No way, Debian stable is completely useless as a distro unless you’re in to time machines and like the feeling of being stuck 5 years behind the curve

        • ReakDuck@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          If you have a device with a specific usage, then its more than perfect as its stable.

          Only need to draw and write documents on a portable convertable? Suits nicely.

          Want to code on that thing too? Uh. Idk. Use other distro, would be much easier as debian sucks in this category.

          • firefly@neon.nightbulb.net
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            8 months ago

            @lightnegative@lemmy.world

            > “Want to code on that thing too? Uh. Idk. Use other distro, would be much easier as debian sucks in this category.”

            Not if one is using the ultimate secret weapon of coding: Lazarus.

            Nothing comes close for rapid development of Linux applications. And I mean nothing. Need to make a networking application. Built-in. Choose from several GUI kits such as GTK, QT, FLTK, FpGUI? Built-in. Need to create an operating system? Drop down some inline assembler for the BIOS loader and do the EFI PXE in Lazarus or any other editor, and point your kernel to your FreePascal binaries.

            Almost anything you can do with C, you can do with FreePascal and Lazarus with the world’s best free RAD IDE and a bazillion units built in. I have found no single IDE that has so much just ready to patch together into a working Linux application.

        • dan@upvote.au
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          8 months ago

          Run Debian testing or get packages from backports if you need newer packages. It’s still more stable than a rolling distro.

          Debian stable is great if you value stability over everything else, for example on a server, or a desktop PC you want to “just work”. Major updates happen around once every 2 years, not 5 years.

    • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      If you are gems in this limestone community I’d suggest you to get out of Linux instead :)

  • Pasta Dental@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    Linux users and Wayland

    Linux users with X11 users

    Linux users with GNOME users

    Linux users with KDE Plasma users

    Linux users with Systemd users

    Linux users with openrc users

    Linux users with snaps users

    Linux users with flatpak users

    Linux users with appimage users

    Linux users with native packages users

    Linux users and Ubuntu users

    • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      BSD is so dead

      No evidence.

      Linux might won on quantity, but its quality is not comparable to BSDs.

  • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    different distribution fights. Different display manager/desktop environment/window manager users fight.

    Why can’t they just left stupid users to use things like gnome and kde and other desktop environment, they can still use their wm for maximum productivity and performance.

    This is a very stupid fight.

    Look at the BSDs, OpenBSD users can laugh on FreeBSD for having to support wine, running ia32 binaries on amd64, broken at securelevel 1, having so many option for ls(1). FreeBSD can laugh on OpenBSD for using giant lock (doesn’t take advantage of multiprocessor machine), …

    But they don’t fight.

    https://www.bsdfrog.org/pub/events/my_bsd_sucks_less_than_yours-full_paper.pdf

    • Carighan Maconar@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I mean in a way I get it, psychologically.

      When you embrace Linux, you - sadly - also have to embrace the fiddling. Still, even in 2024. It’s gotten worlds better, but it still exists. But as it is a choice to swap to Linux - usually from Windows - you do not perceive this fiddling as a shared plight you can bond and laugh over, instead you see it as the “cost” of embracing Linux.

      As a result, whatever setup you end up with has to be mentally justified to your own brain. A bit like a post-purchase rationalization. So you mentally consider your specific end result to be vastly superior to all other possible ones, after all, this is why you did it! You put in the work to create this, it must be superior.

    • barsoap@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      Congratulations, you just called someone stupid who actually understands what a zygohistomorphic prepromorphism is.

      KDE is perfectly sufficient for my needs. Used it even back in the days where I used XMonad as wm because it takes care of the 100000 tiny things that aren’t worth optimising.

      • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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        8 months ago

        KDE is perfectly sufficient for my needs.

        I’m actually praising that, since many Linux users care what desktop environment, what editor do others use. Just use what you want.

        Look at the BSDs, they care about technical issues.

        • barsoap@lemm.ee
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          Well I’m still going to tell you that gnome is bad software both from the user experience and their unwillingness to implement basic features, and that you should be using helix.

          I also don’t like systemd but nixos happens to use it and I usually don’t have to deal with it so meh.

          Look at the BSDs, they care about technical issues.

          I do, too. But only when I’m working on it. Otherwise, as long as stuff just works, I’m perfectly happy to keep the bonnet closed. That was quite different in my early days, I actually daily-drove linux from scratch in the early 00s, but at some point you either decide to become an OS developer, or you lose interest.

