I love the long german shortcut names. ALTERNATIVER WEB-BROWSER MOZILLA! DEBIAN-ANWENDERHANDBUCH! ADMINISTRATIONS PASSWORT EINSTELLEN!
I love the long german shortcut names. ALTERNATIVER WEB-BROWSER MOZILLA! DEBIAN-ANWENDERHANDBUCH! ADMINISTRATIONS PASSWORT EINSTELLEN!
Jesus, UI design was terrible back then. I’m not talking about technical limitations, I don’t need fancy transparency effects or something like that, but I’m sure that you could come up with something much better using the old UI libraries as long as you follow modern design principles.
Maybe that’s why he became a dentist.
That doesn’t mean anything. I once had an issue where every few hours, a random application would crash on Arch Linux, but not on e.g. Debian or Windows. But this wasn’t an Arch issue per se, but was instead related to an UEFI overclock setting (which defaulted to on). After turning it off, everything worked fine.
So while it seemed like an Arch issue, it was actually hardware/overclock related, it’s just that the other OS wouldn’t run into the trigger for the crash.
Your BIOS definitely got upgraded, what you’re seeing is actually the new BIOS version. MSI said they simplified the UI because the BIOS ROM size is pretty limited and they want to support as many CPUs as possible.
Wait, you’re telling me that the price on the shelf doesn’t include tax where you live?
Or just yay
Wait, is this like a really accurate replica of the Windows explorer, or is it actual Windows explorer in a VM with seamless mode?
Edit: No sane person would add stuff like OneDrive and 3D Objects to an explorer replica, so my guess is VM.
I give Valve the benefit of the doubt and assume that they know that there’s plenty of consumers that are heavily against a kernel level anticheat. Valve is not really known for anti-consumer bullshit like this.
Isn’t this what Flatpaks are doing?
Yes! SF Pro is the only font for me that looks good on a low DPI display.
While this is good advice in general, it doesn’t apply as much in OPs use case since he’s using an immutable distro.
AFAIK polybar is X11 only, so OP is probably not looking for a Wayland solution, right?
Don’t feed the troll…
You never met a vegan in real life, did you?
From the Hyprland wiki:
A special workspace is what is called a “scratchpad” in some other places. A workspace that you can toggle on/off on any monitor.
Since GNOME definitely doesn’t support workspaces per monitor (and I haven’t seen an extension that does), I don’t think this is possible.
Seriously, how can a huge distro like Fedora still be so horribly user-unfriendly when it comes to basic things like multimedia playback.
I actually switched back to Windows a few weeks ago because I was so tired of all the NVIDIA problems I had on Wayland. A few days later I read that explicit sync finally got merged, lol.
I’m definitely planning on switching back to Linux, but I’m not sure if I’ll do it before getting a new AMD GPU.
Because there is only one alternative (Xorg/X11), and it’s pretty outdated and not really maintained anymore.
For now it’s probably still fine, but in a couple of years everything will probably use Wayland.
Full desktop environment with decent window tiling.