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danielfgom

@danielfgom@lemmy.world

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danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

So are we all ok with Microsoft now being in charge of systemd? The same company made famous by Blue Screens of Death?

When I consider this, it makes me think Linux has lost. Do you think Microsoft would let the Linux community be on charge of The Registry? Or any other part of the OS?

Mac may be the only decent option left…?

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Use LocalSend. It’s exactly like Apple Airdrop but works on ALL operating systems so no matter what device you have you can easily transfer files.

It’s local, secure and open source.

localsend.org

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

You’re right. LocalSend does require WiFi connectivity. In terms of convenience it’s just like Airdrop, if you have that network.

Maybe one day they could add Bluetooth. Would be cool

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Wait for the distro to officially release an upgrade path. Only do a fresh install if it doesn’t work.

On Windows however whenever I would get a new pc in which I was prepping for staff(I worked in IT) the first thing I’d do after unboxing it is a wipe of the factory Windows install and do a clean install with the latest ISO from Microsoft.

No bloatware, network managers, anti virus etc nonsense. We had all of our own stuff for that which applied via Group Policy anyway.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Implement a wireless file transfer protocol that works with Apple’s Airdrop and Android’s Quick Share.

In other words Airdrop for Linux that works with both iOS and Android.

  1. Create a software tool with UI that allows syncing of a phone with Linux to copy over photos, documents, music etc.

Must work with ios and android

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

I must try that. Thanks

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

I’ll take a look at that. Thanks

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

The enshitification of Gnome continues until it be it’s own little isolated thing and previous gnome code will have to be forked to make progress that users actually want.

That will probably go for gnome apps eventually. The Mint guys might have to rewrite all the bloody apps to work with gnome 3…🤦

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

No. It’s deliberately breaking backwards compatibility to force other projects that use that code to either look bland like Gnome or stop making their DE’s.

That’s bad for FLOSS and Linux users

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Gnome Foundation likes to think of themselves as the pioneer in DE’s and the default choice for Linux. Which was true for a long time. Cinnamon and Mate run Gnome, for example. I’m not sure about XFCE.

If you’re THE leading DE project at least try to accommodate those DE’s that depend on your code or meet with them to inform them well in advance and discuss the best options for those DE’s.

In other words, work together for the good of all users instead of doing your own little thing in the corner and leave the others to deal with the mess you made…

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Who said anything about a conspiracy? I’m just saying they may be acting selfishly and it couldn’t hurt to speak to other parties who they know use their code, to discuss how it will impact them.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Thank you for that context. I was unaware of that.

I certainly get your point. If downstream won’t engage constructively then upstream is free to do what they feel is right.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Indeed.

Someone else replied to me with fantastic context I want aware of.

Here’s their reply: lemmy.world/comment/9847230

It seems Gnome did try to work with downstream but the engagement wasn’t there.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

From what others have replied, this seems to be an old issue and it seems Gnome was actually in the right.

I wasn’t aware of that history. Here’s the reply that helped straighten it out: lemmy.world/comment/9847230

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

It’s not a conspiracy. All I was saying is that by breaking backwards compatibility downstream either has to comply or find another way.

As another commentor has mentioned, gnome did actually inform downstream a good while back but downstream did not engage, so gnome obviously proceeded with their own project how they saw fit. Which is the right way of course.

Downstream should have tried to engage and perhaps found a good work around but sadly didn’t.

So they’ll have to work it out now by themselves.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

We have this already. It’s called Ubuntu + Gnome

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

To quote Clem, head of Linux Mint: “At a time where GNOME applications are less and less designed to work anywhere else than in GNOME, a project like XApp is extremely important.”

Libaidwata breaks backward compatibility with older gnome versions and amongst other things doesn’t allow theming natively, so the Cinnamon team are going to have to fork off and maintain the older code which works so they can continue to have theming and stuff with Gnome apps.

Gnome seem to like doing the opposite of the Linux philosophy which says interoperability should always be a priority so that the code can be shared as freely as possible.

