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poinck@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•Linux comes for Windows at 40 — and gaming can't save it
221·2 days agoI wonder what must happen to roll out more Linux in the public sector. There is still software required by scientist of various professions that need a tool only available for Windows. Installing a VM is not an option; too complicated for the average user.
And there is Windows software not compatible with Windows 11. Here is a small chance to use wine, but will the setup be practical and installable by the users themselves? I doubt it and it will put more work on the admins.
I hope at least, that Linux maintenance will be smoother despite the need for compatibility for older Windows software in the future.
Absolutely, thx for clarifying (:
Both can be very rude to people around them (from what is visible in public). I wouldn’t want either of them as my boss. Apart from that, both have their ways to entertain; I don’t mean by displaying bad behaviour to people; that is no entertainment I enjoy.
poinck@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•After 5 years, I’m finally leaving Ubuntu for this Linux distro
13·17 days agosame, there is only one reason to get Ubuntu over Debian, if you have a Nvidia gpu, they make it easy to just work.
But, if you don’t need cuda, I recommend an AMD gpu and stick with Debian or Fedora. It is trouble free.
PS: I will try immutable distros some day, pinky promise ^^
gnome-remote-desktop exists, but it isn’t as mature as xrdp. I am on Debian stable anyway and wait until it is ready. Locally I prefer Wayland and for RDP xrdp is still the better option in my opinion.
poinck@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•GTK Adds "Reduced Motion" Accessibility Option To Follow macOS, Windows & Others
4·18 days agoThis is very nice. So far, the amount of motion on a Gnome desktop isn’t too much for me, but it is on the default iOS behaviour. I am glad that these options exists!
poinck@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•GNOME Mutter Now "Completely Drops The Whole X11 Backend"
4·19 days agoAt home, I like that this is happening, but at work X11 is still needed for xrdp. I have tried gnome-remote-desktop, but it isn’t on par with it. I could not get it to work reliably on Debian 13.
Maybe, with the next stable release it will be ready and the X11-drop will be a non-issue.
Today, I am close to 1 and 5. Had a fairly nice day and everything went smoothly. Today I can afford to sit, watch and be funny. (:
Did you just say, that popups are back? scream
I am just guessing: Could sector size have something to do with it?
And no, I wouldn’t trust it.
On my EIZO monitor with DP connected I have no issues seeing all of the boot process (Gentoo and Debian 13). I just have to ensure I power up the monitor 1 second before starting the computer. This monitor has great colors for it’s age, only 60Hz, though.
At work I noticed the newer Dell monitors seem to boot for 2 to 5 seconds, but the BIOS on both work machines is slow enough to don’t bother counting down 5 seconds until I boot them.
Generally, I find it a bit annoying and great that everything “monitors” is so dynamically detected. This is why I always power on the monitors first and I can live/work in peace.
Maybe. But, only until bedtime I managed to solve all the issues and I needed to it run overnight. I had use flag issues only every 3 to 6 months, granted, but it was enough for me.
gnome-software, it can also tell you whether the app you want to install is available natively.
Interesting. Why not use systemd-nspawn? From what I understand, the kernel is shared anyway.
Or it is about the friends you loose after you have successfully installed Gentoo and now maintaining it.
Fun aside: I used Gentoo for more than a decade (15 years?, idk). Since I am back on Debian stable, I don’t feel like I am missing out on stuff I want to try, because I don’t have to wait or solve useflag issues anymore. I still think, Gentoo is a solid distro, but I have other hobbies, too. If it were my sole job to maintain a Gentoo system I would do it. But I don’t want to deal with it anymore in my spare time.
poinck@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•What's the highest # of tabs you've opened while troubleshooting something? (linux or not linux related)
2·2 months agoYes, same here. That is why I read on Lemmy to inform myself in advance and reduce the amount of tabs.
I am in the 5 to 20 tab range depending on the solution I am searching for. At around 5 I usually use LLM to help me and cross-check with more searches. If it is longterm, I subscribe to related communities on Lemmy and interesting podcasts.
Regarding your question to virtualize Windows: Use virt-manager if it is just for you and Proxmox if you want to provide virtualized services. Certainly, you can use Proxmox just for yourself, it even works with nested virtualization if you want to learn things before commiting to additional hardware. I am there right now. Many more tabs will be opened to learn about Proxmox, I am sure.
I recommend Debian stable or Fedora if your aim is to get things done. NixOS is maybe a thing you can try out and learn about in a VM on Proxmox or with virt-manager.





Regarding 2: That is actually part of my job. 95% Windows, the rest is MacOS and maybe 3 to 5 Linux users (myself excluded).