

well now I understand why is suse transitioning to a different installer instead of improving it
Computers and the internet gave you freedom. Trusted Computing would take your freedom.
Learn why: https://vimeo.com/5168045
well now I understand why is suse transitioning to a different installer instead of improving it
I don’t think that’s true. Administration tools could build on top of it, like snapshotting, which even if it does not work the best that way, it will work. and that can just run in the background, automatically, just like it does with snapper on btrfs now on some systems.
yeah, but they use immutable system images that you can’t change even if you wanted to. KDE’s update system is integrated with a systemd component that does the installation after a reboot, I think nowadays that’s the best of both worlds
but does it load all libraries into ram at startup? there’s also all the resource files, including omni.ja that has a bunch of javascript code
I was confused too, but it’s on by default, and when it’s icon is blue
It’s interesting because instead of “display manager” it should be “graphical login manager”, and the current “login manager” should be called “session manager”. I don’t know the origin of the name, though.
and while we are at that, MPV also has a working reverse play implementation (though that’s like a slideshow), and it can very seamlessly do frame by frame playback, the hotkey of which just does normal playback perfectly while it’s long pressed
it literally has a lower CPU consumption, even when using hardware decoding. and even when playback is paused.
lower CPU consumption means more free resources for other programs, and lower power usage, which is more battery life.
it also seeks much smoother, I mean quicker with less delay
it tells you on a new tab. if you continue without restarting it you’ll see its already falling apart
sure, then already open programs will start malfunctining left and right, because they assume they have x version of files and libraries on a path, but in the meantime it has been replaced with version y. firefox and thunderbird are especially sensitive to it, but are not the only one.
unattended upgrades work fine on a server with relatively simple programs, but on the desktop world things are different.
it would be pretty useful if we could do this with the more popular distros, but I think we may be stuck with the way where you create an admin account for yourself for maintenance, and when you give the machine to them you make a new account for them too.
but I’m curious. how will you solve keeping the system up to date? Especially the web browser, but all the other things too
where you can just start the installer and it does everything for you, including users,
that sounds exactly what OP does not want? especially because they still habe to wait it over until the installation completes, before they can create the users and show them around the computer
this is an actual blessing, as the mobile site of facebook is intentionally buggy, and the site is so complex that if you try to come up with ublock rules to hide all the deceptive things (“open the app!”, “you might be interested in xyz!”, and the broken messenger button), then random other parts of the page will break, like the 3 dots menu of any posts, if not now then at most 2 weeks later
burning forests just so that the actual brainless users don’t have to think about whether to decline the notification permission! good job google!
Lets just hope nobody steals my credentials, not that tey’re worth too much lol.
well, access to gullible acquaintances, in your name no less, is very valuable
what do you use x-eyes for?
I wasn’t able to get gamescope working while I was using an nvidia card, and haven’t tried yet with amd
I need to force keepass and some other things to x11 mode so that autotype and window detection works.
ok that makes sense and if it is not too limiting, at least its a bit self documenting, you aready know what changes did you made. hmm maybe I should try it out someday on a spare laptop