monovergent 🛠️
- 8 Posts
- 54 Comments
Whatever comes with your distro or desktop environment ought to be enough for anybody.
Unless you have a minimal window manager that comes with only xterm. Then I’d install xfce4-terminal to get tabs and more reasonably sized text. If for some reason the distro or OS only has sh, I’ll also go ahead and install bash, but nothing fancier than that.
To be completely honest, I installed Jellyfin “bare-metal” and have been using it that way since after attempting to skim the Docker documentation and failing to understand how Docker works.
monovergent 🛠️@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Cross-platform video player GrayJay now available as Flatpak27·25 days agoAwesome, adding to my current arsenal of alternative clients alongside FreeTube and NewPipe. One less chance for YouTube to force me onto their webpage.
monovergent 🛠️@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Retro, vaguely windows-95-looking linux distro that's actually usable and people like it?10·2 months agoChicago95 XFCE on Debian is my daily driver. Having been a Windows 2000 fanboy, it makes me feel right at home.
The Raleigh GTK theme ported to GTK 3 on XFCE is also a quick and dirty way to get a 90s-esque look: https://github.com/thesquash/gtk-theme-raleigh
For an entire distro, there’s Hot Dog Linux: https://github.com/arthurchoung/HOTDOG
monovergent 🛠️@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Why doesn't the Linux subreddit leave Reddit already?10·2 months agoMany of them are single-issue Linux users and don’t concern themselves with FOSS philosophy
Also have been using Debian for the past 3 years. It just works on all of my machines and comes with just enough features to make life easy. Also love the variety of packages and compatibility with pretty much anything I need that isn’t in the official repo.
Many would beg to differ but I love how stable and predictable it is. I have a very particular taste in UI and the less work to maintain that cozy look, the better. Having been a holdout on old Windows versions in the years before I moved to Linux, getting new features at all is already very exciting. I had thought for several years that nothing would beat the comfort and reliability of Windows 2000, but Debian proved me wrong.
If just using the Live CD counts, Lubuntu 12.04, to copy files off a broken Windows machine
Then Ubuntu, followed by Deepin (looked cool), UbuntuDDE, Arch, Xubuntu, and finally settled on Debian in 2022.
monovergent 🛠️@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Is KDE actually good or it is overrated? Or I was just unlucky because of prebuilt distros?5·2 months agoIn my experience, KDE can run just fine, but it is seemingly pickier about drivers and hardware (I’ve had a loose DisplayPort connection crash it several times) than other desktop environments.
monovergent 🛠️@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Atomic Linux Distros: What Barriers Stand Between You and Making the Switch?1·2 months agoCustomizations, especially theming, at the system level. Or just learning to modify system files on an atomic distro, in general.
I’m sure it’s doable and I am genuinely interested in moving to atomic/immutable distros. But more for the security aspect than reliability as I’ve yet to break my install of Linux in a way that takes more than an hour to recover from. I’ve enjoyed the predictability of Debian and my very particular taste in UI makes for additional baggage just reinstalling, let alone moving to a very different distro.
- 180 MB
/efi
(if needed) - 384 MB
/boot
(for LUKS compatibility) - Remainder
/
(usually btrfs)
- 180 MB
It is evident from the current top-level comments that more education is needed.
It’s certainly doable and something like that was my setup for a few years. There isn’t much in the way of distros or software packages that provide such a ‘personal multiseat’ configuration out of the box.
I wanted bare metal GUI access, so instead of using Proxmox, I went about configuring Debian to the task. This might not directly answer any questions, but here's an idea of what it looked like.
Hardware
- i7, 48 GB RAM, 500 W PSU
- GTX 1650 (passed through to VM), Radeon R5 340X (basic bare metal output)
- 60 GB SSD boot disk
- 1 TB SSD for VM images
- 2 x 4 TB HDD for NAS
- 1 TB HDD for testing, “overflow”, etc.
Boot disk
- Debian stable with XFCE
- Virtual machines set up through virt-manager and each port forwarded to LAN
- unattended-upgrades, ufw / iptables firewall
- GUI more for ease of management, software on bare metal kept to a minimum
Virtual machines / (RAM allotment)
- Desktop (10 GB): I would use this VM while seated at the machine for productivity and web browsing.
