Clicked in this post because of the wallpaper.
Stayed here for the polemic.
Searching the wallpaper, now.
Clicked in this post because of the wallpaper.
Stayed here for the polemic.
Searching the wallpaper, now.
I’m following your path leap on Secureblue, because I found the project philosophy appealing to my interest.
I don’t feel the same about the others Atomic distros. I’m probably missing something but other Atomic projects don’t seem to be adding much value if you know your thing for workstation home users.
Also, to the OP, reading the comments it seems clear to me that even with the best product you won’t be able to please everyone. Although it definitely plants the interest on some that are coming across the topic for the first time, which I think is good. Learning something new should be on everyone’s list.
Some answers to your first question you can find here: https://madaidans-insecurities.github.io/guides/linux-hardening.html
For the second question about in what ways Secureblue do mitigate that you can find more here: https://secureblue.dev/features
The last question about usability, is very usable. If you use Bazzite you may have a similar experience. It is not like QubesOS that isolate all processes making it even not able to use a GPU.
Not exactly a product from ublue but something in the same line:
Secureblue because of the reasons aforementioned for the ublue images where things are really darn rock solid out of the box AND because Linux is fundamentally behind in security and this project is trying to mitigate some of the big flaws.
It looks that part of it is proprietary https://docs.sailfishos.org/Services/Development/Sailfish_OS_Source/
Sorry, it is very poorly worded. English isn’t my primarily language. What I intend to say is that government would benefit for picking a community distro, like Valve did, instead of a company driven one.
Well, companies like Valve, they are a bit more worried if the distro are community or organization driven. So, for government, perhaps that same philosophy should be considered which is not the case of Fedora or Suse. They check distros such as Arch or Debian and derivatives.
Anything in particular that wish you to get over from Bazzite?
Very minor things which may or may not be already available in Secureblue:
LatencyFleX, vkBasalt, MangoHud, and OBS VkCapture installed and available by default.
Patched Switcheroo-Control fixing default-broken iGPU/dGPU switching.
HDR available in game mode and full hardware accelerated codec support for H264 decoding.
Are we even able to successfully add an eGPU on those ARM laptops using a Linux distro?
Any particular friction with GPUs? I see that they have a Nvidia image and they actually recommend if possible to stay away from Nvidia but does it work well with Nvidia or AMD GPUs?
Can we maybe tinker it to get some of the things that we have in Bazzite?
I wonder how feasible would be to calibrate Secureblue with the gaming changes that were introduced in the Bazzite desktop flavor.
Would it be similar to try to change Bluefin and Aurora or it requires additional work?
I mean, for me makes more sense to start with the secure option and add the gaming tinkering to it.
Lol, I’m still on Vega 56
Manjaro?
Not sure how Solus is doing nowadays as well but maybe a tiny bit better than Manjaro?
Not exactly a MMO mouse but, maybe?
Keychron M6 wireless mouse
https://www.keychron.com/products/keychron-m6-wireless-mouse
Most apps stated in their website if not all are closed source
Not defending Ubuntu but wasn’t this clarified to be Mozilla’s deploying it via Snap and requesting to remove the apt installation?
Source: https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2022/04/how-to-install-firefox-deb-apt-ubuntu-22-04
I wonder if would be possible to custom build a mechanical keyboard like this and fit it in a Thinkpad or NovaCustom laptops.
Lol, not sure why a “thank you” got downvoted
Underated comment