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Cake day: 2024年7月11日

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  • I actually wanted Arch but everyone was saying that you HAD to do a manual install first and I had been miserably failing at doing it in a WM for a few weeks. I had finally decided to try it directly on hardware so that I had no choice but to complete it if I wanted to use my laptop, and just as was about to burn the ISO on a USB stick the power went out and my hard drive died 😑 On a saturday evening, obviously…

    All I had was a Haiku USB I had made to check it out, and a Linux Mint USB a friend lent me that I hadn’t tried because I assumed I would hate it. So I used Haiku for about 30 minutes (let’s say it had a few bugs), and Mint for the rest of the weekend and did, in fact, absolutely hate it (Windows PTSD 😭 ).

    So until the computer store opened on Monday, I spend 48 hours browsing the web to find a better distro and when I got my new SSD I installed AntiX, because it was very light and likely to run well on my potato-grade laptop, it came without a DE and 7 different window managers to try (which seemed cool at the time, but I didn’t actually try any of them except the default one IceWM and after a few weeks I installed i3 😅 ) and also because YouTube had convinced me that systemd was the Antechrist (thanks YouTube 😑 ).

    After two months I decided to try Manjaro on my other laptop… it didn’t go well : incompatible dependencies preventing updates, Nvidia + Wayland making games not display correctly, and if I had to fix all that manually what’s the point I just might as well use regular Arch. So I gave up after 48 hours and decided to install Arch, and just as I booted from the Arch ISO the laptop died (fan malfunction) and I had to send it back 😑.

    After three months, the third laptop, bought with the refund from the second one, did actually allow me to install Arch without throwing a fit 🥳 using archinstall to preserve my mental health this time.

    Arch has been really great but I need to switch to a bigger SSD and I am probably going to try Nix because it seems really cool 🤩




  • phantomwise@lemmy.mlOPtoLinux@lemmy.mlEmail client recommendations ?
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    20 小时前

    Cool if Thunderbird hasn’t gotten the same treatment as Firefox, I hope that continues (though I wouldn’t say I have much confidence in Mozilla not to muck that up too…) True you can switch, but you might lose all your previous emails if you have set up your client to use POP3 and it doesn’t save your downloaded emails in a format that is portable 😬 …which is exactly what I did when I tried Thunderbird a year ago 😑 That’s why this time I want to be less stupid and be sure I choose a client that supports MailDir


  • And also, what distro might be best for me?

    • For gaming and if you just want things to work without being bothered, Nobara. It’s a Fedora base, which is good for gaming because you will have updates more quickly than other distros, but not so quick that you will get bad updates breaking stuff. It’s Fedora but heavily modified for gaming, and has a lot of stuff already set up that you would need to do manually to improve gaming on another distro. It uses KDE as a Desktop Environment which is pretty good and similar-looking to Windows (a task bar on the bottom, a start menu, a system tray, etc) and you can customize it extensively.

    How does digital security work on Linux? Is it more vulnerable due to being open source? Is there integrated antivirus software, or will I have to source that myself? Antiwhat ? Just kidding.

    • You’re not installing softwares by running executables found on random websites, so you at least have less chances of accidentally installing malware that way (not saying that happened to me a lot on Windows… but not saying that it didn’t 😅 ).
    • The best known antivirus on linux is clamAV, but it’s command line only. It’s not very complicated to use, but if you want a graphical interface there are several applications that are clamAV frontends (clamAV still does the actual scanning and such, but the application gives you a graphical interface to interact with it)

    Will my ability to play games be significantly affected compared to Windows?

    • For Steam games, the Steam app has Proton, which enables you to play Windows games on Linux, and most will work just fine. There will always be a few games that require tinkering, or that won’t work at all, but not many. You can check ProtonDB to see if your games run well with Proton (https://www.protondb.com/ ) and if a game won’t run, you can check it to see if people have posted solutions (sometimes it’s as easy as copy-pasting a command into the game’s launch options, and poof, there goes the DirectX error !
    • For GoG games, and also games from other stores (EA, Epic, etc) you can install Lutris which will use Wine to make your non-Linux games work on linux. As will Proton, there will be a few games that won’t cooperate. All in all, I’d say less than 5% of my games don’t work or require tinkering, and I have a lot of them.
    • If you play multiplayer online games that use kernel-level anticheats, you might be fucked (though I’d argue that it’s a good thing, because the game not working is much preferable to the security risk posed by kernel-level anticheats…). Some games are still playable without the anti-cheat activated, you just can’t join competitive servers without the anticheat, while other games won’t work at all.



  • phantomwise@lemmy.mlOPtoLinux@lemmy.mlEmail client recommendations ?
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    21 小时前

    Oh that’s good to know ! Does this mean it doesn’t have the same annoying opt-out “features” than Firefox ? Like the sponsored links, the “privacy preserving” ads, and so on ? Also you said you can switch to a different client if something happens, but doesn’t Thunderbird use mbox which from what I understand is not portable to other clients ?





  • phantomwise@lemmy.mlOPtoLinux@lemmy.mlEmail client recommendations ?
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    21 小时前

    It’s both but mostly Mozilla, I got fed up with Firefox and having to go through settings to see if there’s anything weird enabled by default like telemetry and ads, and never knowing when Mozilla might add yet another wonderful opt-out feature like “privacy preserving ads”. I really don’t want to go through the same thing with my email client and my trust in Mozilla is somewhere down in the Earth’s mantle. But I guess I shouldn’t have called it “awful” since it’s very subjective, for me personally it was a pain to find anything when I tried, even after trying to tweak it. I didn’t know it had forks though, thanks I’ll check them out !