• kina@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 hours ago

      Same here! College friends spent hours late night helping me install and configure Arch + i3 on an old MacBook, going crazy trying to get wifi working. Great memories

    • _cryptagion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 hours ago

      Bazzite is so good, especially on the Steam Deck. I did run with Arch for awhile, but ended up switching back to Bazzite when I realized that all I ended up doing was recreating Bazzite in Arch. KDE 6 with all the gaming essentials pre-configured is just so nice.

      • DoucheBagMcSwag@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 hours ago

        As someone who currently uses Windows 10 w/ NVIDIA hardware and a destain for W11, I’m definitely liking Bazzite.

        Apparently though DirectX games don’t perform as well as well compared to Windows though. At least heard from an ROG Ally Bazzite vs windows comparison I saw on YouTube

    • yeah@feddit.uk
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      8 hours ago

      Heh. I just went from a Chromebook to mint.

      Honestly baffled by the basics. Currently youtubing how to mount a NFS share from (on?) my NAS.

      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        5 hours ago

        Not 100% sure if there’s an easy-mode for this one but just a friendly reminder to copy fstab to fstab.old or fstab.backup so you can revert to it if something doesn’t go right. :)

    • ByteJunk@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      Are you me?! Also just migrated to Mint, and I’m really impressed. Good level of polish, and stuff just works out of the box.

      Currently still have it on dual boot, I’ll give it a week or two and I don’t need Windows in that time I’ll move it to my main M2 SSD and ditch M$

      • Jumi@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        I tried it from a USB drive first and when I saw how easy it is I just took the leap and fully switched.

        My biggest worry was gaming but even there was no problem at all

        • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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          5 hours ago

          Same story! The improvements in the gaming sphere really need to be experienced to be believed. But okay, Steam works great, we know that.

          What about stuff that requires EA’s launcher through Steam? Works.

          EA exclusive stuff? Heroic Launcher. Works.

          GoG? Heroic Launcher.

          Ahh, but old disc games that Windows decided to just stop caring about anymore? Bottles. (Not 100% guarantee, but I’ve been IMPRESSED at how easy it was to get something like Sims 1 to play.)

          Hotel? Trivago.

          Now I just hope the Monado project can make some leaps so we can get WMR devices working on Linux. VR is super neat and I don’t wanna leave it behind completely. :( (Still grudging against M$ so hard for that.)

      • Bronzie@sh.itjust.works
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        10 hours ago

        I was you six months ago.

        Formated the W10 drive before christmas as I never spun it up anymore. Have fun in Linux!

        • ByteJunk@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          I don’t even need it to be fun! I just need it to work, and not stuff me full of scummy invasive spyware and bloatware every time an update rolls around.

          Having fun is just that cherry on top!

  • utopiah@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    So… actually (put on fedora hat) it’s a GREAT way to learn!

    What I do NOT recommend though is distro hopping with your data and your daily life setup. Namely the safest to learn is main system is stable, easy to setup and fix, you’re comfortable with even if you are not “proud” to claim it on Lemmy BUT the weird stuff you do on the side, it’s on a dedicate harddrive (ideally not even partition, just so that you can even mess that up) and you go LinuxFromScratch of whatever rock your boat knowing your data is safe and if you fuck up you can still go on with your day.

    • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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      5 hours ago

      This is great advice. Heed this advice, people.

      Know what? I’ll add to it. In Windows a power user will often end up screwing around in the registry or system files or whatever to crowbar it into doing what they want it to do…

      But if you’re opening a root shell or file-explorer screwing around outside your /home folder, digging around in / ? On your daily use machine?

      STOP. ☠️

      • FACT: People Systems have died and data has been irrecoverably lost by going into this cave.
      • There’s probably a much less dangerous way to accomplish whatever you’re trying to do!!
      • You shouldn’t be poking around things and exploring a working system as ROOT! This is by design!

      GO. NO. FURTHER!