          Side note there’s actually a project brining the glory of nix to the BSDs.

          • Korne127@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            > Gets (in my opinion rightfully) mad that someone called their preferred software dumb and says that it works just good for them
            \ >Literally does the same for different software in the next statement

            Why are some people like this… No, Gnome, KDE or some other stuff is not obviously bad, otherwise there wouldn’t be tons of people that really do know the different options be using and enjoying it. Just let people use it. You can list advantages and disavantages and why you personally prefer something else, but don’t call it outright bad or insult the users…

            • barsoap@lemm.ee
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              8 months ago

              OP called users of the software stupid, not the software. While some of what gnome is is defensible and I just don’t like it, like having very little in the way of configuration options, the other part, like being unwilling to implement server-side decorations, makes it plain bad software. There’s a reason you hear people reply “well just don’t use gnome” to claims of “wayland is broken”.

              Software can, indeed, be objectively bad. “Oh tastes just differ” is an appeal to false civility: No, if your bridge doesn’t get people across the river I don’t care how pretty it looks it’s broken. It might be a beautiful art piece, but it definitely isn’t a bridge.

          • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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            8 months ago

            Well I’m still going to tell you that gnome is bad software both from the user experience and their unwillingness to implement basic features, and that you should be using helix.

            I should?

            I use what I want. (understand that you are advertising software here.)

            I do, too. But only when I’m working on it. Otherwise, as long as stuff just works, I’m perfectly happy to keep the bonnet closed. That was quite different in my early days, I actually daily-drove linux from scratch in the early 00s, but at some point you either decide to become an OS developer, or you lose interest.

            (See what technical issue I’ve written. See the pdf slides above.)

            Side note there’s actually a project brining the glory of nix to the BSDs.

            advertising. Don’t care.

            • barsoap@lemm.ee
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              8 months ago

              advertising. Don’t care.

              It’s very much a technical issue. Skimming your pdf it even talks about package building and delivery. Nixos is so good at that that I gladly put up with systemd is what I’m saying, depending on what you care about more it might even make you tolerate linux.

    • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      By calling them stupid you are actively participating in the fight yourself

      There are very valid reasons both for and against WMs

      Whole point of Linux is allowing user choice, why get on people’s cases about what they can and can’t use

      • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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        8 months ago

        By calling them stupid you are actively participating in the fight yourself

        Sorry :)

        There are very valid reasons both for and against WMs

        Whole point of Linux is allowing user choice, why get on people’s cases about what they can and can’t use

        In my mind I call them “stupid” because I personally thinks desktop environments are “stupid”. Sometimes this flew on the keyboard. Sorry for that.

        A better word to describe those de/wm is “crap”. Just my personal thought.

        • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          Crap is still insulting them though, personally I think gnome is really good. I use hypr and love it but it’s also taken a gargantuan amount of effort to get it how I like it which not everyone wants, and before I switched gnome was doing perfectly fine

          KDE and cinnamon I’m sure are similar boats, though I haven’t daily driven either of those yet

          • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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            8 months ago

            Crap is still insulting them though

            No one wants their software to be called a “crap”, so I will not puke out again.

            personally I think gnome is really good

            But many people doesn’t take “personally”. I wanted to write a post about this a few days ago but the op posted the meme.

            “Linux users” cared about what their desktop environment looks so much.

            This is my .cwmrc:

            bind-key 4-s “bin/scrshot”

            (EOF)

    • jaybone@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      What you think he’s running Windows 11 with an Office 365 subscription in that tool shed of his?

  • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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    8 months ago

    Technically nVidia chose that fight, not Linux users. nVidia is chocked full of proprietary implementations meant to bog down competition, for example all CUDA technology including translation layers are technically illegal to even look at without nVidia proprietary drivers. All alternatives are free open source, afaik.

      • Korne127@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Well, I’m not a Linux user and I say that as well. Nvidia does not just not care about Linux, they actively try to act against their open source driver implementation and working with an Nvidia graphics card on Linux is much harder than using the alternatives.

        • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          Well, I’m not a Linux user and I say that as well. Nvidia does not just not care about Linux, they actively try to act against their open source driver implementation

          Can you give more information on this?

      • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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        8 months ago

        I agree, but that’s what a linux user would say…

        “linux user” should be put in double quotes :)

    • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      Technically nVidia chose that fight, not Linux users.

      nVidia is chocked full of proprietary implementations meant to bog down competition, for example all CUDA technology including translation layers are technically illegal to even look at without nVidia proprietary drivers.

