I like just good old gnome terminal. Theming scripts work well with it, like the gruvbox one that has like a hundred color themes. it’s got all the right features. just works
I like just good old gnome terminal. Theming scripts work well with it, like the gruvbox one that has like a hundred color themes. it’s got all the right features. just works
Currently, I have 3 DEs installed that I use regularly. Cinnamon, i3, and Unity. Cinnamon is for retro themes, and Unity is for a modern mac look after tweaks. and i3 is just nerd porn
That sounds like a nightmare. I would only discord for conversational communication at most. How does that even work?
ProtonDB recently told me civ 3 didn’t work or had major issues. Here I am playing flawlessly.
Yeah, when I released the alpha of my first open source app, boy I had a lot of work to do when I started getting feedback
I love mint. I use it everywhere. You wouldn’t recognize it anywhere I use it though. I customize the hell out of it. Right now I got this retro Ubuntu thing going on, running Unity DE and no snaps. not that I’m wholly against them, I just don’t have them.
good thing my Ryzen 1000 series motherboard doesn’t even have TPM…I need to upgrade lool
It was fun to play with Linux. And it was easier to develop on. The terminal is amazing.
I like all the shows on Jupiter broadcasting . They’re really into the fediverse, self hosting, etc. their shows are:
Linux unplugged Linux action news Self hosted Coder radio.
Chris and the gang have created an awesome community that you can find on matrix as well.
https://matrix.to/#/#jupiter-broadcasting-space:matrix.org
I also like their shows because they’re always trying new things and it encourages me to as well. The hosts are really human and it’s not like a voice reading a script. They’re really accessible and I’ve had many conversations with them. They’ve even featured one of my apps/projects They’re active in the community and Sponsor projects and meet ups. They’re also independent and really picky about ads.
I’m nostalgic for Ubuntu when it still had Unity as default, and Linux mint around 2014. That’s when I began coding, and that’s the time I liked the look of them more than the current modern offerings. Plus there was more ease of customization it felt like