more likely that humans extincted themselves way earlier than of a process “just dying” by a bug…
Lol what???
more likely that humans extincted themselves way earlier than of a process “just dying” by a bug…
Lol what???
I’m pretty sure the Arch Wiki has a substantial documentation regarding systemd
Yeah and xwayland is working just fine for me right now. It’ll be nice when it’s no longer needed, but in the meantime, it has caused no noticable performance issues for me.
but many games and programs don’t work even on it, you just need to switch to X11 manually, this is annoying me.
This has never once happened to me. I have never had to switch my session to x11 for any reason whatsoever, especially not for compatibility issues. Been over a year now.
Dunno what distro or hardware you’re running, but I suspect Wayland is not the issue.
Not on Nvidia, but I use Wayland and play games with it every day
Cool. Don’t care… Just pointing out that the person is wrong.
(best quality I could find)
Aero looked (and still looks) so cool
Oof. Hard disagree.
“We are all vegooners on this blessed day”
-Ken M
A lot of it you won’t even notice until you use Linux daily for a week or two. Then you’ll wonder how you ever lived with it.
Everything is free and 100% customizable if you want to put a little bit of effort in (I’m sure this varies wildly depending on technical abilities).
I use EndeavorOS which draws from Arch repositories including AUR. I’ve never once had to manually add a repository.
Hours later she was still at it, hairs scattered, baffled looking… saying how could someone live with so many choices lol.
Oh man I relate to this so hard hahaha…
Do everything you can to try to preserve those settings, because you will need to do a clean install at some point (well maybe not, I’m sure it depends on your distro), and you’re gonna lose all of it.
You could just send it to me instead of letting it fall… Just a thought.
Took me weeks to figure out a way to run a script at startup in a konsole window that gets hidden but continues running in the background. Tmux could do it but I found it cumbersome.
screen did the trick with a single command.
Ok. I guess I just didn’t automatically understand what “the shortcut” meant.
Hamburger? Who eats a burger without cheese? In this political climate?
EndeavourOS is the first Linux distro I tried a little over a year ago.
I have never felt the need to even try anything else. If it ain’t broke…
Baloo only takes up a lot of CPU if you have it set to index file contents and hidden files. Shut those off, let it index completely, and it won’t happen ever again.
You might be able to keep “hidden files” on, but indexing file contents always bogged my laptop down.
Seems so antithetical to the entire concept of Linux and FOSS