      This already described that Linux user started that fight, and they chose it.

      But they cannot do anything than using the proprietary drivers, screaming about moral, propagating GNUism.

      But they never write their own drivers for many hardwares like the OpenBSD project do. OpenBSD convinced many manufacture to release documentation.

      • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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        Lmao, Linux developers aren’t allowed to use the proprietary software and firmware unless they’re completely non-profit, and even then if it is too similar to nVidia’s intellectual property it can still be taken down. Only nVidia are authorized to create drivers which use CUDA.

        The hardware manufacturers are intentionally making it difficult to use their own hardware, that’s got nothing to do with Linux, Mac, Windows, or any other Operating System because it was never their job to create drivers for every hardware in the first place.

        • IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          I honestly can’t believe I’m saying this again.

          Does not matter.

          Users want compatibility and ease of use.

          It doesn’t matter if Jenson takes Joe Biden hostage and signs an executive order to make reverse engineering illegal. It’s still the Linux communities road block to adoption.

          • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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            8 months ago

            Users want compatibility and ease of use.

            The distribution can choose not to include proprietary drivers. And not to “fix” it.

            “Ignorance is strength”, isn’t the strength of “linux communities” is enough to take nvidia down?

            • IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              Year of the Linux desktop! Amirite! The Linux desktop advocates have to be the most clueless FOSS community out there.

        • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          If nvidia is an evil, then why you suppose them to provide you free drivers.

          Just drop nvidia.

          • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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            8 months ago

            We can drop nVidia and also talk about how evil they are at the same time. nVidia sells hardware, you would expect them to provide drivers for their hardware, instead they are actively preventing anybody else from making drivers for their hardware.

            • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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              8 months ago

              you would expect them to provide drivers for their hardware

              I’d correct: we would expect them to provide at least documentation.

          • IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            This is my point. Telling people to just drop Nvidia is delusional. It’s Linux desktop contributers problem to fix. Doesn’t matter if it’s fair or right, but Linux DE is never going to be mainstream with Wayland type issues and having to ditch the top hardware makers.

            • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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              8 months ago

              +1

              Telling people to just drop Nvidia is delusional

              We can tell people’s that is going to buy a new computer to avoid nvidia :)

              It’s Linux desktop contributers problem to fix.

              We can’t write drivers for platforms that we don’t have documentation. linux desktop contributors dropping support for nvidia entirely is not a bad decision, though

        • IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Yes. NVIDIA is NEVER going to spend money on your community and it will NEVER be year of the Linux desktop with the planets best GPUs not working.

          Nobodies problem but the Linux community.

            • IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              I know, when reality gets in the way, you can summon your inner Steve Jobs and turn up that RDF.

              AMD is the top GPU maker and users are going to ditch Nvidia in droves to adopt Linux desktop.

                • IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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                  8 months ago

                  No. It’ll take a while lot more than a few. Nvidias IP is worth a metric shit load. They will never open source the entire thing. At best you’ll get small modules of support.

      • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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        8 months ago

        it’s a Linux issue

        Not a linux’s issue, though. When they don’t have documentation, they can decide not to write a driver, and not to use proprietary drivers too.

        But nvidia doesn’t care about linux, doesn’t target linux. And current “linux communities” can’t do anything but whine.

  • nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    Hate the irrational hate for Nvidia, Wayland or some desktop . I’m just out here trying to help others figure out their problem and some asshole comments"Nvidia doesn’t work on wayland", “just get an amd card”, “Wayland will never work” or “gsync doesn’t work in Linux with multiple monitors”.

    All of them are equally absurd, the last one largely true on xorg for any GPU. Xorg doesn’t do mixed frame rates. Also it doesn’t help the person who is using an Nvidia card because there are solutions for most issues. Those issues are just not well understood because there was a time Nvidia drivers just didn’t work on wayland etc.

    I hate gatekeepers and purist that just make anyone who might be new to the platform feel attacked or alienated. No one cares about your ideologies if they’re not asking and the idiots that parot it doesn’t prove anything other than your part of the loud minority. Just being kind to one another and being understanding of other peoples decisions can go a long way to growing a healthy supportive community.

    I’m still a little frustrated about the behavior of people when I was trying to help someone setup hardware video acceleration in their browser. And another that wanted to use a different distro but found Nvidia worked best on arch for him.

