Thanks for the heads up! I meant in philosphy, not necesarily in the code.
Hiya! I’m Wiikifox! 2D/3D artist, game and software developer, and maybe something else I forgot to say.
Thanks for the heads up! I meant in philosphy, not necesarily in the code.
It’s not just GNU/Linux what people show in unixporn: some rice macOS, some rice BSD, and some even rice Android. What do they have in common? They’re all based on UNIX.
st. It just works. I’m always opening and closing terminals, and 90% of the stuff I use have’s a TUI. st launches before I can even notice, under 4GB of RAM, and the entire install is less than a MiB.
You need to count the yellow one too
The sum of all those numbers, in months
If you see the numbers out of center you have terminal cancer
AwesomeWM:
Super+/
for a hotkey listSuper+P
for rofi -show run
Super+C
for a scratchpad with profanity
Super+V
for a scratchpad with cmus
Super+X
for a scratchpad with notesSuper+~
for a quake termIn the files tag I run terms and Thunar, in the web tag qutebrowser and everything else in the term tag.
clones a git repo
dwm has a tiling layout in any case, and most TWMs do too, so there’s no real reason to leave your TWM, even if you need/want foating windows.
I think they’re talking about the tandem of tiling and workspaces, as usually you can customize your tiling per-workspace. Some TWMs have tags instead of workspaces, making it even better.
No recomendaría Manjaro ni la mayoría de los forks de Arch. Y pudieras agregar a la lista Debian Sid, aunque técnicamente no es una rolling release.
I’m not asking for a distro made specifically for servers. I’m asking for a distro that fits what I specified in the post body. Most people here said Debian, and I’m probably going with that as it’s my daily driver anyways.
I haven’t tried Photoshop, but all the Windows apps I’ve used in Linux (mostly games) run seamlessly. Probably you can find a YouTube tutorial for configuring wine for your needs
I use wine most of the time. In extreme cases qemu will do it.
I was scared to install Linux as a daily driver at first. Then Windows Update screwed up my install and I said “Screw it, I’m not installing Windows again”. Basically Windows took the decision to uninstall it for me :)
For the end user, especially a beginner, there’s 0 difference between them.
Shouldn’t be the other way around? Beginners usually won’t want to install DE’s or other stuff by hand:
Linux Mint offers a Windows-like experience with cinnamon out of the box, and has several stuff setup by default like system snapshots and media codecs.
Pop!_OS is really appealing visually and very comfortable to use and setup.
Ubuntu, well, is Ubuntu. I’m not diving into it.
rPis for me aren’t an option as there’s no way to buy one here, first hand at least. And the electricity isn’t really an issue as I pay it by estimates.
Also must say the server only purpose is to run long tasks without occupying my daily use PC. I don’t have Ethernet internet either, so I can only put it online sharing connection with my laptop or with a (future) wireless expansion.
I use a bare git repo in .dotfiles/
that uses the home folder as a working tree, configured the repository to ignore untracked files, and then just add my dotfiles if there’s a change.
To setup working dirs I aliased that to dtf
Get a hammer 🔨 . That will open it :)
*they’re
grammar police