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- header credit – Randall Mackey, The Lonely Cosmonaut
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after trying a tiling manager
I like the idea of tiling window managers – I just find it so much less hassle to use tiling keybinds on a stacking window manager …
just a quick bit of background (terminology below is “close enough”):
- Windows treats the drives as primary and the filesystem as secondary
- so all the drives get their letters
A:\
,C:\
,D:\
, etc. - then you move your folders the drive, ex.
C:\Windows\Fonts
- so all the drives get their letters
- Linux treats the filesystem as primary and the drives as secondary
/
as the base point, binaries in/bin
, users in/home
, fonts in/usr/share/fonts
, etc.- then the drives get mapped to mount points in the filesystem (you can see the mounts in
/etc/fstab
)- on my system,
/
is on the drive/dev/nvme0n1p1
,/home
on the drive/dev/sda2
, and so on (everyone’s setup will be a little different)
- on my system,
- this way the filesystem can be spread across multiple drives but appear to the user as a cohesive whole
- Windows treats the drives as primary and the filesystem as secondary
cerement@slrpnk.netto Rss Feeds Recs@lemmy.world•I made a public RSS feed aggregator for the small web called powRSSEnglish4·1 month agoso … um … RSS feed?(nice seeing a revival of the old Planet idea)
EDIT:
looks like things are “in active development”: https://powrss.com/feed.xml just showed up!
- main thing to keep in mind is that a window manager is normally just one component of a desktop environment – full desktop environments like Gnome go to great lengths to assemble a whole fleet of apps to work together to make a cohesive experience
- if you’re going to forego the full desktop environment, then expect to have to fill in on the various missing pieces to suit your needs (file manager, terminal, text editor, clipboard manager, bar/panel/dock)
- if you just want lighter weight but maintain a cohesive experience, then Xfce or LXQt
- otherwise, there are a LOT of choices (both for X11 and for Wayland)
- tiling window managers
- i3 on X or Sway on Wayland are probably the most popular
- special mention: Regolith – pairs Sway on the front end with Gnome components underneath
- dwm for the full do-it-yourself experience
- awesome if you like Lua, xmonad if you like Haskell, exwm if you live in Emacs, Qtile if you like Python
- i3 on X or Sway on Wayland are probably the most popular
- stacking window managers
- Openbox for the old school feel, LabWC as the Wayland successor
- IceWM and JWM for a minimal experience (both show up regularly on Raspberry Pi)
- Motif for the retro enthusiast
cerement@slrpnk.netto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Scientists of Lemmy, how would you standardize or improve cooking recipes?6·2 months ago- examples from professional recipes – measurements are given as weights (in grams) – no worrying about how much brown sugar in a “packed cup” or if your cup of flour has been sifted enough or what exactly is meant by a “cup of spinach”
- examples from baking recipes – measurements are given as percentages – allows easy scaling up and down
cerement@slrpnk.netto Linux@lemmy.ml•Installing Linux Doesn't Need to Change. The Experience Does.8·2 months agosearch for information when Google intentionally lies to you and hides results to keep you on their site looking at ads longer …
along those same lines, used Chromebooks – Google ends support after only a couple years so school districts all over the place are generally stuck with palettes of e-waste
(don’t know how amenable they are to individuals versus corporations (or just affordability in general), but a recent news article mentions Ukraine is looking at Govsatcom, Eutelsat, and Iris2)
(one of the older tropes in Linux-land is giving new life to old hardware just by replacing Windows with Linux)
(one advantage of Flatpaks over AppImage is Flatpaks bundle their libraries – most AppImages won’t run on musl libc systems)
(there’s also an older, but still working, protocol called packet radio – does require a bit more technical expertise though)
an extreme option could be something like the Varvara / Uxn virtual machine by the Hundred Rabbits collective (created after having to deal with Adobe updates and Xcode updates over a barely functioning cell connection) – emulators are available for all sorts of hardware
blog: Weathering Software Winter | youtube: Weathering Software Winter
also [email protected] (most active) and [email protected] (less active)
with the majority here, I just use distro default / automatic setup in installer
LONG ago, I did the whole hand-crafted thing, obsessing over exactly how large each partition had to be, but with increasing speed and lowering prices of storage, this attention to detail now seems pretty irrelevant:
hda
split into/boot
,/tmp
,(swap)
,/
,/opt
,/usr
,/var
hdb
split into(swap)
and/home
- The Person Saving The Media You Love Is You – talks about using VHS-decode (which usually requires opening up the VHS player and soldering in taps)
- c/datahoarder – Do you have any advice for digitizing VHS tapes?
cerement@slrpnk.netto Linux@lemmy.ml•Best (preferably offline) HTML viewer? Minimal resources?2·3 months ago(technically a console browser – Debian installed size 352 KB)
free time
cerement@slrpnk.netto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Why isn't anyone talking about how much of a privacy risk Chinese tech brings.312·3 months agowhataboutism – as long as you’re distracted by “China!”, you aren’t paying attention to the far more egregious privacy violations happening right here at home
now … how many of those were by Linus?