in reply to Rhaedas

It's somewhat less mainstream, but it's often recommended to recent converts from Windows as a more familiar experience, plus, Ubuntu offers more choice (like regular Ubuntu, all the flavors that are mostly different desktop environments (which Mint also has, but not as many), and Ubuntu server edition), which is a detriment for new linux users. Imagine accidentally installing Ubuntu server.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to magic_smoke

How is your Qubes experience, if you don't mind me asking? I always loved the idea, especially since some of my work are different cybersecurity/pentesting projects, where both the separation of trust/data and the ability to quickly run templated environments per project sound super useful, but I never really got around doing it.

Do you daily drive it? I'm also pretty much a gamer, and while I could imagine it on my work laptop, I'm not sure if it's feasible when gaming is one of my main focuses on PC. I can kind of imagine that a virtualization-based OS would be terrible for gaming.

in reply to Mikina

I daily drive it for non-preformance tasks on a star book mk VI (coreboot, ME disabled). You can do things like GPU pass through, by qubes doesn't recommend it because of how insecure accessing vram can be (I think, someone will correct me if I'm wrong XP).

For larger tasks like games or CAD, I have a desktop with a 5950x and a 5700xt. That runs proxmox on Debian (headless). I decrypt it via dropbear-ssh and login via proxmox's web interface. From there I can start 1 for four VMS I setup which have access to most of the machines resources including all but two threads 30ish GB of ram, and a full 5700xt. I used a VM running on this machine to beat Cyberpunk 2077 @ 1440p mid-high settings with above 60fps, that being said that was back when my host OS was gentoo, and pre-dlc when 2077 was a little lighter on hardware.

Haven't gotten it to run that good since, however my play through of system shock (2023) has been p good so far.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to magic_smoke

Yoo Starbook, I'm unironically considering one of those Starlabs laptops, but sadly the standard starbook is sold out.

I'm a little sad they don't offer openSUSE, Fedora, or Arch options, but there's an option to buy them without any OS. Is there a reason they recommend a particular range of OSes as suitable for the starbook?

And how are they for gaming? Think like Stardew, Paradox games, and so on.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to birdwing

Using qubes so can't say much for gaming, but I imagine it'd be about as well for any similarly spec'd ultrabook. I think they test those listed distros for compatibility, but I ran qubes on it since before they listed it as an option.

Actually in the middle of rma'ing the board for bad power circuitry (after 3 years), well see how it goes before I reccomend it. That being said the new lemur pro from system76 isn't made out of plastic shit, but instead magnesium alloy, so that actually looks promising as an alternative.

I'll let ya know how I make out with the repair.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to magic_smoke

That's actually an impressive setup! I've been mostly gaming on desktop Bazzite, but usually just connect through Sunlight/Moonlight from a laptop in bed. Never really considered a proxmox setup.

I might look into it, that sounds pretty useful. Already have an old desktop I sometimes use as a server, with older GPU and some RAM, so it would make for a great test environment for this kind of things.

in reply to Draconic NEO

This entry was edited (1 week ago)
in reply to birdwing

I know Fedora and Debian are the best ones (I use Debian on any machines which need long uptime and I'm looking to use Fedora or a derrivative on the Tablet I'm planning to get). I was mainly asking in the context of the chart the OP showed since it lists sock heights that are all lower than the thigh highs I wear. So I was wondering which distro would correlate with the sock height I have.
in reply to TotallynotJessica

I'm sitting here pondering how it is that there's so much overlap between coders and femininity. Is there a connection between the habits of coders and a desire for comfortable stockings? Am I just seeing a small sample size (due to this being Lemmy)?

Or, perhaps, is it simply the spirit of our coding foremothers calling coders back to their ancestral roots?

Either way, carry on, you lovely people. Rock those socks!

in reply to Cantaloupe877

I'm struggling with Mint today. The Bluetooth handling of my headphones and earbuds is dogshit. It connects and then immediately disconnects, shows Error: Unknown error, and I have to unpair my phone and desktop PC from the headphones to get them to pair properly.

Also I'm looking for Mint versions of Green shots and Fancy Zones that have close functionality to those windows apps, and I haven't found anything suitable yet.

in reply to Cantaloupe877

Flameshot is pretty good, but Greenshot allows me to single click capture a region without confirming to save. I use that workflow to zip through service calls, capping remote screens, sections of log files, config files, ect and have them save somewhere where I can go and review or mark them up later. Press PrtScrn, mouse down, drag, mouseup, done.

Having to go looking for the save button and click it is a small additional step, but it still adds time to that workflow where I might be capturing a screenshot region once every second.

in reply to Agent641

I've also not had any Bluetooth issues, but I've not got Bluetooth integrated into my machine.

I use a cheap USB dongle for it. Maybe that could help? They usually cost less than $10 (though this was pre-AI tech prices).

Obviously there would just be a fix for it (and maybe there is), but his is a good placeholder/fallback solution.

Or indeed another distro might be the way. Though yeah that's a PitA too.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to Cantaloupe877

I don't really agree, I'd recommend something KDE based instead since it's more similar to modern Windows.
Probably actually something like Aurora would be good to recommend since it's immutable and not easy to screw up. And it comes with Flathub built right in.