I swear Nix users are the mormons of the Linux world.
I swear Nix users are the mormons of the Linux world.
If you’ll be using it in a shop, as a tool and that Debian works well. Well… stick with Debian !
If you want up to date go with Arch/Nix, don’t go OpenSuSE.
If I remember correctly, you can define the modifier key in KDE. Not sure though, you might have to test it out.
That would be the fastest way. Apart from that, it’s very much possible by binding every possible action to different keypresses. That would be long and stenuous.
I tried using the wiki to set up nvidia but to no avail… Is there any insight you might give me ? I’m using Plasma and have a prime card (intel/nvidia)
Yeah even for linux enthusiasts, without archinstall, it is hard. at first. Then once you know what is expected it is easy. But the first time setting it up correctly is frustrating. Particularly if you forget to install intel-ucode
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Did you see the specs of the “old mac” lol. Shit’s a powerhouse. He could even host lemmy on it.
But mailspring uses electron tho
It is definitely not beginner-friendly. But not undoable.
It should work. There might be driver errors. But hopefully it will work.
You just have to make sure there is a EFI partition on the drive to boot linux from.
Joke apart I’ve run into these issues once or twice before. The way to go is to purge the keyring then update it from scratch.
For AUR the best way to go is to install yay (see how on ArchLinux wiki) then go from there. Normally the dependencies should install themselves easily.
Have you tried installing with yay ?
vim has got to you… There’s no going back.
Debian is hard to master for someone coming from Windows ^^
Plus, it’s pretty ugly without heavy customisation. Which ZorinOS (or Pop!_OS) ain’t :)
Zorin is the best distro to learn linux when coming from Windows. I have used Zorin 15.3 and Zorin 16.
The UI is nice, simple and reminds a lot of Windows. It is easy to understand (easier than Ubuntu, Debian, Pop!_OS and Linux Mint).
It has wine preinstalled and runs smoothly.
There are indeed more lightweight distros. But if you want something that “works out of the box”, contrary to, say, PuppyLinux or Gentoo, then Arch is interesting.
It is however harder to configure than Fedora, Manjaro, SuSE, etc. It’s a great inbetween.
Yes