+1 for uBlue. I did the same for my mother on her laptop and desktop PC for office work. Chose Aurora in this case. Setting system and flatpak updates to automatic means I hopefully never have to look after these systems again as the distro maintainers basically do the maintenance. Setting up Secure Boot with the shim/MOK method and TPM auto-unlocking for full disk encryption using the ujust scripts is a breeze as well.
SunRed
Keyoxide proof: $argon2id$v=19$m=64,t=512,p=2$/Bxo7QiXHH/MThwxZ1irnA$S8IDyQY5+tRZjnqvqnYcGQ
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Matrix is alright with clients like Element (X) and Cinny. But for me it’s rather a (still somewhat lacking) Discord replacement. Maybe at some point with better clients this improves. The protocol already allows for a lot of stuff but most clients don’t implement most functionality (yet).
If you can wait just a little longer I would seriously consider the Framework 12 that is going for pre-order next month and being shipped “mid-2025”.
Of course, this isn’t an option if you need a laptop right now. In that case the current Framework 13 offerings are the best you can get but of course are not as affordable and possibly a bit overkill for a simple browsing machine.
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Completed NTSYNC Driver Merged For Linux 6.14: "Should Make Many SteamOS Users Happy"English
5·10 months agoYou can install the Zen kernel as it has the ntsync patch merged already and which I personally prefer for a gaming (desktop) system.
But as I understand it we have to still wait for the corresponding wine patch to be merged as well for it to be usable for Windows applications and more so in case of Proton.
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I Can’t Keep Waiting for SteamOS! - Linux Gaming Update 2025 -LTTEnglish
5·11 months agoAccording to her pinned Xitter post, Emily left LMG at the end of August already.
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•What genres were we playing the most? Let's guess the games. I'll start.English
1·1 year agoThese are some very good game ideas. :)
The few hours I’ve spent in Wobbledogs, Shenzhen I/O and Another Crab’s Treasure apparently were more significant to Steam than the few hundred hours in Satisfactory and Factorio.
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•What genres were we playing the most? Let's guess the games. I'll start.English
8·1 year ago
I agree, we need more Dwarf Souls-Likes.
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•What genres were we playing the most? Let's guess the games. I'll start.English
2·1 year agoI have that genre listed there too only because I played ~7 hours of Wobbledogs this year.
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Haven't booted this machine for a month or two... look at these updates!
101·1 year agoYes, I am amazed that quite a few people in this thread are saying they ‘had to completely reinstall the os’ and that it broke everything after not much time. As long as one doesn’t rely on the AUR for system critical packages or much in generel, it is incredibly hard to break an Arch system (Manjaro and other Arch-based distros don’t count). This is due in part to Arch being quite reproducible but it also having very good maintainership.
It doesn’t hurt to apply new package configs by going throughpacdiffonce in a while though.Edit: Typo
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What's the most obscure distro you can think of
8·1 year agoI see no one has mentioned Bedrock Linux yet. Not sure though how others would rate its ‘obscurity’ though. It’s definitely a standout among distros.
KDE for its Wayland performance and features and occasionally I switch to hyprland if I need a more focused work environment.
In the past I used Cinnamon but it became ever more buggier on Arch and due to lack of Wayland support still it was a dead end anyway.
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•ZOOM Platform store announces new tool to run Windows games on Linux with ProtonEnglish
5·1 year agoI created an account there an eternity ago when I first heard about them to reserve my username just in case but I will never consider a platform that cannot package their launcher/tool/software correctly and instead shoves a complex curl-to-bash script embedding binary data and a whole lot of other anti-pattern up my throat that is the least trustworthy and safest method of distributing your software.
Well, Minetest also can hardly be compared to Minecraft as Minetest is only an engine or platform for voxel based games like Minecraft. What you rather have to critique is something like Mineclonia that is apparently a more active fork of the MineClone2/VoxeLibre project that try to perfectly replicate Minecraft (without using Minecraft assets that is) on Minetest. Allegedly it’s pretty good now but I haven’t tried so myself. As already mentioned, the community for Minetest as a whole is pretty small and that additionally split among so many different games building on that. But it’s good that viable alternatives exist in case Microsoft ever considers shutting down the Java edition.
Edit: Typo
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•NVIDIA switching to open kernel modules by default in future driver update for Turing+
17·2 years agoYou have to keep in mind that this is only about the kernel module (and only for Turing GPUs and newer). The userspace components stay proprietary. You are still not going to use the mesa graphics stack using an Nvidia gpu anytime soon.
I guess it’s good to mention alternatives but imo Kyoo seems to be overkill for a homelab use case as its design goal appears to be to scale much better and serve a high user base and huge library. Just looking at the dependencies or
compose.ymlshould make this apparent.
Consequently the setup is much more complex and heavy to run compared to Jellyfin e.g.
SunRed@discuss.tchncs.deto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Linux users with uncommon or unusual setups: tell us about it
3·2 years agoI could mention that my bare metal server runs a rather unusual setup in that I use Arch Linux on ZFS headless as a kvm hypervisor and lxc containerisation host. I maybe want to migrate it to something else like NixOS at some point since I use nix on Arch on my desktop already but since I know Arch the most of any Linux distro I just went with it and it’s running rock solid for quite a few years already.


I use Secure Boot on all my machines but I just use my own keys with Foxboron’s wonderful
sbctlutility instead of the hacky shim/MOK method most distributions use.