I can’t tell whether they are stupid or lazy over at Gnome. It’s not enough to strip the DE down to nothing but now even the code that worked with previous, gnome still widely used, is being dumped.

They are a little island unto themselves.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Purposely breaking backwards compatibility knowing full well that other FLOSS DE’s rely on it is enshitification of the worst kind.

We all lose in the end.

Will antivirus be more significant on Linux desktop after this xz-util backdoor?

I understand that no Operating System is 100% safe. Although this backdoor is likely only affects certain Linux desktop users, particularly those running unstable Debian or testing builds of Fedora (like versions 40 or 41), **Could this be a sign that antivirus software should be more widely used on Linux desktops? ** ( I know...

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Nope. In Linux the typical action is to immediately get a fix out ASAP and be done with it.

Plus it’s unlikely that AntiVirus would actually make any difference. Even in Windows many things go undetected. All it does is bog down your system

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

The very first one was Fedora but it seemed very bare and I had no idea how to get apps etc.

So I switched to Ubuntu and used that for a while before distro hopping.

Now I’ve settled on Linux Mint Debian Edition

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Mint ran fine in my 2015 MacBook pro and I’m running Linux Mint Debian Edition on my Mac Mini 2014.

It does use X11 not Wayland but everything worked fine, except the webcam and possibly the SD card reader, which is normal on Mac’s running anything other than macos

If you think you’ll be doing zoom calls etc, leave it running macos and just run Linux in a VM.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Linux Mint. It’s THE best distro hands down. Those who know, know.

Longtime Arch user, first time Debian enjoyer

As the title says, I’ve been using various flavours of Arch basically since I started with Linux. My very first Linux experience was with Ubuntu, but I quickly switched to Manjaro, then Endeavour, then plain Arch. Recently I’ve done some spring cleaning, reinstalling my OS’s. I have a pretty decent laptop that I got for...

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

I agree. I did a lot of distro hopping when new to Linux to try all the desktops and have the latest apps etc. But after years of that I just wanted something stable that will be reliable and I don’t have to maintain.

I installed Linux Mint Debian Edition 6 as soon as it was released and it’s fantastic. Stable Debian base with Cinnamon on top. I couldn’t be happier.

I’ve always been confused by pacman/arch in general and always preferred apt which I find straightforward.

As one who worked in IT for years, I’m tired of micro managing systems and unnecessary complications. Linux Mint Debian Edition/Debian + apt just keeps it simple.

Timeshift is a must. Creates a system restore point in the event that an upgrade goes wrong and it really works well. I highly recommend that to all Linux users.

I also like Warpinator which is Linux Mint’s version of airdrop. Works between my android and my pc perfectly.

And there is tons of help online for Debian, unlike other distros.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

The laptop that doesn’t exist… For they money you might find something with an Intel Atom or Pentium inside. Which is about as far as having a mouse on a wheel as your CPU…🤣

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t know who these people having issues are but I run Linux Mint Debian Edition and have no issues editing my stuff.

The only issue I can imagine is if they had formatted an external HDD with ext4 and and copied docs from a previous Linux install, and now when they copy it to their new install, they don’t have permission to edit the doc.

For example, you try out Ubuntu for a few weeks/months. You format your ext HDD in ext4 and create docs in Ubuntu. You then copy those into the HDD. Or maybe you had another drive formatted with NTFS and copied docs from there onto the ext4 drive.

After a few weeks you erase Ubuntu from your machine and install Arch. Now when you try to edit a doc on the HDD or copy it to your machine, you find you don’t have permission because those permissions were set on your previous Ubuntu install.

I’ve had permission issues with that hence I format my ex HDD with exFAT and it works perfectly. Also works perfectly with Windows and macOS as they can all read/write to exFAT without permission issues.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Dual booting is the easy part, but exposing the Linux filesystem is the hard part.

I personally would just run Linux as a VM inside macOS using Parallels or Oracle Virtualbox. It will be alot easier and more reliable.

