Skip Navigation

User banner
data1701d (He/Him)
data1701d (He/Him) @ data1701d @startrek.website
Posts
52
Comments
342
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • Zhush/zhoosh could work - I don't think the word is commonly used enough that it would get confusing.

  • From what I’ve seen of Asahi Linux’s progress on emulation, Windows games are running pretty darn well on Apple Silicon - there’s still work to be done, but a lot of recent, complicated stuff is playable.

    This gives a bit of hope for gaming on other ARM platforms.

  • I have a Blu-ray drive, though my case doesn’t have 5.25” bays, so I just have the SATA cables come put the side.

    The sole reason I have it is because once a couple years back, I wanted to watch the Star Trek: TNG Spanish dub, which was only available in the US on a Bluray, which I promptly borrowed from my local library.

    I have used it a couple times after, though - once to burn a CD-R with TinyCore to boot on a Pentium II laptop, and once to backup a Bluray with a dub only available on that medium.

  • The nice thing is the tape is all over YouTube, so you can watch all the campy clips of totally not Gowron.

    There’s also a version done in Tabletop Simulator, though I have no clue if it’s any good.

  • I didn’t even immediately notice the photo was of the VHS board game. 🤣

  • My dream set is a Cali class.

  • Agree. Codium goes brrrr, honestly.

  • I think your Adobe comment isn't quite right. I have two family members who are professional photographers and use Photoshop; Photoshop is so important to their workflow they can't give it up just to use Linux. They thus stick with Windows (though one's work had them using Macs for a bit, so they see it as acceptable).

    In contrast, although I sometimes used Photoshop in hobbies (a euphemism for memes), I never used any features so specific to Photoshop that I couldn't just replace it with a combination of Inkscape and GIMP.

    I think the truth is as much as I hate Adobe, Photoshop is the best at what it does right now compared to competitors; GIMP 3.0 has a dismal UI and a weaker feature set, and the latter is largely true of a lot of the web-based editors as well.

  • I’ve been liking my 1st gen Thinkpad E16 AMD. It took a bit of tuning, but the battery life’s decent.

  • I don't use the quick copy and paste on my Thinkpad because it's so easy to accidentally trigger. I use it more often on my desktop, though.

  • The KMS timeouts almost make me wonder if the graphics chip is snorting some sort of crack.

    Just to be safe, maybe try booting a live USB and see what happens. To be very sure, you could even try multiple distro/DE combos on the live disk.

    If it's RAM, it should be easily replaceable on a laptop of that age. If it's the graphics chip, then it's probably time to find some other laptop. You can probably still press this to service in a homelab, though.

  • Maybe post the entire DMESG just in case.

  • I think a-Shell's the best thing for that - gives you a nice Unix style shell on your iPhone.

  • Old isn't necessarily bad. Also, as far as I can tell, distros are still patching 1.32. Based on my personal usage of LightDM and the fact that the project is still developed (based on commits to main), I'd say it's more of an "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" dynamic. As for security, the active development suggests the developers would respond if there was a vulnerability - a big if, considering its last CVE was in 2017.

    Personally, I love LightDM - it has just enough features while mostly sticking to its name (I mean, you're probably using GTK anyway).

  • Virt Manager does have snapshots as well.

    As for the host system directory mounts, you got me there. There seems to be an option in the Virt Manager GUI, but it is kind of difficult to get working.

    I've never used Virtualbox on Linux - it was what I used back when I was on Windows.

  • Yes, I've unmounted an ISO image plenty of times. The button, in my opinion, isn't that hard to find.

  • I don’t agree. I’m pretty sure Virtualbox has its own weird kernel module instead of KVM.

    In addition, I’m pretty sure the the Virt Manager GUI has most of those features and is in general pretty easy to use.

  • Virt Manager GUI is my preferred.

  • This isn't quite Debian red - more of a mix of reddish pink and purple, which is common in Ubuntu backgrounds.

    Despite the Debian logo being red, Debian has tended towards blue-ish backgrounds for several versions.

  • Sad to hear. I don’t know if it’s luck or something else.

    I’ve been running Debian on btrfs on my laptop for 3 months without issue; I still use ext4 on my desktop, as I just went with defaults when I installed the operating system.