    • pixelscript@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      I am going to continue to tell people “just get an AMD card”, but only if they have indicated to me that they are shopping for new parts and haven’t committed to any yet.

      Giving that advice to someone who already has an Nvidia card is just as useless as those StackOverflow answers that suggest you dump your whole project architecture and stuff some big dumb library into your build to solve a simple problem.

      • lad@programming.dev
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        8 months ago

        I am planning to shop for new parts (well, strictly speaking I continue to plan for more than a year already, but life gets in the way). I can’t decide between the better compatibility of AMD and (supposedly) more features of Nvidia

        I have just started trying to make sense of the situation searching the internet, but I would appreciate it if you can sum up what’s the pros and cons for my use case: I mostly use GPU for gaming, consider participation in ML crowd sourcing like AI horde, sometimes edit images or video. Plus, I mostly use Win now and want to use Linux in dual boot on the new machine

        • imecth@fedia.io
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          8 months ago

          There’s basically only 2 reasons to go for nvidia, rtx and cuda, figure out if you care enough about it to get an nvidia gpu.
          As for postponing shit, just get it over with, there’ll never be a perfect moment to buy your gpu.

          • lad@programming.dev
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            8 months ago

            I was postponing because otherwise I had to carry my GPU in a suitcase instead of a computer case 😅 but I’m almost done moving around, almost

            • nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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              8 months ago

              No need to rush it. I moved recently with an ultra wide 32", 24" and 2 midsized desktop. I ended up with scuff on my ultra wide screen and a gouge on the interior plastics because I closed my hatch on my pc by accident.

              Now I have a lil squiggly dead center of my screen but thankfully no tempered glass mess in the back.

        • pixelscript@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          Nvidia and AMD broadly cover the same use cases. Nvidia cards are not intrinsically better to my knowledge, Nvidia simply offers ultra high-performance cards that AMD doesn’t.

          If you just need nonspecific games to run decently, a card from either brand will do it. If you need to run the most intensive games there are on unbelievable settings, that’s when Nvidia should be edging out.

          ML dabbling may complicate things. Many (most?) tools are written for CUDA, which is a proprietary Nvidia technology. I think AMD offers a counterpart but I do not have details. You will need to do more research on this.

          • lad@programming.dev
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            8 months ago

            Yeah, researching the last point now, thanks for the heads up about the rest. Probably not going to be running super mega ultra, not potato is already a big step forward 😅

    • cmhe@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Nvidia has created a bit of a sore spot for many Linux Developers and thus users. Through their actions and non actions made it impossible to create FOSS drivers for their hardware that work well and are integrated and tested with the rest of the system.

      Many fresh users don’t seem to recognize the reason why they are having a sub par experience using their hardware is Nvidia and not the open source community. They often blame and complain to the developers of the open source drivers or applications, who either have to hack around hurdles placed by Nvidia or cannot inspect closed source drivers written by that company.

      It is IMO understandable that at some point the community stops providing free and unpaid customer support for hardware and software, they have no control over or don’t even own.

      If you would start paying them, then I suspect you might get better answers. Otherwise you just get information about stuff people are excited about.

    • ElectricMoose@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      As a developer, I really don’t like how Wayland has fractured the ecosystem. Competing immature protocols are still all over the place while the immobility of x11 has spoiled us for years. It’s getting better, but in the meantime I can still write an x11 app which will work mostly everywhere (thanks to xwayland), whereas a wayland app may not work everywhere (not on X11, and not on compositors which don’t implement the right combinations of protocols).

      • nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        As a user I like no screen tearing, low latency, no soft locks from apps crashing, no softlock when a window is capturing the keyboard while the screen is locked, no weird artifacts from hardware accelerated effects, no app windows blanking out and lagging usually web apps (still happens in XWayland),etc.

        I still miss being able to kill the screen locker from the terminal, made me feel like a hacker.

      • nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        Yeah. I’m guilty of doing that to myself, I use Arch and neovim btw. Your perspective kinda changes when someone close to you that wants to switch to Linux she found windows frustrating or start getting into more than just animal crossing and the sims but finds camera controls disorienting or both. (Mother)

        A lot of these new people who want a better experience for themselves but find certain technology issues daunting and they really get the raw end of the deal when they run into the loud minority. I also blame Linux Bros for promising the moon and with no issues.

        It’s about as difficult and as exciting (for some) as switching to Macos for the first time, ask me how I know.

