IndigoGollum

joined 2 years ago
[–] IndigoGollum@lemmy.world 1 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

Things were mostly broken (i couldn't get fluxbox to start) until i used tasksel to install Cinnamon so i could use a browser to look some stuff up (i only have one computer). I removed Cinnamon but whatever it left behind fixed my system enough that i'm now typing this in LibreWolf with not too many weird graphical issues. Some stuff doesn't work at all yet, like my laptop's function keys for things like brightness and volume.

So all in all, better than i thought this might go.

[–] IndigoGollum@lemmy.world 1 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) (3 children)

Thank you for that last bit. "Just do it" out to be the advice i needed.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/42285031

I think i understand adding a link to /etc/apt/sources.list so apt knows to check there for packages. What i don't understand is how to find those links.

For example: i know i want xed, a plain text editor. Wikipedia tells me that's maintained by Linux Mint, but the Mint website doesn't, as far as i can tell, have a link to a repository for installing Mint-specific packages in another distro (assuming that's possible). It doesn't mention what i might want to put in sources.list.

The same is true of Cinnamon, Mate, Xfce, KDE, and Gnome. If i install Debian and it doesn't come with one of these listed in the aforementioned file (and it doesn't), i have no idea how to get packages from that repository unless i can also find a downloadable .deb file and it has no dependencies from unknown repositories, or i download the entire desktop environment i want just a few packages from.

For context: i plan to install Debian without a DE and just get what packages i want from across several DEs. This will be hard to do if there are no software sources for apt.

Is this hard to find because it's something that people who don't know what they're doing shouldn't mess with? Am i just looking in the wrong places, or for the wrong thing?

One thing i've successfully installed with apt (as opposed to a .deb package) is LibreWolf, which i used extrepo for in accordance with the instructions on their website. Should i be using that instead for packages meant for specific desktop environments?

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/42263587

Of the desktop environments i've tried, i prefer Cinnamon overall. But i find that i'd rather use the KDE or Mate versions of some programs. I don't need Nemo when i'd rather use Thunar, or Gnome Characters when i prefer mate-character-map or kcharselect.

Is there any reason i can't start with nothing that's specific to any one DE, then install whatever i need to have Cinnamon applets with the Mate and KDE programs i want? I don't expect this to be easier than picking one DE and sticking with that, but is it so much harder that it's not worth the trouble to have my computer so customized? How common is it to use a custom blend like this?

This was sparked when, while cleaning up my system that still has similar programs from several DEs, i accidentally broke Cinnamon and had to reinstall it, complete with everything i'd removed in favor of some other DE's version of a program.

[hr]

What window managers are recommended for situations like this? I've always used whatever comes with my DE, without really being aware of the window manager. How does that affect what display manager i need?

 

I'm setting up a computer to play DVD and Bluray from, and i'd like it to also be able to host games like Terraria or Minecraft over the local network so i'm not doing that from the same computer i'm playing on.

Is there any distro in particular that's good for this? Mint is what i'm most familiar with but i'm open to trying others.

[–] IndigoGollum@lemmy.world 14 points 2 years ago

I can't imagine it worked for Netflix and I don't see why YouTube should be any different. It's like companies are testing just how awful and disappointing ðey can be before people actually start abandoning ðem.