      These sorts of shenanigans are why you play around in virtual machines. :)

      –Sincerely: Someone who manually deleted his writable in-use BTRFS snapshot when trying to free up space, thinking it was an orphan file that the system tools didn’t detect, rendering his system unbootable and unrecoverable, forcing a complete reinstall. (I found this is analogous to the infamously dangerous “rm -rf /” , or thinking you’re deleting an old Windows restore point but somehow wiping C:\ )

      If you don’t know what “3-2-1 backup” means. Now’s the time to look that up!

  • lurklurk@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Everyone is a bit lost at first… That’s the first step to becoming an expert.

    Great that you’re trying to learn something new!

  • zxqwas@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    After over a decade of using it exclusively at home and partially at work I still googled how to add users to a group last week.

    • addie@feddit.uk
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      1 day ago

      Well yeah. You barely use groups on a personal machine - maybe once and done for audio and VMs, depending on what distro you use - and at work you’d automate that shit, probably have it centralised.

    • 299792458ms@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      I try to remember commands backwards by how they look(<command> <flags> <arguments>), if they are short, have capital letters and so on… Is that weird? If I give up I open the history file or my good ol’ cheat sheet.

        • 299792458ms@lemmy.zip
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          1 day ago

          I did use it but the only real benefit for me as a hobbyist was the git status indicator on the prompt and the easy to configure prompt. The rest of the indicators did not help me since I’m not a developer. Now I just have my custom prompt with colors, and custom git info.

          • Petter1@lemm.ee
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            24 hours ago

            But it autocompletes pretty well, isn’t it? 🤔or was it fish doing that

            • PoolloverNathan@programming.dev
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              7 hours ago

              Fish does history autocomplete, not Starship — you still have autocomplete using unconfigured Fish, and you don’t get autocompletion by enabling Starship for other shells.

            • 299792458ms@lemmy.zip
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              23 hours ago

              I quite sure fish has it, but I use zsh without autocompletions, I just press tab until I find what I need. And the fzf history shortcuts for the rest.

  • m4m4m4m4@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I’m old (not much, though) but back in my day it happened the same thing with people like me. Only that instead Arch+Hyprland it was Compiz Fusion+Beryl because the cube and the flames was the tits.

    Also I just happen to be a graphic designer so hopefully this post of yours helps into letting die that idea that Linux is only for devs and sysadmins.

    • Illecors@lemmy.cafe
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      1 day ago

      Conpiz fusion!.. I’ve created so many problems for myself trying to run it on ATI at the time.

      Totally worth it :D

  • Thrashy@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    I’m an ex-sysadmin so I guess I get to be the middle head, but blundering my way through the current distro scene after not having touched a desktop Linux install in, oh… twenty years or so, I feel more like the right. I suppose on the one had I had the good sense not to jump right into Arch or Nix, but even more familiar territory like Nobara has its pitfalls. Just today I had to clean up a botched release upgrade because the primary maintainer had left conflicting packages in the repository for an extended period. Not laying blame per se, that’s what you get when you sign on to a one-man effort, but it was a real pain in the butt to diagnose and correct.

    • trxxruraxvr@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Is nobara really more familiar territory than arch? I’d never heard of it before. Arch may not always hold your hand, but it’s extremely well documented.

      • Thrashy@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        Nobara is just Fedora with a heavy layer of gaming-focused polish applied. In that regard it’s quite a bit more familiar than something like Arch, which makes a point of not holding anybody’s hand, and (just in terms of ease of use and overall userbase) feels a lot closer to what Gentoo was like back when I last was in this space.

        I was heavily in the camp of Debian-based distros back in the day, but Debian proper has never been a great choice for desktop, and Ubuntu’s star is much faded of late, so I decided to give an RPM-based distro a chance before jumping way off into the deep end. I don’t have the time to fiddle that I used to, and (at least until yesterday’s hiccup) Nobara was much closer to “it just works” out of the box than anything like Arch would have been.

