If buying a graphics card is in your plans, but AMD. Nvidia does better cards, but AMD works with less bugs on Linux. I just switched and I’m quite happy with the results.
For distro, Mint is a safe bet.
If buying a graphics card is in your plans, but AMD. Nvidia does better cards, but AMD works with less bugs on Linux. I just switched and I’m quite happy with the results.
For distro, Mint is a safe bet.
Man, you will have some pain as any change will cause. But I think you will like it. Have a second USB to be safe.
Interesting, but seems difficult to enforce
The malicious code is not on the source itself, it’s on tests and other files. The building process hijacks the code and inserts the malicious content, while the code itself is clean, So the co-manteiner was able to keep it hidden in plain sight.
That sounds like a bad transition plan. For sure there’s some lessons to learn from that experience.
Linux Mint. Works well and it’s friendly.
I think they meant that the Snap itself (or part of it) is proprietary. But I’m not sure.
@dataisugly material
The time is flying fast this year…
Apple, Microsoft and Google, on the other hand, decides what is best for them, shove it down the users’ throats and get users’ money (and personal data) in return…
I think some criticism still valid though (but not the entitlement).
From Arch to Debian, that’s a 180° on stability. But to be honest, I’m using arch for 2 months now and everything seems very stable. I had no problems, yet.
Valve created gamescope, that’s a microcompositor just for games. Other Wayland compositors may still break games.
TBH, not all games works on windows out of the box either. It usually is better than Linux, but I always need to do some adjustments when playing on desktop; to really work with minimal effort, it needs to be a console.
stress