If a program insists on Windows, it is instantly deemed incompatible with my operating parameters and fails my system requirements…
Raccoonn
Sometimes…
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- 17 Comments
Ah yes the golden days of “Linux drama”…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Tell one thing that you miss after switching from another OS to Linux.121·6 months agoWhen I switched from Windows to Linux back in 2002, I never looked back. I missed absolutely nothing. Linux offered everything I needed and more, with unmatched freedom and flexibility. In late 2008, I bought a unibody MacBook, and while macOS wasn’t bad per se, it just didn’t feel like home. I missed Linux too much, so I wiped the MacBook and installed Debian. From that moment on, I’ve never switched again—Linux has always been home. I’m currently rocking Arch (btw) on my main desktop & Debian on my laptop…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•There are sane people with this many VMs on a personal machine, right? RIGHT?2·8 months agoMy motherboard is a stock dell from around 2012 so I doubt performance would be at all good. Thats even if it worked in the first place…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•There are sane people with this many VMs on a personal machine, right? RIGHT?1·8 months agoGPU passthrough has always been one of those exciting ideas I’d love to dive into one day. My current GPU being a little older, has only 4GB of RAM. Oh the joy’s of being a budget PC user. Thankfully it’s more of a “would be nice rather” than an “actually need”…
While I appreciate the utility of snaps and flatpaks for providing sandboxed, cross-platform apps, I’ve often found them slower than traditional packages. Their tendency to take up more disk space also feels inefficient, especially when system resources are sometimes precious. For these reasons, I generally prefer using apps installed directly through the system’s default package manager, which tend to offer better performance and use space more efficiently…
I really want to love Elementary OS, however, its foundation on Ubuntu has me hesitating, as I’m not the biggest fan of Ubuntu lately. If it were built on something like Debian or Fedora, I’d definitely be more inclined to give it a serious try…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Wike: Wikipedia Reader for the GNOME Desktop51·10 months agoWhile I’d personally never install or use this, it good to know its there for the extremely small percentage of people who’ll want or need it…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•People doing the 30 days linux Challenge are having several problems because of Mint's old packages and technology. Why people still recommend it when there is Fedora and Opensuse with KDE and Gnome?2·11 months agoI never said anything about “tiptoeing around”, but what you said here is correct…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•People doing the 30 days linux Challenge are having several problems because of Mint's old packages and technology. Why people still recommend it when there is Fedora and Opensuse with KDE and Gnome?14·11 months agoAny distro will “just work” if used correctly…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•2024: The Year Linux Dethrones Windows on the Desktop – Are You Ready?451·1 year agoI honestly don’t care about dethroning windows or anything related to it. All that matters to me is that my Linux system works the way I need it to…
Computer is connected to the router via ethernet. The connection to the router is I believe fiber optics…
Doesn’t have to be every week. Could be every other week or at least once a month. I haven’t used Windows since 2002, but personally, I update once a week, and it never takes all that long, maybe 2-3 minutes tops. But I understand that it’s not for everyone…
Fair enough…
Arch can definitely be a “set & forget” type of distro. Just install it, use it correctly, and that’s really it. No need to upgrade to new releases; just keep the system up to date…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•A large state corporation in Brazil is currently trialing 800 Linux PCs. If successful, it will deploy and replace 22k Windows installs, comparable to the migration happening in Germany.2·1 year agoIn the past, some people have expressed dissatisfaction when I’ve sent them files in .odt format. However, it’s the superior format in terms of support and functionality, so I always make them aware of that and of the fact that I will never use some shitty ms product…
M$ loves locking users into their totally bulls*it ecosystem with deliberately broken “standards.” LibreOffice, on the other hand, actually respects open formats like ODF and doesn’t treat interoperability as a threat. Word still can’t properly open documents it didn’t create, unless you pay the vendor tax and pray the formatting survives…