I usually spin up a distrobox container of Arch for anything I need that I don’t want to, or can’t compile myself. Both CLI and GUI programs work, and you can use podman as the backend.
she/her, queer anarchist and enjoyer of video games, books, music, cool maps, history, cats, and probably other things.
I usually spin up a distrobox container of Arch for anything I need that I don’t want to, or can’t compile myself. Both CLI and GUI programs work, and you can use podman as the backend.
Gentoo, because no other distro offers as much choice.
With neovim you can even put vim in the textarea.
You mean I have to bring up the on-screen keyboard and type out the name of an app instead of just scrolling & tapping an icon with 1-2 simple motions?
It just means you have the option to do both. Kvaesitsio has the app drawer one would expect, and a persistent search bar.
You can configure Helix to behave a lot more like vim quite easily, beyond the default keybinds which are already quite similar. You can even revert to vim-style normal/visual modes, rather than Helix’s “select by moving approach” if you really can’t stand that.
After being a vim then neovim user for many years, I fully made the switch to Helix, using some options from the config I linked, and there are only a few minor things I miss.
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It would be awesome to have a distro where you can just mix and match all the things.
You may be interested in Bedrock Linux.
Calibre-web even links an empty database in their readme so you can do exactly that without the desktop app.
Yo usaba Arch durante muchos años pero cuando cambiaron a usar systemd, yo cambié a usar Void Linux. Si no tenés alguno problema con systemd, Arch es bastante bien.
A mí me encanta Void. Es una distribución muy simple, fácil de usar y aprender (si te sentés cómodo con el interfaz command line), y me gusta mucho runit. También es muy simple y fácil de usar, y crear tus propios servicios. (Y no hace nada que no quieras).
Si te gusta solucionar los problemas tú mismo, y aprender por qué lo ha pasado, personalmente recomiendo Void.
Si querés una distribución muy fácil de instalar, EndeavorOS es básicamente Arch. Al instalar, podés usar el Arch Wiki como si usás Arch. Manjaro no es muy recomendado por acá. Es basado en Arch, pero no es Arch. Manjaro tiene sus propios repositorios, pero EndeavorOS usa los de Arch.
(ojalá que yo esté entendible, el español no es mi lengua materna 😆)
Diablo II most definitely had seasons, starting when ladder was introduced with patch 1.10, in 2003. Not the same “seasons” typical in gaming today, but seasons nonetheless.
I now love Debian more than I previously thought possible.
brb installing Debian on all my hardware.
edit: there’s a fortune-anarchism
too, amazing.
Pretty sure it just reads the file contents, so extension is irrelevant, but either way it definitely works with the .tgz
extension.
tar xafv
every time, works like a charm.
Yep, for me Arch was top of the list, followed by Gentoo and Void. I was completely expecting Arch or something like EndeavorOS to be at the top, so I’m totally unsurprised. Seems pretty good to me!
It most certainly feels that way, in more ways than one.
I like to think of it as, his history and legacy being written to for the final time, the file being closed.
ZZ. You will be missed Bram, but your legacy will live on.
Where has this been all my life???
Thank you for support us Windows weirdos too. I’ve been looking for something like this that works on Windows as well for ages.
There’s no built-in mechanism for cloud-saves for anything but Steam games that support Steam Cloud, but there is OpenCloudSaves for other games. Takes some setup, but the community will usually pull through for issues like this.
There was a recent post here, that has heaps of links and stuff related to the Steam Deck, too.
My main distro these days is Gentoo, but I definitely feel the same. I’ll write an ebuild anytime it’s feasible, and Gentoo has some pretty great tools for helping me keep up with updates for things.