- NAS / media server (4 GB): both 4 TB HDDs passed through to this VM, which hosted a Samba file server and Jellyfin. Also served as file storage for a couple other VMs via internal connections. 4 TB of usable capacity since I set it to rsync to the second drive at 02:30 every morning.
- Misc. services (4 GB): second Samba file server for devices I wanted to sync but didn’t trust with access to my full 4 TB library. Also an Apache server to host a couple of HTML pages on LAN. Various other services tested here as well.
- Windows (8 GB)
- GPU access (16 GB): GTX 1650 forwarded here. Intended for gaming, but ended up using it for Stable Diffusion and LLMs for reasons below.
I’d suggest starting with anything graphically intensive running on bare metal and setting up a VM with virt-manager / Virtualbox / etc. for the NAS part. Get a couple of disks specifically to pass through to the NAS VM, forward its ports to LAN, and connect to them on the host as you would any other machine. For a desk further away, you may be able to get away with a KVM extender, but I can’t say I’ve any experience with them.
If you try to virtualize everything like I did, there’s a couple of hurdles:
- Much time and manual configuration in the command line is needed
- Atrocious graphical and input latency on remote connections
- Very high RAM usage
- Input glitches and general slowness on the VM with GPU passthrough, remained unresolved despite scouring tutorials from people who somehow managed to get buttery-smooth gaming in a VM
- Lots of bandwidth used while updating all of the VMs. Probably optimizable, but not out of the box.
Go for AMD if you can, but NVIDIA hasn’t given me much trouble either. Make sure to install the driver from your distro’s repo, not NVIDIA’s website. IMO, this is less of an issue if you decide to pass through the GPU to a VM since any NVIDIA driver shenanigans will be contained to the VM.
Debian stable:
- Works on all of my devices, none of which are newer than 2019
- Compatibility with all of the software that I use day to day
- I like my system set up in a very particular way and the stability makes upkeep simple
- I was a holdout on older Windows versions before I moved to Linux, so getting new features at all is already exciting
monovergent 🛠️@lemmy.mlto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Liberux NEXX Is a New (Still in Development) Linux Phone10·2 months agoIt bugs me how, within a month after Apple releases a new iPhone, small-time manufacturers put together the hardware, custom ROMs, and tooling to pump out bespoke knock-offs of the latest model. Which sell for maybe $200. While we’re stuck worrying that the development of a new Linux phone, with completely ordinary hardware by today’s standards, might get mismanaged to hell or ends up costing a fortune.
In an academic setting, LibreOffice is a good substitute if:
- Documents will not be passed back and forth between LibreOffice and MS Office for collaboration
- Teachers accept assignments in PDF format
I got away with using LibreOffice in university since:
- Opening and reading files prepared in MS Office almost always works
- Every formatting option I had used in MS Office was also present in LibreOffice
- Professors accepted work I prepared in LibreOffice and exported as PDF to guarantee that my formatting stays intact
- Students and professors almost always used Google Docs for collaborative work
From experience, a moderately-formatted document with images will survive about 3 round trips between MS Office and LibreOffice before something breaks (things on the page get completely rearranged or get stuck and can’t be moved or deleted).
And despite having used LibreOffice for several years now, I still feel like I’m having a stroke when I see the default interface. For sanity, either set the user interface (under View menu) to tabbed or sidebar, or customize the toolbar to match that of Google Docs.
I didn’t
It’s also likely that the mSATA slot is bottlenecked since it runs at SATA II speeds while the 2.5 bay runs at SATA III speeds. This becomes noticeable with heavy swapping or flatpak updates. I found this out the hard way because I want my boot drive on my 256 GB mSATA instead of the 2 TB SSD that I use for media and backups.
monovergent 🛠️@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•want to clone my debian install so i can test updating to trixie1·3 months agoI’m also considering this when it comes time for me to update. I would:
- Throw a spare SSD or equal or greater size into a USB enclosure
- Clone my boot drive to it using Clonezilla
- Remove the original boot drive to avoid UUID collisions
- Boot off the spare SSD and perform the update
I would rather meet bona fide rightists than pot-stirrers like OP
Is the automatic scaling a recently-introduced feature to KDE? I have Plasma 5 on Debian 12, could that be the missing link, or is my configuration just wonky? Hoping to avoid editing every affected shortcut to include Gamescope.