        • Default_Defect@midwest.social
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          8 months ago

          I also blame Linux Bros for promising the moon and with no issues

          This is the one that I see the most when I’m in Linux communities. The guy that knows all of the ins and outs of the software and the hardware and has no problems, telling the person that only has ever used windows that it all just works no matter what. “ALL of your games will work right away AND run better than windows ever did.” but they fail to mention that all they play are games that had good linux support or something.

          • nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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            8 months ago

            I don’t think you get how dxvk and wine work. All games that don’t require rootkits and have Linux support in their flavor of anti cheat will start, about 80% playable potentially with some tweaking or hardware specific fixes and about 20% pretty much work out of the box which is nice. AMD users are probably feeling smug about the aggregate 50% playable with 10% verified steam deck compatible.

            It only runs better as a result of the optimizations done to translate Windows calls to Linux calls as well as translating Direct X into Vulkan or just uses vulkan. So if the game is well optimized Linux is a lot less likely to have an advantage and often suffers in performance a little bit until optimizations for that game are patched into Wine or DXVK about the same as video card drivers in windows.

            On the other hand some poorly optimized games still run just as bad as they do on Windows if the game has issues not related to the graphics stack. Things like Elden Ring play to the strength of the optimizations and presented good results but I like to think of it as the exception and not the rule.

            On average you see a delta of at most 10fps with windows beating Linux or Linux beating windows which even I find surprising sometimes. Maybe lower CPU overhead, the game just runs better being translated into Vulkan, or shader cashing in DXVK has gotten better than some in-house solutions; it’s hard to say.

            • Default_Defect@midwest.social
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              8 months ago

              I don’t think you get how dxvk and wine work.

              Clearly, I don’t use Linux. I should have specified that it was an example of the type of comment I see rather than the absolute reality of it. My point was that there’s always a something that the loudest proponents of linux don’t mention simply because they took care of it so long ago that they forgot or its so routine to them they fail to mention it.

              • nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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                8 months ago

                Yeah, I totally agree. Sorry about that. I got pretty excited about the topic because it’s amazing how all my games have worked so far and how it works is interesting. If I was using Windows or MacOS I’d be paying attention but I generally wouldn’t care about the progress.

    • dan@upvote.au
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      8 months ago

      I’ve known some fantastic developers that used Nano as their primary editor. It supports syntax highlighting, linting, and bracket matching (jumping to the matching opening bracket when a closing one is selected, and vice versa), which is enough for some people.

      Sure, it’s no micro, but it’s already installed practically everywhere.

      • firefly@neon.nightbulb.net
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        8 months ago

        @tsonfeir@lemm.ee

        I have an alias to run nano with command-line flags to customize it for plain text note taking. I remove all the fluff and the status and shortcut lines from the editor so it’s just a text field. Micro is my choice for editing remote code over SSH when I don’t want to push a local file.

    • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      Why we have to care much about software usage. This is the current issue of linux communities, which decrease user qualities.

      Our enemy Microsoft and other “big tech” laugh people like these. They are using linux just like they use windows, even bring the bad, flawed windows culture to linux.

      • marcos@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        even bring the bad, flawed windows culture to linux

        Infighting is on the Unix culture since it left the Bell Labs. Or maybe even sooner.

        But the only real enemy of that set is NVidia.

        • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          But the only real enemy of that set is NVidia.

          The only?

          (Windows user that switch to linux and then say: we only need partition for / and /home are also enemies. Windows user that have switch to linux and use root for every task are enemies.)

          • marcos@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Are those ex-Windows users slowing you down in any way?

            And anyway, if you are talking about desktops, I’ve been using only / and /home for about 20 years since I noticed that /boot and /var didn’t bring me any value for a really long time. I’m currently wondering if I shouldn’t ditch /home.

              • marcos@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                Wow, I can’t believe I’m reading that first point from a 2018 comment. I’d mock it if it was in 2006.

                You should have backups. Not hedge against 1 in 10 million error conditions.

                The second one is a huge bother in desktops. I never not regretted trying it.

                The third one is a complete non-problem.

                • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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                  8 months ago

                  You should have backups. Not hedge against 1 in 10 million error conditions.

                  if a partition isn’t actively written to, it’s less likely to suffer damage

                  The second one is a huge bother in desktops. I never not regretted trying it.

                  ok

                  The third one is a complete non-problem.

                  This is only a problem with OpenBSD. They never encourage using a huge single root partition, and never test it.

                  It have an asterisk, not a -