veggay

joined 7 months ago
[–] veggay@kbin.earth 2 points 2 months ago

I seeee, thank you :)

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

yeah, the automatic updates made me double think installing Godot from the snap thing but because I always update right away anyway and my game is quite small with only me working on it I thought to stick with it for now; also because it prompts you to save a back up before opening a project with a new engine version. It seems a bit wild to me that almost everyone that has commented here assumes that I use my pc for nothing but web browsing and documents or something... I thought the Linux community (full of tinkerers and developers) would make less of those assumptions than Windows users but it seems I was wrong haha

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 2 points 2 months ago

but I must know where it is so I don't press it!

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 2 points 2 months ago

wow I'm amazed you're the first person to suggest this, thank you !

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 1 points 2 months ago (3 children)

oh... I hadn't heard about any of those, thank you! Installing Flathub

Why would Flathub not be included with Mint? And how did you find it was in those three places? Did you look for it manually on each or is there a place that tells you where it's distributed? Because on their website the only thing I found was the Download link that takes you to itch.io or their github page that doesn't give any linux alternatives

edit: reviews in flathub say that there are some features that don't work and it's better to download from their itch.io page haha - it's not the first review I see saying that about flatpaks, so there are valid reasons to just download them manually like one would in windows anyway

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

ooh thank you, that breakdown at the end was insightful!

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 2 points 2 months ago (4 children)

There are plenty of reasons why one would use Snaps on Mint... I've been using it for like 2 days and so far I got: Blender, Godot, and Signal. Blender has an older version, Godot has a super old version, and Signal isn't included in Software Manager. Outside of snap I manually downloaded Material Maker.

People keep telling me snaps are not needed and that I should find everything in the official repo and whatnot but that's just wrong generalized assumptions from what I see, neither of those 3 programs are too niche either. There are plenty of people out there that do things outside of web browsing and file management in their computers, I'm so confused why Linux out of all communities would ignore hobbies with specialized software exist, game dev even

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Yeah, I'm not new to Linux, I just couldn't put in the work to learn how to actually use it safely and efficiently until now, also because it's gotten much easier than last time I tried many years ago with more software compatibility. I have no intention of switching distros any time soon and there would need to be a massively good reason for me to even consider it. But I'm just curious why would you recommend a newbie to install Gentoo ?

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 1 points 2 months ago (5 children)

Yeah the problem is that I understood the first time it was explained, no need to keep circling it over without answering the actual question I was asking about.. what you quoted from my comment was just me clarifying what I was asking about, not clarifying my (lack of) knowledge about firewalls.

Thank you for the actual answer!

I do have occasional need to download random programs from random websites because of my hobbies and profession, the first case being Material Maker from itch.io - that one is clearly safe with all those reviews and the public git, but it is a random program from the internet nevertheless, and the reason why I was asking about the placing of programs that I download manually.

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 3 points 2 months ago

Yeah but it seems like some people (not you) take it personal geez... Of course a "casual" will mix firewall with anti-virus, like...? I am literally saying I don't know shit.

Thank you for actually explaining things in a helpful and chill manner without getting so stuck about one word I use wrong while still being an understandable question.

[–] veggay@kbin.earth 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Thank you, I just wish people weren't so critical about how I word my questions when it's still clear what the core question is anyway, man it's like being a casual is not welcome or something x_x

Some people are really welcoming and some others are so.... unnecessarily strict? Condescending? Harsh?

 

I finally bit the bullet and I'm giving Linux a second try, installed with dual boot a few days ago and making Linux Mint my default from now on.

There are a lot of guides and tips about the before and during the transition but not for after, so I was hoping to find some here.

Some example questions but I would like to hear any other things that come to mind:

I read that with Mint if you have a decent computer you don't need to do a swap partition? So I skipped that, but I'm not sure if I'd want to modify that swap file to make it bigger, is that just for giving extra ram if my hardware one is full? Because I have 48GB of ram and if I look into my System Monitor it says Swap is not available.

Was looking at this other post, and the article shared (about Linux security) seems so daunting, it's a lot. How much of it do I have to learn as a casual user that's not interested in meddling with the system much? Is the default firewall good enough to protect me from my own self to at least some degree? I was fine with just Windows Defender and not being too stupid about what I download and what links I click.

I was also reading about how where you install your programs or save your data matters, like in particular partitions or folders, is that just like hardcore min-maxing that's unnecessary for the average user that doesn't care to wait half a second extra or is it actually relevant? I'm just putting stuff in my Home folder.

Connected to the last two points: in that Linux Hardening Guide lemmy post I shared the TL;DR includes "Move as much activity outside the core maximum privilege OS as possible"... how do I do that? is that why people have separate partitions?

Downloaded the App Center (Snap Store) and I was surprised there was even a file saying to not allow it... why is that? Is it not recommended? Is it better to download stuff directly from their websites instead?

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