A frog who wants the objective truth about anything and everything.

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 4th, 2023

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  • even with wine/yabridge getting paid ones with licence protection running is a mess.

    Honestly, because I’m not a fan of intrusive DRM anyway, I say Yarr, matey 🏴‍☠️

    I know that’s not a solution for some, but until there’s more Linux native VST’s, it’s a viable path for those willing to take it.












  • I disagree that stable distros aren’t good at general purpose gaming systems, they work fine unless you have very new hardware.

    And sometimes the newer stuff csn bring more problems than a stable distro, depending on your hardware.

    As an example, my system is an nvidia laptop with an external monitor. Unfortunately, the Nvidia driver is absolutely unusable under Wayland with this setup, which was a bummer for me, as I wanted to use Fedora with it, but starting with Fedora 41, X11 was completely phased out, so I couldn’t fall back to it.

    I’m not a fan of openSUSE tumbleweed or Arch based distros, which do still support X11, which left me with the more Stable distros. Mint worked flawlessly with my setup, and I have no issue gaming.

    Tl;dr there’s more nuance to stability vs bleeding edge, and both have their place.





  • I tried both Bazzite and Fedora the past couple months, and this was my personal experience:

    While Fedora does have a codec installing option in the installer now, it still doesn’t seem to include some common ones (couldn’t play certain formats until I installed the non-fedora flatpak VLC player).

    Bazzite was very nice, though apps seemed a little slow to open. At some point all apps refused to open, which may have been my fault, but it was at that point that I noticed how incredibly sparse help documentation was, and how many questions (that were relevant to my issue) remained unanswered on the uBlue forum for months.

    I think for a new user, access to good help documentation and resources is essential, so I currently don’t recommend it for newbies.


  • Hm, just to be sure, you’re trying sudo apt upgrade (not update) at the end?

    A distro with newer stuff likely would work out of the box, though they tend to be a bit less new user friendly compared to Mint and Pop.

    Fedora is generally recommended as the best compromise, but with it comes the need to use a third party repository called RPMFusion to get patent encumbered software like video codecs and steam. After it’s setup it’s usually smooth sailing, but something to bear in mind.

    A non-lts version of Ubuntu should also work, as that’s more up to date.

    If you’d like to troubleshoot pop a bit more, I believe a newer kernel should be available in your repository, 6.11 perhaps? (I’m not actually sure, I just know Linux Mint has it available). If it’s not available, you could grab the Xanmod kernel, which I recall being pretty easy to install, and is very up to date.




  • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.nettoLinux@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    15 days ago

    LibreOffice is very good, and generally its Microsoft Office compatibility is decent. If you ever find it’s causing problems, OnlyOffice is known to have better compatibility overall.

    You can also try either of them on your Windows PC to see how she likes them, since they are available on all platforms.