I never looked into flatseal and I don’t have any issues with Steam. But I wonder if flatseal can allow a Flatpak Java application to run systemctl poweroff
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Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
🇬🇧 / 🇩🇪
I never looked into flatseal and I don’t have any issues with Steam. But I wonder if flatseal can allow a Flatpak Java application to run systemctl poweroff
.
Maybe let go of this ancient hardware? Seriously: Get a Raspberry Pi (or whatever SOC computer is the latest trend) and install whatever distribution you want. You get 100x the performance for 100x less power consumption. It’s great to reuse old hardware and all, but THAT old?
Whenever AI is mentioned lots of people in the Linux space immediately react negatively.
Because whenever AI is mentioned it usually isn’t even close to what AI meant.
If you’re on a small budget, look for older ThinkPad laptops, you can get them for good prices and in good condition and Linux works very well on them.
For mid-range try to find an older Dell XPS 13, they sold those as certified Linux devices nicknamed “Developer Edition” and with an Ubuntu LTS version preinstalled. I have one of those and I run Arch on it. It runs perfectly fine. Also: superb build quality! It’s a very great device.
Most common/relevant/larger distros do that at least for the install/live ISO.
Agile software development bases on four core values (paraphrased to make them more drastic but not change them in their meaning):
I am not surprised that this fails miserably.
I’m happy with the distribution I use. But I now need something new to suggest to interested users.
Yes. And now Flatpaks the don’t like, too.
They derived from Ubuntu to provide a better experience - what they did.
But they now go down the Ubuntu way with dumbing down the interface and holding back and/or hiding software they disagree with.
What Debian did with KeePassX is on a whole other level. They maliciously and intentionally harmed the reputation of upstream.
Too bad they go the Ubuntu route now.
And two networks and a reverse proxy and four more volumes …
It’s absurdly complex and annoying and lacks proper documentation.
There currently is no sane way to deploy it via docker since it needs half a dozen of different containers and volumes and networks to barely work at all - overwriting/ruining your already existing setup while doing so.
The cleanest would likely be setting up a VM where you set up docker in and let Lemmy do whatever it wants.
They miss easy to use effects and filters.
Make a piece of text pop in with a nice animation and sound effect letter by letter.
Mmmh. To me apps are the things installed on a smartphone. The things I install on a computer I call programs.
But the same applies there for me, too. I basically do everything in the browser.
And stick to it! Also make sure other participants also adhere to that. Optionally configure a linter for doing that.