In general, I agree with the sentiment - at the same time, I think the idea behind Nextcloud is to cover more use-cases at once and serve as some kind of a “extensible platform”… and honestly, it does that quite well
In general, I agree with the sentiment - at the same time, I think the idea behind Nextcloud is to cover more use-cases at once and serve as some kind of a “extensible platform”… and honestly, it does that quite well
+1, Thunderbird’s Calendar is the best OSS calendar application out there.
Pipewire and Wayland are boss brothers
For some time I have been lurking around this topic and for general computer use, including typing, talon seemed like the best option
I really enjoy how GNOME handles windows currently already.
Between having the ability to move and resize windows with Super + (mouse left|right)
, switching between windows of the same application with Super + backtick
, workspaces and Super + type
to search, there is very little to desire.
Unlike tiling VMs, this makes sense out of the box for 99% of the apps out there while providing a really quick way to get where you need quickly.
I would commend any student that would be able to figure this out in my hypothetical school
reminding me about I nearly got suspended because I showed my Health teacher how you could bypass our school’s firewall and buy drugs on a school computer
It’s such a rejected behavior to even consider suspending you for this.
Anyway, yeah, I agree. I think if one has interest in the inner workings of a computer system, just trying to make Linux do whatever you want it to do is a good way to experience that. You will, over time, without knowing, accumulate so much information just by troubleshooting things that don’t work for one reason or another
Thanks for the insights :) I appreciated
Go Debian
How long did it take you to migrate from the distribution before and what’s your experience in this space in general?
I like the idea of a declarative configuration, but I find it hard to justify when Ansible has the potential to do the job 99% as effectively.
Also, what do you feel are the most “killer features” in nixOS?
Interesting - I always ran into issues with btrfs so now I am using ZFS exclusively :D
Honestly, I am pretty surprised that Baikal requires that much :D It should literally take no more than 100 MB of memory and way less CPU, IMO - or did you mean the size of a VM?