Plus the hardware will work properly whereas with Linux on bare metal Mac, some hardware doesn’t work at all like thunderbolt, SD cards and webcam.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Ok, good luck 🤞

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Linux Mint or Linux Mint Debian Edition installs very nicely on that machine and is one of the better working distros for apple hardware. It should auto detect the WiFi driver which is normally the pain point because it uses broadcom and the drivers are reverse engineered.

I don’t think thunderbolt works, the SD card reader might not work and the video camera definitely won’t work. Plus on standby the battery will drain flat.

These are the issues I had on my 2015 MacBook Pro before it died. I need to take it to apple for diagnosis but don’t have the money right now.

However I run Linux Mint Debian Edition on a 2014 Mac Mini and it’s ok

Generally Apple hardware is a pain with Linux. You get better results with pc hardware - better Harare compatibility and less issues

Any news on Cinnamon DE?

With all the news surrounding KDE Plasma 6, I’m wondering if there has been any interesting news about the Cinnamon DE. This is my preferred DE and what I’m currently using on Arch. Last we heard, Cinnamon moved to Version 6 on Linux Mint, and that version comes with an experimental Wayland setup. Since then, I haven’t...

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Cinnamon normally has incremental updates. If you’re hoping for some massive new features update, you’re going to be disappointed. I think at most you might get a Wayland option.

On Linux Mint you have that option, I don’t think it’s on Linux Mint Debian Edition yet and not sure about Arch.

But at for the look and feel etc, I don’t expect to see any change. I’m assuming the default cinnamon you install on Arch is pretty bland and not as nice as the LM version. But you just need to find out how they themed it to get the same cool look.

The only improvement I’d like to see is an auto dark mode at sunset option added. The rest is fine by me. I run Linux Mint Debian Edition.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Ok cool. There are also other themes you can get for cinnamon if you want to dramatically change the look.

For example I have an OS X inspired theme with a dock because I prefer they layout to the windows style default layout.

The Wayland session is currently in beta so it’s definitely going to be buggy.

[Rant] A few days ago, I asked if Mint would run okay on a Lenovo T460 (I appreciate all the advice). I got it working, but the installation was a big pain and I totally blame Lenovo.

I got the T460 refurbished and I really didn’t want to run Windows 10 on it. I last used Linux for any real length of time a good 20 years ago, so I’m pretty inexperienced with it at this point and I had to figure out how to install it myself....

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

I totally agree. I am an IT Profe and it’s still very irritating to have to jump through these hoops. Plus each manufacturer has a different key you need to press to access the bios. Sometimes the same OEM will have different keys on different models.

So you try the normal ones which don’t work and then have to Google the model number to try find out which key to hold.

Frustrating and time consuming. And definitely makes it very difficult for the average user to install Linux.

I sometimes think Microsoft did it on purpose to hinder Linux installs and then disguised it as “security”.

It’s not really “security” if you can turn it off is it?

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Disable UEFI, enable legacy boot. Reinstall and it should work

Need a new distro(or help with fedora

So I have a new installation of fedora, which I reinstalled because gdm would freeze and prevent me from logging in and using my computer. I then noticed the same problem on the new installation. I noticed that using an older kernel worked, but system upgrades will break gdm again. I don’t want to have to never update my...

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Opensuse Tumbleweed is what you should try and see if you have the same issue.

If not, stick with that. It’s a rolling release but typically very reliable.

And it’s not a corporation like Fedora/IBM Red Hat

Asking for a Linux (or non-Windows) laptop during a job interview?

I’m interviewing for a software dev job currently (it’s in the initial stages). If things work out, I’d absolutely prefer a work laptop with Linux installed (I personally use PopOS but any distro will do), a Mac will be second choice, but I absolutely cannot tolerate Windows, I abhor it, I hate it… (If all computers left...

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

As an IT Technician/Sysadmin who is responsible for ordering the laptop, my recommendation is DEFINITELY ASK because this is info the IT guy needs to know!

