t_378

joined 1 year ago
[–] t_378@lemmy.one 26 points 1 month ago (2 children)

The point you raise reminds me of when Signal dropped SMS support, after my efforts to convert all the non techie people in my life over to it. So sad when it happens...

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 21 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I'll be slightly contrarian to others and give a different perspective: you may find yourself hitting some roadblocks, I'll try to explain.

I set up Linux Mint for my elderly parents. The key thing is, I set it up for them, functioning as the administrator for that machine, making sure they had a non admin account and configured their desktop to only show the shortcuts they cared about (firefox).

It worked fine, and I only got calls once every few months. They got scared if some popup occured, or if they accidentally saved something to their desktop that they wanted to get rid of. I don't know if that really meets the definition of seamless, and I don't know if you'd even consider those problems.

The other thing that can happen, is hardware interfaces. I know that you've listed out your use case. I'm just saying that if your birthday rolls around and someone buys you a 3d printer where you "just plug it in", you're going to be in for a long troubleshooting day, if it isn't natively supported.

With Steam games, you can often get away with enabling proton, but... Small issues like being able to select multiple drive folders have sent me down long troubleshooting avenues as well. And when I use the word troubleshoot, I'm inevitably referring to the command line.

Lots of people are encouraging you to try, and you can make that decision. I just want to toss out that it might not be seamless. But I don't think Windows is seamless either. It's just what most people are used to.

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 2 points 3 months ago

I had many problems with installing grub in a dual boot configuration, so much so that I moved to systemd-boot and never had problems after. I don't know why, but it's config file approach felt more intuitive.

I'm actually not sure why GRUB is such a popular boot loader that comes packaged with so many distros. Maybe GRUB does something more complex than just bootloading, but I don't know if most users would care...

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 2 points 4 months ago

That sounds exhausting. I hope you find peace, one day.

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 18 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

This may be a minor point, but I often think in discussions like these, people are talking about the entire OS rather than just the kernel. And while you can take a fully featured desktop ~~system~~ environment for a spin, and it's pretty good, a lightweight window manager is lightning quick.

If you stick to minimalistic apps for things like photo viewing, you can open folders with 1000s of images in thumbnail mode at incredible speeds, or enormous PDFs. Those are the types of tasks that seemingly slow W10 to a crawl.

In general I also have pretty good luck with stability on my machine. I don't find myself needing to kill apps that start misbehaving for unexplained reasons, except Firefox... But usually an update sorts it out.

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 2 points 5 months ago

I'm the same as you! I recommend "trash-cli", then you can undo if you mess something up. You can even set an alias to echo "wrong command" if you use 'RM'.

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 4 points 7 months ago

I guess their company might have a BYOD policy... Damn I hope that's the case.

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

I saw this thread on stack Exchange

https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/41210/redirect-terminal-output-to-image-file#41211

I think you'd write a script that turns standard output from something like khal to an image, then use a feh command to turn it into your background. But honestly it's pretty fast to set up a keyboard shortcut to launch a terminal session and type khal.

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 1 points 8 months ago

I think PhotoPrism

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 1 points 10 months ago

If you check out the mailing list archives there is some active discussion about dbus-broker as well.

[–] t_378@lemmy.one 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

What software did you use to put the slide deck together? It seems to work so nicely when placed on a webpage, too...

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