Attempting solidarity pragmatically.

Also @cakeistheanswer@lemmy.world @cakeisthenanswer@lemmy.fmhy.ml

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 23rd, 2023

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  • It gets better!

    I took a deep dive on fonts my first week(they were fuzzy). I now know a lot about things I almost never use or set, but every win will give you a piece of the whole thing.

    Eventually you figure out the "core" (that stays the same everywhere and you don't have to do near as much work to tack on the extras.

    It's big and complicated because you're replacing windows with the hundred individual things windows does, each were made by someone else, in some cases decades apart.

    Somehow it all works pretty well, but we stand on the shoulders of some giants.

    Edit: I also don't like manjaro, but someone here has covered why better than I would have. I run endeavouros and would recommend if you want arch with less config, but it is arch. Mint is where I have been pointing people to start recently.


  • It hooks into nearly every base utility I can't live without (fzf, jq, helix, ripgrep). If you're on windows im not sure you're going to get a ton unless you live in WSL.

    You can pick the editor it'll open by default, which should be configurable with comparable syntax highlighting. Vi can pretty much look like whatever. I think it'll default to vscode on windows.

    Im not sure what you'd use it for but manage files, but I would have poked it and probably moved along while I was still on windows.

    Edit: the other benefit you might not see has a lot to do with support of mime types.

    https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/media-types.xhtml

    The xdg open protocol will open whatever app is assigned to handle type locally. Which is probably why it defaults to editor.



  • Generally Fedora's purpose is to make sure nothing gets into redhat (RHEL) Linux. So if there are breaking changes to things, you'll be getting them.

    Historically if people had wanted to learn I'd push them towards Ubuntu because its Debian based, meaning familiar enough to most of what runs the modern internet that I could eventually (I'm not a Linux admin) fix.

    These days if you just want to use it I'd pick Linux mint, just since they seem to be orienting towards that way. Arch or SUSE based something if you want to learn more about how the packages you install work together. But the choice in distro honestly feels more like an installer and package manager choice than anything. a distro is just a choice of which thousand things to hide in a trenchcoat.

    I just ideologically don't like IBM and would rather hand in my bug reports to the volunteer ecosystem.