From video description:
Reason 1: Gaming
Reason 2: Creative Apps
Reason 3: Foobar2000 (my music player)
Reason 4 (bonus) Fussing, fussing, fussing!
From video description:
Reason 1: Gaming
Reason 2: Creative Apps
Reason 3: Foobar2000 (my music player)
Reason 4 (bonus) Fussing, fussing, fussing!
Why did they change this icon?
I’ve used a bit xrdp and even less vnc. Can you please elaborate why is rdp better?
I still don’t get why GNOME moved to RDP instead of sticking with VNC.
Embracing Microsoft technologies to better fit offices?
I know Microsoft gave Gnome a donation of 10.000$ because they use Ubuntu (which use Gnome) and inside the repo (inside SPECS folder) I’ve seen gnome-commons to build gnoem stuff.
But yes, this is probably a server distro without a DE.
Seems to be based mostly on Fedora by reading the Readme.
I would like to know if it does use systemd and/or other redhat technologies.
In the readme they mention Qt, does anyone know what DE do they use?
Mostly of packages from Fedora is also Flatpaks from Red Hat’s server (not Flathub)
That’s not true. Fedora used to have a Fedora flatpak repo but now they simply ship with flathub enabled by default.
About RPM, I don’t know if Gnome Software Center is able to handle it
Yes, it can
Fedora asks you to enable third party non-foss repos like Steam and Chrome, but still you have to manually enable rpmfusion. Plus idk if new install of Fedora ships codecs pre-installed.
I use fennec (firefox from f-droid) with uBlock using all the filters, so I get no popups anymore.
Can opt to automatically open links in private navigation too.
Reject all not essential
Plus I think there will be a way to disable it (like with local translation we have rn).
I like more the “Stolen Servers” one.
It’s not just about the SoC itself and GPU needs drivers to work.
Edit:
If you would like to know more about adding support for a new SoC on Linux, check out Asahi Linux blog.
Apple M1 isn’t just a CPU, is a SoC which holds a CPU and a GPU.
Copr is like Ubuntu’s ppa
For M1 Macs the best (if not the only) linux distro is Asahi Linux and their flagship is Fedora Asahi Remix (which is a collaboration between Asahi Linux and the Fedora Project).
Maybe that’s why OP chose it.
It has more granular settings aimed at games, like having antimicro and mangohud toggles (for antimicro you can select a map to use). Gives many versions of wine to use (even custom ones like GE). Plus, I can use it to launch other games which does not need wine, like emulators or native ones.
To me it gives no hussle and UI is not that bad.
Bottles seems more aimed at software.
For games I find Lutris more comfortable than bottles.
VM for the Adobe stuff
Try https://github.com/LinSoftWin/Photoshop-CC2022-Linux
For games try Lutris. Ntfs should be readable/writable without issues (expect if, in dualboot, Windows does not completely turns off).
Why having DRM behind a “do you want to install DRM to play media” button is seen as a bad thing? Otherwise everyone would have to use chromium.