Lettuceeatlettuce

joined 1 year ago
[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 2 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)
[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 week ago

Different distros for different uses:

  • Debian with KDE for my casual servers and Docker boxes.
  • Nobara for my main gaming PC.
  • Linux Mint with Cinnamon for my general purpose PCs and my #JustWorks uses.
  • Arch for my pimp mobile test machines.
[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 week ago

Lol I am so happy about this.

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 week ago

They have an experimental Wayland session, but it is still in early beta and not ready for regular use.

I don't use any special touchpad gestures on my laptops, so unfortunately I don't know that one.

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Mint is my goto for newer Linux users, and users that want something that #justworks.

I use Mint on all my personal laptops with the default Cinnamon desktop environment and it's always incredibly stable.

Mint just announced a few weeks ago that they are partnering officially with the Framework team to make sure compatibility is top notch, so the already good compatibility will become even better over the coming months and years.

The only real downside with Mint, and specifically Cinnamon, is that it looks a little dated. You can get it looking pretty modern and clean, but it doesn't look nearly as modern and sleek as KDE Plasma or Cosmic. It doesn't look bad though, and honestly, when I need to just get work done, I don't need it looking ultra sexy-sleek.

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 8 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Noob friendly? Linux Mint. It's not the prettiest, but it looks nice enough, especially if you tweak the themes a little, which is super easy.

It's a fantastic all-around distro, and if you use the default Cinnamon desktop environment, it's rock stable and super easy to navigate.

It's what I use on all my personal laptops and also what I set my parents up with when I switched them from Windows to Linux.

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 9 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I worked for a classic MSP a while back, barely lasted 3 months. Such a toxic environment, tons of pressure to spread yourself thinner and thinner.

It was one of those places where you were expected to be there an hour early, stay an hour late, and work through your lunch.

Even though that's illegal, it was never explicit, just one of those, wink wink type things. But the workload was always so heavy, you couldn't stay on top of everything unless you were working 50+ hours a week.

And of course, all salary, no overtime or double time for weekend work.

I do internal IT now, much better. Trying to get my own one-person shop going to eventually be fully self-employed. Actually, it would be really cool to become a worker-owned co-op, but that's still a faint dream.

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 weeks ago

5800X3D is my CPU for the next 3-5 years probs. Maybe even longer, it's so damn good.

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

My gaming rig has been running Nobara for years now, it's built off of Fedora by the developer who does the glorious eggroll version of Proton.

It's got multiple desktop environment versions and is optimized for Linux gaming. It has a bunch of gaming-specific kernel patches and optimizations. Extra drivers pre-installed for controllers and Nvidia GPUs, etc.

It has a very easy update wizard, I run it once every few weeks, works awesome.

Nobara Linux

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 7 points 3 weeks ago (5 children)

It is if you get your ass spanked hard while it happens, which fairly accurately describes what's been happening to Intel in the last year or so lol.

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago

My advice: Don't wait until you have to switch to start learning, it will frustrate you if you're under pressure to figure it out all at once.

Buy a cheapo SSD online, 500GB ones are out there for $35 and install Mint on it.

Use that to dual boot and play around with Linux. Start slow, if you get frustrated, take a break. It will be a much smoother experience than you probably expect these days.

Mint is very easy to get started with, very Windows-like in its UI. And it has easy options to install Nvidia drivers if you need to, and the app store is very easy to use.

[–] Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 weeks ago

It's really solid.

 

I've been 100% on Linux for several years now and I don't miss Windows at all in any aspect.

But in my opinion, there is one thing that Windows does significantly better than Linux, kiosk mode.

I wish Linux had something similar. All the solutions I've been able to find are far more complex and technical to implement and use.

If anybody has suggestions for something that's easy to use on Linux that works similar to Windows kiosk mode, I'd love to try it.

 

Any Linux Sysadmins here use Timeshift on Linux servers in production environments?

Having reliable snapshots to roll back bad updates is really awesome, but I want to know if Timeshift is stable enough to use outside of a basic home lab environment.

Disclaimer: Yes I know Timeshift isn't a backup solution, I understand its purpose and scope.

 

A while back there was some debate about the Linux kernel dropping support for some very old GPUs. (I can't remember the exact models, but they were roughly from the late 90's)

It spurred a lot of discussion on how many years of hardware support is reasonable to expect.

I would like to hear y'alls views on this. What do you think is reasonable?

The fact that some people were mad that their 25 year old GPU wouldn't be officially supported by the latest Linux kernel seemed pretty silly to me. At that point, the machine is a vintage piece of tech history. Valuable in its own right, and very cool to keep alive, but I don't think it's unreasonable for the devs to drop it after two and a half decades.

I think for me, a 10 year minimum seems reasonable.

And obviously, much of this work is for little to no pay, so love and gratitude to all the devs that help keep this incredible community and ecosystem alive!

And don't forget to Pay for your free software!!!

 

I'm running a few Debian stable systems that are up to date on patches.

But I just ran ssh -V and the OpenSSH version listed is "OpenSSH_9.2p1 Debian-2+deb12u3" which as I understand is still vulnerable.

Am I missing something or am I good?

 

I have a very short equipment rack installed in my server closet. It is only 16 inches deep, fine for most networking uses, but not great for most rack-mount server cases.

I am looking for case suggestions that would fit my rack, 16 inch depth maximum. Height isn't a problem, the rack has a ton of vertical space, over 15U, it's the depth that's an issue.

Thanks!

 

I'm visiting my parents for the holidays and convinced them to let me switch them to Linux.

They use their computer for the typical basic stuff; email, YouTube, Word, Facebook, and occasionally printing/scanning.

I promised my mom that everything would look the same and work the same. I used Linux Mint and customized the theme to look like Windows 10. I even replaced the Mint "Start" button with the Windows logo.

So far they like it and everything runs great. Plus it's snappier now that Windows isn't hogging all the system resources.

 

Just making sure I'm not missing something obvious:

Self-hosted Linux VM with protonVPN and QBitorrent installed on it.

QBittorrent networking bound only to ProtonVPN's virtual interface with killswitch and secure core enabled.

Auto updates enabled and a scripted alert system if ProtonVPN dies. Obviously everything with very secure unique passwords.

Is this a safe setup to run 24/7 to torrent and seed with?

Are there any significant risks I'm missing? Thanks, fellow sea salts!

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