Also PKGBUILD’s are the superior packaging format. Back in the day people use to talk about preferring debian or redhat based distros based on how much they liked debs or rpms. Building packages on Arch is easier than pretty much any distro I have ever tried to build packages on.
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I used them for some things, but other things still don’t work quite right. Take Steam for example. I do love flatpaks for testing out apps, things with really finicky dependencies, or pinning a specific version of a software that I want to continue to work in the future. However, for most things, Arch + AUR just covers all my needs without any hiccups.
To me flatpaks are sort of like NixOS. All the benefits they provide aren’t something I need on a daily basis. Rolling back works just fine 99% of the time with
downgrade
. I already have system backups. Despite what some articles might insist, things don’t just break all the time. I’m not running untrusted software.Basically no solution is perfect, but they don’t need to be. If the benefits I gain can be recreated through other methods without the tradeoffs they introduce, then I will go with that. Of course, that isn’t to say they don’t have their place, but sometimes I feel like some people think that “being designed from the ground up” to handle certain use cases is always better than whatever “cobbled together” thing we currently have and that isn’t always the case. I’m specifically quoting those two phrases because these are the exact phrases you will hear projects using to justify their existence. In fact, I would go so far as to say that some people have outright confused modularity for “cobbled together”.
One last example I want to make is that I make use of projects like the fish shell and helix editor. In these cases, I find the features they introduce to be worth the tradeoffs and work better because of being designed “from the ground up” to do what they do. However, I don’t make use of immutable systems, containers such as docker, or say filesystems such as btrfs. The features they provide are not useful enough to me compared to the problems they introduce.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•How to get AUDIO forwarding to work... if it's possible?2·1 month agoMaybe pipewire and the ROC protocol? I’m not sure if it can be used on windows. You will have to refer to their documentation to get anything working. On Arch the package is called
pipewire-roc
. On Android the app you will need is roc droid. I have used it from linux to android, but have never introduced windows into the mix.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•GNU coreutils - useful flags and obscurities | Bread on Penguins5·2 months agoWell she was right. I did learn something new about those commands.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•is there any way to automatically edit several mkv files to get rid of the file title on debian 12.11?1·2 months agoI’ve been using some ancient java app called jmkvpropedit to do this.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Do you actually audit open source projects you download?English1·2 months agoDepends on how the project and how long they have been around.
At least I don’t need to pay for freeware. Last I checked, the cost of Windows was included in my laptop and I didn’t get the option to not install an OS even though I fully intended to install Linux on it.
About the time that Windows 10 came out. I was just messing around and ended up liking it.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•How much of a pain is it to install Nvidia GPU drivers, really?2·3 months agoI’m constantly surprised at this point how anyone fails at it. Not to mention there are a number of distros that provide them out of the box now and somehow people still say they couldn’t install it.
Finally time to bust this out again.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•A Roadmap for a modern Plasma Login Manager – David Edmundson's Web Log7·4 months agoYep, I remember when distros had to ship git versions of sddm with unmerged patches to fix issues because of the disconnect between the sddm maintainer and kde developers who seem to be doing most of the work. They are unfortunately limited to goals and architecture of that separate project project and its maintainer and its finally time to get away from it.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft CEO Admits That AI Is Generating Basically No ValueEnglish2·5 months agoWouldn’t call that a “summary”, but interesting read all the same. Thanks for the link.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Technology@lemmy.world•Your Android Phones Aren’t ‘Google’ Anymore, They’re All ‘Gemini’English3·5 months agoI’m so fed up that I’m about to go all in on linux smartphones as long as phone, sms and data work. Everything else. Guess I don’t need it. To my knowledge those things do work. I just need to see how solid they are.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Make Calculator in KRunner respect system settings for numbers?24·5 months agoIs this actually a bug though? I just don’t think krunner or many other calculators for that matter use delimiters anymore. Therefore, the only thing it is changing based on regional settings is the use of the comma or period to denote a decimal.
I could be wrong considering I had a bit of trouble understanding the post. I just bring this up because in American English there are no delimiters for thousands place or above either.
Also I don’t see how from this post the decimal point is wrong. Sure it is simplified to one decimal place, but again many calculators do this. Perhaps op simply needs something that provides more fine grained control over number formatting than what krunner is supposed to.
You can configure the kde clipboard manager to never delete things or keep a higher amount of things. That is how I have mine setup.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Texas Arrest Records Search – Explore Criminal History & Jail Information3·6 months agoWrong sub
The link says it is a pre-release.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Technology@lemmy.world•Online Behavioral Ads Fuel the Surveillance Industry—Here’s HowEnglish1·6 months agoAgain the type of people who probably visit communities like this know that. If the profile is accurate and they know that these people are more resistant to these kinds of tactics. Isn’t just a waste of money to bid on showing that person an ad in the first place. I personally don’t even connect my tv to the internet and I run linux, so I doubt either of said devices are talking to anything. Ads outside that someone play your favorite song would need to build a profile on you on your digital devices and then somehow correlate that to you the individual when you go into stores.
I know you said you don’t think are all the way there, but without getting facial recognition involved. I don’t see how they would correlate the two in the first place. Even then there are still holes, but that is besides the point. My main point is that someone whom meets the criteria that I described in my first comment seems like a waste on money to advertise to if you are one of the advertisers who are bidding on these spots.
D_Air1@lemmy.mlto Technology@lemmy.world•Online Behavioral Ads Fuel the Surveillance Industry—Here’s HowEnglish2·6 months agoWhy is it that if they have this information and build these supposedly accurate profiles about you that they would still be willing to show ads at all to the kind of people who are likely to frequent this community? For example, if someone who runs linux, adblockers, firefox with strict profile, etc, etc is being broadcast to these advertisers. Why would they want to bid for advertising space for that person at all?
Or all of the above while still not being “as secure and private as promised”.