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gnome-software, it can also tell you whether the app you want to install is available natively.
poinck@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•What's the highest # of tabs you've opened while troubleshooting something? (linux or not linux related)
2·11 days agoYes, same here. That is why I read on Lemmy to inform myself in advance and reduce the amount of tabs.
I am in the 5 to 20 tab range depending on the solution I am searching for. At around 5 I usually use LLM to help me and cross-check with more searches. If it is longterm, I subscribe to related communities on Lemmy and interesting podcasts.
Regarding your question to virtualize Windows: Use virt-manager if it is just for you and Proxmox if you want to provide virtualized services. Certainly, you can use Proxmox just for yourself, it even works with nested virtualization if you want to learn things before commiting to additional hardware. I am there right now. Many more tabs will be opened to learn about Proxmox, I am sure.
I recommend Debian stable or Fedora if your aim is to get things done. NixOS is maybe a thing you can try out and learn about in a VM on Proxmox or with virt-manager.
poinck@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•I make all my videos using Linux. Here's how. | Veronica Explains
2·18 days agoDid you try the video editor of Blender? I did some of video editing with it. It can use ffmpeg for exporting and parallelization for composition.
One can dream about practical rollable or slidable displays so that it fits in my pocket. And no, I don’t look at foldables. The part where it gets folded just looks ugly.
For me the Palm Pixi was the peak expierence: small, touch friendly, hardware keyboard, relatively open OS, integrated headphone jack, wireless charging and very good battery live.
iPhone 13 mini user here; I can relate. Anything bigger than this is too big for me. I will use it until it breaks or security updates stop. After that I will have to see.
Older, smaller phones with PostmarketOS come to mind. But this OS is not ready for day-to-day-use, just yet.
Nice to read that more and more people are using btrfs on LUKS. I went for the debootstrap route from within a booted debian live iso to omit the debian installer entirely.
For a long time I considered Gentoo the best, because I know my things around there. A month ago I said goodbye to my last Gentoo installation in favour for Debian trixie (the next stable release). Gentoo was too time consuming despite the binary repo.
If it would be my job to maintain a Gentoo system I would gladly accept, but there should be a need for it by the users. Otherwise I would just recommend Debian stable or Fedora.
My favourite is Debian over Fedora, because I often don’t need the latest versions of a software. And there is flatpak.
What are the application we can see here?


I am just guessing: Could sector size have something to do with it?
And no, I wouldn’t trust it.