lancalot

joined 2 weeks ago
[–] lancalot@discuss.online 2 points 5 hours ago

I tried to find sources on that but failed. Could you help me out?

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 2 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago)

The .deb package can be found on Github.

~~I find it peculiar that it doesn't seem to be packaged by any distro. Debian does have a package called level-zero. But, while they're linked, it doesn't seem to be the exact same thing.~~

Edit: It's packaged under intel-compute-runtime.

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 32 points 3 days ago (17 children)

Check out the random button on Distrowatch (distrowatch.com/random.php) - it's like a Linux lottery, but you always win something weird!

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 2 points 5 days ago

Great response! Much appreciated!

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 2 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Interesting. Have you also tried openSUSE Aeon(/Kalpa)? Though I assume you're a KDE user and thus waiting for Kalpa to become mature before a test ride.

Could you elaborate on what you didn't like about Aurora and Bazzite; especially about how that experience made you more appreciative of openSUSE?

Thank you in advance!

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 2 points 5 days ago

What distro do you use

I daily drive secureblue.

and why?

Long story short; I love me some security. Unfortunately, My device is far from ideal for running Qubes OS. From within the remaining options, secureblue comes out on top for me.

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 5 points 5 days ago

Options include:

  • Installing them through brew; this is setup, enabled and configured correctly by default on uBlue projects like Aurora, Bazzite and Bluefin.
  • Installing them within a container; be it though Toolbx or Distrobox. This is what Fedora Atomic initially intended (and probably still does).
  • Some users got a lot of mileage from utilizing nix to this effect.
  • If all else fails (or if you outright prefer it this way), you can always layer it through rpm-ostree.
[–] lancalot@discuss.online 1 points 5 days ago

the fact that Fedora is the only (at the least that I know of) distro that has proper SELinux implementation.

AFAIK, openSUSE Aeon(/Kalpa) does as well*.

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 2 points 5 days ago

Yup; at least to some extent.

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 2 points 5 days ago (2 children)

I don't know why, but openSUSE has had difficulty garnering popularity overall (aside from Germany).

A possible explanation, which also ties in to Fedora, is how both are the open source variants to corporate distros; SEL and RHEL respectively.

Arch and Debian are more community-driven by comparison.

For Fedora specifically, people couldn't regard it as anything but a testing bed distro; especially if you see how back2back they were with adopting new technologies like PulseAudio, systemd, Wayland, GTK 3/4, PipeWire etc. To be fair, openSUSE was the first to default to Btrfs and auto-snapshotting with Snapper*. Fedora was also facing competition from industry darling CentOS; similar code base, but a lot more stable.

Thankfully, since a couple of years now, Fedora has recognized that it's not cool to expect your user base to be sadistic. And together with the (unfortunate) downfall of CentOS, Manjaro and Ubuntu - Fedora has amassed a very healthy user base. And with how quickly Bazzite is becoming the face of gaming Linux (at least until Valve releases SteamOS), I don't think it has even peaked yet.

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 2 points 6 days ago (4 children)

Historically, (at least for hobbyists/enthusiasts) Fedora and openSUSE have been a lot less popular compared to Arch, Debian and their derivatives. While not necessarily representative, Boiling Steam's chart -in which ProtonDB's data is used- does indicate to this as well.

Just my 2 cents.

[–] lancalot@discuss.online 2 points 6 days ago

I had something similar going on in Fedora Silverblue. I didn't really want to fiddle with it at the moment, so I just uninstalled whatever I got from ProtonVPN and the update went smooth afterwards. I hope someone else can point you towards a better answer.

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