You can get Steam on just about any distro, for years at this point. And there’s always Flatpak for these cases too although for Steam I recommend native packages.
he/him
You can get Steam on just about any distro, for years at this point. And there’s always Flatpak for these cases too although for Steam I recommend native packages.
You’re not wrong, it’s definitely not something a n00b should attempt in most cases. But I’ve done this before to save myself the need for distrobox. A lot of proprietary software only offers .deb, but is usually either statically linked or comes with its own set of nearly all the libraries it needs. So just extracting and running it often does the trick on non-debian distros like Fedora in my case.
Seriously though, just use distrobox or see if there’s an unofficial package for your distro that you trust (AUR/copr/ppa/OBS). It’s more straight forward especially if you don’t know what you’re doing.
That’ll work but distrobox is a much simpler solution
Also great when you get some software as a deb for old Ubuntu and don’t want the trouble of manually making it work on a new system. Just make an old Ubuntu distrobox.
I use fish which is quite nice OOTB, although if you want a posix compliant shell, zsh with some plugins is also great.
Use a shell with decent auto-completion. I have not been irritated by this in years.
I wonder why they use A/B root in the first place instead of a single BTRFS partition with Subvolumes and snapshots
I’ve had lentils based bolognese at a restaurant before. It wasn’t bad, but I prefer this one by far. I guess we all have different tastes :)
My home server is a RockPro64. I didn’t specifically buy it for that purpose but since I had it lying around I figured I might as well use it.
It has a PCIe Slot which I used for a SATA controller, with two 3,5" HDDs.
They have an official NAS case for it too, not sure I’d recommend it as it’s kind of expensive, doesn’t isolate HDD vibration / noise at all and isn’t very convenient to service (to replace the drives for instance). I’m not aware of a better case option for this board though.
I run debian and OpenMediaVault on it (I didn’t have to mess with the kernel or device tree at all), with the ZFS plugin, and several docker containers (Jellyfin, PiHole, Syncthing, Tailscale).
For my needs it’s working perfectly fine and doesn’t need much power. But:
TL;DR these low power ARM boards are just fine as a cheap option for getting into homelab / Self hosting and I wouldn’t necessarily recommend against them, but sooner or later I want to build a low power x86 based NAS with more RAM, SSD cache and TrueNAS Scale instead.
Reminds me of this…
You can use VAAPI or NVENC for hardware encoding, I believe there are presets for that in the render dialog nowadays. I think that is or was broken in the AppImage though. Using the GPU for actually processing heavy effects (like color correction, chroma keying, transformations etc) is currently not possible and the GPU processing option in the settings is broken. And many of these effects are single threaded on the CPU.
Kdenlive unfortunately isn’t amazing at really utilizing your hardware. Getting better though.
I’ve never had good luck with distro packages of Kdenlive, on any distro. Always crashing and glitching. The Flatpak has always been much more stable for me, and the AppImage is even more solid.
Btrfs snapshots are a blessing. Call me a cheater :P
I don’t use Wine so I’m really not sure if this would be prevented
It is not prevented. In fact I saw a video where someone removed the Z:\ drive for wine (the path that gives windows apps access to the whole Linux rootfs) and then ran Wannacry, and it was somehow still able to encrypt all writable folders on the system.
That wouldn’t remove the Wine prefix, i. e. the virtual C:\ drive where the virus most likely lives. Uninstalling Wine wouldn’t do shit since it only removes files that your user (and thus wine) can’t even write to, and if a virus manages to get around that you have bigger problems.
I feel like it does make a difference but it might just be placebo.
I’m not trying to invalidate your experience; if Wayland doesn’t work for you yet then stay on X11 for a while. But a lot of complaints I see about Wayland are pretty outdated and just not true any more.
I just don’t really get the “I won’t use Wayland until it has complete parity with X” attitude. The status quo is that X11 has features that Wayland lacks and vice versa. Like, I enjoy features like VRR, mixed refresh rates, mixed scaling, better gestures etc. on Wayland right now, but color management isn’t there just yet.
Wayland doesn’t need complete parity with X11, it just needs the features that people actually need these days. And yeah it lacks some stuff like color management but I’d argue for the majority of users Wayland is already fully usable day to day.
I guess that makes me a tech conservative with a hint of newborn paranoid, based on the provided. But I don’t think the name “tech conservative” is very fitting at all. To me those words would describe someone has been using Linux for 20 years and hates everything that is new just out of principle and will never change their mind (e. g. containerized apps, Wayland, systemd etc.). I couldn’t be further away from that stereotype.
The poor cleaning staff isn’t responsible for the dystopian ads, neither are other people who just need to use this bathroom.
Vandalizing the ads themselves, and only the ads, is something I could get behind though.