

screen sharing, screen recording, remote desktop
ive used all three on wayland without issues.
screen sharing, screen recording, remote desktop
ive used all three on wayland without issues.
agreed, plenty of bug and issues with wayland in the past, but i can now comfortably use it for everything on amd/intel cards.
been dailing it for almost 10 years now, i think.
the speed of their progress is impressive.
another 5 years and it will be unrecognizably good.
thats a good point. unless you forget to update it in a timely manner.
that includes most servers out there ime, so
you would need 2 different exploits for 2 different types of attack though.
its always good to have an extra layer of “oh shit i need another exploit”. unless your threat modelling includes nation-states, that is.
it is also vulnerable to whatever ssh exploits that can bypass the key
because FOSS has no country lines, and fedora is a bit better nowadays.
ive plugged in various mpci, m2, and random chinese or brand name usb dongles, everything always works out of the box for me. even when some of their documentation omits linux. i wouldnt worry, i’m assuming almost anything will work.
if i were to actually recommend one, id get an m2 intel ax series card. the ones with wifi+bt. no worries if you can’t get something as fancy though.
just curious: why do you like doing it?
talk about bad taste
loch ness monster
deleted by creator
try the flatpak version. its more up to date than debian repositories, directly supported by the devs in most cases and should work more consistently.
think of it as the equivalent of mobile app packages coming from the app store when it comes to ease of use. id go as far as recommending you use it over the alternatives whenever possible.
i’m already doing this with gnome lol.
if my computer was older, probably xfce.
can you exemplify a few of the things you miss?
good taste
oh my observation comes from the blogs recommending it.
but i couldnt have put it better myself, except i think you mean 9070 XT
@op, they may suggest you to change your kernel version to support newer hardware, don’t do this unless you know what you are doing and can undo it from cli. its fine 90% of the time but can cause weirdness or no boot.
to be fair linus shouldnt have to come scold adults into acting like adults, yet here we are.