Vanilla OS 2.0 looks promising in my opinion. But it’s not out yet unfortunately. It’s an immutable distro that has integrated containers for all the main Linux distros. You can for example install Ubuntu, Fedora and Arch stuff on the same machine.
Vanilla OS 2.0 looks promising in my opinion. But it’s not out yet unfortunately. It’s an immutable distro that has integrated containers for all the main Linux distros. You can for example install Ubuntu, Fedora and Arch stuff on the same machine.
Did you even read what this is about?
The European Commission used its statement to detail its concern “that Microsoft may have granted Teams a distribution advantage by not giving customers the choice whether or not to acquire access to Teams when they subscribe to their SaaS productivity applications. This advantage may have been further exacerbated by interoperability limitations between Teams’ competitors and Microsoft’s offerings. The conduct may have prevented Teams’ rivals from competing, and in turn innovating, to the detriment of customers in the European Economic Area.”
Let me guess. You’re an American?
In Europe we have rules, regulations and consumer protections because our respective countries and the collective union actually give a shit about the people that live here.
Does this list include rolling release distros like Arch? Because I can see no mention of it
If you want to play games then check out Nobara. It’s based on Fedora and made by the guy that created GE Proton
What’s up with all the negativity around flatpaks? I use Arch (btw) and I try to install as much as I can using flatpak. I think they are great. They are compatible, usually up to date, easy to install, easy to remove and it won’t break your system. The sandbox can be edited to include more paths etc.
Oh okey, then I am with you! I have an integrated GPU in my processor that have been tinkering with but for my usecase it’s not enough. Ideally would I need two external GPUs in my system so I can game on both Windows and Linux without rebooting or leaving Linux. Detaching a GPU from a running system is quite messy 😅
Could you please explain how to do it in only the GUI? I need to disable my Nvidia GPU with scripts, detaching the GPU from my main OS, before I can pass it. It’s not 100% reliable
I would like to recommend Yabsnap as an alternative to Snapper. It’s made for Arch, tested on Fedora and might work on other distros. But it needs more eyes and testers!
Edit: thank you for the list! It’s very nice to see what is available for btrfs
If Linux is to go mainstream I feel like KDE needs to be the default Desktop experience on distros. The Windows-like style is what the majority of people recognize and are familiar with and the KDE developers seems to care a lot about their userbase.
New users already has a lot to deal with and learn when it comes it Linux. They don’t need their desktop environment to work against them too.
I’m using Niagara launcher and I am very happy with it. But I would definitely use Kvaesitso if I hadn’t already paid for lifetime premium Niagara.
Last time I signed up (a few years ago) you could just enter whatever email you wanted and never bother to verify it. It’s only a problem if you forget your password
You can make a separate home folder for the distrobox container if case you don’t want to get your main home folder dirty
I have the same problem on my desktop with both KDE Plasma 5 and Plasma 6 using the Zen kernel and Nvidia GPU. It happens randomly, every 10-20 shutdowns maybe, that my computer hangs on Target reached: System Power Off
I turn off my computer using the button in KDE start menu, which opens the shutdown menu. In there I press the Shutdown icon to turn off my computer.
I still haven’t figured out the issue.
English is not my native language and I am still pretty new to Linux. But it doesn’t change the fact that Arch was not compromised and Debian is/was
Thanks for clarifying. I read through the original announcement but I couldn’t fully understand it
According to this guy Debian is the problem https://lemmy.ml/comment/9780209
The wierd app drawer was still a thing and a few other things I really didn’t like. Canonical was giving away copies to try at Dreamhack Summer. I remember it very well
The Plasma desktop is well supported and is pretty close to a Windows experience.
I hate Gnome with passion because it’s nothing like Windows. I tested Ubuntu 2009 and the Gnome DE is what made me not like Linux. I did not know at the time that KDE Plasma also existed
Yeah kinda. A container has a lot better performance than a virtual machine and can interact with your system