Linux desktop appreciation post

I recently had to use windows for stuff and after a year of using Linux, it made me realise how janky windows is in comparison. Even on a top spec pc unminimized (or resized) windows flash white before their contents appear. Super-d to minimize/maximize doesn’t bring all windows back up or in the same order. And these are...

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Yes indeed. I used to work in IT but due to a change in my life I’m doing something else now. Which means I only use Linux at home and only see Windows when I need to print. I keep Win10 in a VM, disconnected from the net, just to print. Which is rare.

But I remember well how crap Windows is, even on good hardware. The issues I had with Surface laptops at work was painful. I stopped ordering those for management because I’m the one who had to fix the issue they inevitably had. And that’s MS’ own hardware.

Even powerful graphics orientated HP machines would need regular rebooting to fix freezing issues on Win10.

Meanwhile the few Win7 and XP machines we had still in use, ran just fine, even though the hardware was 10+ years old …

I’m on Linux Mint Debian Edition on a Mac Mini and it runs flawlessly.

Linux is really great, considering it’s free of charge, and I wouldn’t ever voluntarily run Windows again.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

I run Linux Mint Debian Edition on my 2014 Mac Mini and it’s works really well. Should be the same on the MacBook. Or regular Mint.

I’ve run Mint on my 2015 MacBook Pro and it worked very well.

Either way I recommend a slow release distro because if you use a rolling distro the WiFi will stop working with every kernel update … It takes a few days before they update the Broadcom reverse driver to work with the newer kernel.

That’s why I’m on Linux Mint Debian Edition - I don’t need the latest kernel nor my WiFi breaking every other week. Linux Mint Debian Edition is stable and just works.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t have the answers but doesn’t Linux have to boot off a ext4 formatted drive/partition? Not sure if it will work on an NTFS drive.

If it was me I’d just buy a good quality 128gb usb 3 drive dedicated to this task.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

That’s is the genuine one. There is a genuine company called Exodus for Crypto. The problem is that a scammer made their own clone and nobody verified whether they really are from the Exodus company.

If you check the manifest on Flathub you’ll see they verified it belongs to the real Exodus

danielfgom, (edited )
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

They seem to be doing more on that side than Canonical is. But I agree, it should be MANDATORY that the developer is thoroughly vetted and approved and the code run and checked before publishing.

I hope this is a wake up call for Snaps and Flatpaks.

Apps from the repo have the security, which is why I always default to the distribution repo

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Damn autocorrect…

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Settled on Linux Mint Debian Edition.

I just want reliability, a beautiful desktop and great support. Plus 100% community based - Debian + Cinnamon.

No corps like canonical or red hat and no heavy maintenance routine like Arch.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

As long as Mint is at the top I don’t care what’s underneath 😁

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

It’s HUGE. That’s the biggest downside for me. I’m always use a deb/native package first because they are way smaller.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

I’d say avoid Wayland for now. There’s no real benefit to it at the moment and at least your card works with X11. If the Linux Mint team are happy to wait and just test it out at the moment, that tells me that is the way to go.

Not sure what bloat people mentioned but Linux doesn’t have bloat. The distro chooses their preferred apps which they hope everyone will like but it’s easy to remove them if you don’t and use the app you want. If it’s a system app (.deb, rpm etc) it will barely take up any space anyway. Only flatpaks and snaps take up huge amount of space. I wouldn’t recommend using alot of those as you’ll be pressed for disk space

Linux doesn’t require maintenance. It typically just works. It’s not like Windows where you run a cleaner every so often. Just just use it normally and don’t work about it.

What I wish I knew at the start: Linux Mint is the best distro. I wasted a lot of time distro hopping only to realise I just want a stable distro that gets out of the way but is thoughtfully put together with nice touches. Mint is that. I use Linux Mint Debian Edition because I don’t like canonical.

It’s been rock solid except for when the kernel broke my WiFi, but I had a time shift backup so in 5 minutes I had my pre-update system back and working.

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