  • 9488fcea02a9@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    I have a coworker who went from windows only to “i want to try self host a bunch of stuff”

    Ran into lots of learning curves and problems

    Conclusion? “Linux sucks! Too difficult!”

    • highball@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Everything I selfhost was easily setup with a simple compose file and various env files for each resource. What the heck was he trying to setup? I haven’t used Windows in a long time, but I doubt they have anything as easy as a declarative file like compose.

    • Rooty@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Technically difficult thing is technically difficult, let’s blame John Linux for not making a big red “host server” button.

      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        5 hours ago

        Man. THANK YOU.

        I’m all for welcoming and teaching everyone, but I’m getting real tired of all the “Linux will never catch on because grandma can’t instantly VM-passthrough her NVIDIA card and remote in with Wireguard” or “changing the wallpaper requires terminal-ninja skills” rhetoric.

        Some common things could use simpler on-ramps but people act like mega-corpo you're-too-dumb-let-us-do-it-for-you -ification is some kind of “good thing” for tech adoption , when the strategy is really to create dependent customers without a fundamental understanding of how anything works.

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    1 day ago

    I started with Manjaro. Unfucking that system has taught me more than any “stable” distro could. It’s all a matter of determination.

    Welcome to the party.

    • Undaunted@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 day ago

      It’s funny that they claim to be more stable than vanilla Arch because of their own repositories. My Manjaro installation broke itself very frequently after half a year of use. My Endeavour now is much more stable and reliable.

      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        5 hours ago

        Endeavour is just freaking lovely. The community is really chill and welcoming, too.

        Also all the ethereal purple space aesthetic is rad. We gotta get them some proper artwork haha. (Some of it seems generated)

      • Owljfien@lemm.ee
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        16 hours ago

        The only time i tried manjaro it was broken from the start in the sense that it defaulted to Wayland and didn’t set the appropriate nvidia flags. Back then I knew nothing and didn’t know how to do much of Anything so ended up back to mint lol

        • Undaunted@discuss.tchncs.de
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          16 hours ago

          The main issue I had was the incompatibility to the AUR. Manjaro holds back updates from the main Arch repo, to do some more tests etc. But that doesn’t apply to the AUR. But the AUR packages depend on the latest versions from the main Arch repo to be installed. With Manjaro always being 2 weeks or so behind, it’s just a matter of time and your system breaks at some point when you use AUR packages.

    • nul9o9@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Three steps for me.

      1. Linux on a laptop
      2. Dual boot on my main pc.
      3. Full switch done in spite after windows nuked my linux partition.
      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        5 hours ago

        Haha nice! Similar journey! My step 3 was when Win10 kept BSODing my games, and then being more subtly broken when I booted it up.

        “Okay, I’ll just ‘refresh this PC’.” I said.

        “Can’t.” Said Win10.

        “Why not?” Says I.

        “Lol-idk” says Win10 with an indifferent shrug.

        OpenSUSE Tumbleweed runs all my creative artwork tasks AND all my games run beautifully. Just pointed Steam to the folder and it handled everything automagically.

        Game doesn’t crash anymore on the same hardware, BTW.

        Tumbleweed my beloved. ❤️

      • SeekPie@lemm.ee
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        13 hours ago

        My steps:

        1. Think about dual-booting
        2. Try to install Nobara as dual-boot
        3. Fuck up Windows install
        4. Too lazy to reinstall Windows 5.???
        5. Now own Steam Deck, have old ThinkPad and PC running Fedora
    • themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Me too. My final reason to not go back to windows was that I realized I didn’t actually really care for the games I played with restrictive anti cheat and was only playing them because they were popular.

      Now I just play games that I consciously acknowledge I’m enjoying playing, and that has been great for mental health as well.

    • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      I’ve been playing with Linux for almost 20 years and only wiped my windows partition maybe 2 years ago. I figured I can run a windows VM on my Proxmox rig, but I haven’t had the need to yet (probably helps that I’m not big into gaming).