

Autoclicker basically.
Also AutoHotKey exists


Autoclicker basically.
Also AutoHotKey exists
I think it’s more about the specsheet than anything else. If Mint works, great! I’m just not too sure how well it will work (It should work well, but is it the best option?).


I mean, yeah, Fedora Atomic is based on rpm-ostree


I think he means the unusually high turnover of Executive Directors over the last few years.
Here’s my .zshrc:
https://gitlab.com/theshatterstone/dotfiles/-/blob/main/.zshrc
and ~/.config/zsh:
https://gitlab.com/theshatterstone/dotfiles/-/tree/main/.config/zsh
This config uses Starship for a prompt (https://starship.rs/), Homebrew as an extra package manager, and my own custom fetch script at:
https://gitlab.com/theshatterstone/fetch
A lot of it was taken from Luke Smith’s zsh config. Say what you will about him, he’s got a good zsh config. Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLEo4OQ-cuQ


I can confirm I’m a newer user (not a normie) to Nextcloud and I don’t know or really care what it uses because it works so I haven’t had to learn what it is or how to debug it.


Yeah, they’re holding back PopOS 24.04 because they want to release it together with COSMIC. Though at this rate, COSMIC will be out not long before 26.04, so idk what they’ll do there.


I agree, and COSMIC aims to reach Mint level and stay there. Settings have continuously improved (like everything else), and the main feature of COSMIC is tiling (regular people don’t care about written-in-Rust or Wayland-only). I can’t wait to see major settings/features appear with the next release, like Night Light. For now, I just want to see it stabilise fully and reach release.


Yeah, I’m waiting for River 0.4.0 and I can’t wait to try it out and hack around with it. I’d love to add “a Custom WM for River” to my project portfolio.


If
the learning curve for a tiling window manager is too high
I highly doubt they’d go for dwm


I can think of one: Excel Macros. If this had come out before May 2022, it would have saved me from needing to dual boot for a single assignment where I needed to do data analysis using Excel just two months after switching to Linux. It was literally around 2 hours of work, or less, and the entire dual boot setup took a similar time.


And that’s why even static sites like Hugo blogs or even simple pages like the one OP posted should have HTTPS. Source: Studied Distributed Systems at university.


If you’re a new or intermediate Linux user or sysadmin, you might have felt an odd fascination with the myth of systemd. I invite you to this deep dive into systemd’s nuts and bolts. I’m not gonna beat around the bush: It’s a hairy business, it will be hard, but I promise juicy and satisfying rewards if you keep pumping through this guide.
Let’s start by uncovering the “D” of systemd, the secret sauce that doesn’t get the love it deserves: D-Bus.
Okay, those innuendos have to be intentional!
It isn’t. I’m on PopOS 24.04 Alpha 7 (soon to be Beta 1), because of COSMIC (and because I was having some bugs with Fedora a few months back).
I recently wanted to tinker with a piece of software that wasn’t packaged, and I couldn’t compile it because of outdated libraries. I could return to Fedora specifically to tinker with it but as an ex-distrohopper, I know it isn’t worth the effort.
Even though Fedora or some version of it will likely be my forever distro, I will stick to PopOS for now because I can’t be bothered to distrohop and back up months’ worth of files, including game saves and a ton of stuff in my Downloads directory.
True, but what about fully (or mostly) FOSS games built on OpenMW?
Are there any free games built on OpenMW, so you don’t have to look for the files of Morrowind to play something with it? Any fanmade games?


I agree the UI can be feel a bit spread out (you access the stores at the Stores section, but your games are at the Library), yet I personally couldn’t even come up with a better way for them to do things.
I used to hate non-steam gaming as I could never figure out Lutris, but then I tried Heroic and it was really intuitive for me to the point I now use it more than Steam (I’ve always played non-Steam games often, but I used to add them as to Steam as third-party games and it was always clunky).


Same here tbh, but I never used my Linux device for it in the first place, so…


Apparently, there was some drama within Organic Maps and this is a fork. Idk if it’s worth it.
As a Vivaldi user, I found that no other browser works as well for me, as Vivaldi does. I can’t imagine life without browser workspaces, sync, vertical tabs on the desktop, and a mobile tab bar at the bottom.
The closest alternative is either Floorp or Zen, with mobile Firefox and Sync, but I found Vivaldi is just smoother and a better and more well-integrated user experience for me.