Looks very creepy and calming at the same time. I like it, thanks for sharing!
How did you make the light twigs stand so out? Local contrast?
Do you want to tell me your editing, just for learning purposes?
Looks very creepy and calming at the same time. I like it, thanks for sharing!
How did you make the light twigs stand so out? Local contrast?
Do you want to tell me your editing, just for learning purposes?
Looks like a False Parasol in my eyes, though remote ID is a bit hard of course.
Why? The edible Parasol is usually brown with a dark brown underside, has flakes at the cap and stem, and the ring is detachable.
But don’t trust my impression alone please, I’m no ID expert!
Maybe consider buying hardware with better Linux support in the future, e.g. getting an AMD GPU instead of a Nvidia if you want to get a new one anyway.
I personally have zero issues with my (relatively normal) setup.
Even more, I have better hardware support on Linux than on Windows!
For example, I noticed that I can dim my monitor, which doesn’t work on Windows!
Or, my GPU is more silent, because Bazzite and the Linux kernel ship some tweaks that make the energy draw and fan curve more efficient in my experience.
Again, I think it’s just your hardware, especially the multi monitor. Multi monitor is supposed to be fine on AMD (can’t confirm, I only have one ultra wide), or single/ dual monitor is also supposed to be almost great on Nvidia, with the proprietary drivers.
If you have a spare laptop with proper Linux support (most ones do, even with Nvidia, Surface, etc.) consider installing it and just try it out. uBlue (Aurora/ Bluefin, Bazzite, etc.) is great for that, so, maybe check that out.
If not, then we’ll welcome you again in a few years. The OS is just a tool, use the best suited one for your use case. In yours, it may be Windows currently.
Bazzite offers a variant with Nvidia drivers already baked in too.
You don’t have to reinstall anything btw, you can just rebase from Kinoite to Bazzite with rpm-ostree rebase *link to Bazzite*
.
(You find the instructions on the website).
It takes about 5 minutes and you can keep all your configs and data, including Flatpaks, pictures and WiFi password. And if you don’t like it, you can revert that or rebase to some other variant, e.g. Aurora, the Sway spin, or whatever. I find it pretty neat.
+1 for Fedora Atomic.
Especially Bazzite comes with Nvidia drivers already built in and everything should just werk™.
It’s very modern and reliable. If it doesn’t work with that, nothing will.
To be fair, the use case is very demanding. Just 2 years ago, we were glad that we can play more than one game on Steam, and now, we’re complaining that our triple monitor setup with Nvidia and VRR/HDR doesn’t work perfectly. I’m happy we’re at this point, but some things, like that, may hinder the wide spread adoption…
AFAIK the uBlue stock image is even leaner than Silverblue. uBlue doesn’t contain any pre-installed Flatpaks by default.
Maybe take a look at universal-blue.org, especially the Aurora (KDE) or Bluefin (Gnome), too. It’s basically the same, but with some QoL stuff already added, like proprietary drivers and more already set up for you for a nicer experience.
For one thing, image based distros are very convenient. If you tell someone “Just install Bazzite”, they will probably have a nice gaming experience without any tinkering, because everything is already set up for you ootb.
You have to understand the concept first. Fedora Atomic/ image based distros are built from top to bottom, not on the same level. If something changes from “above”, your install will change too, to an 1:1 copy basically.
Problem is, if stock Fedora isn’t allowed to ship/ doesn’t have some things pre-installed, it’s harder to iron out on the user level, e.g. by negatively affecting update times.
uBlue is basically a “build script”, that takes the upstream image, modifies it, and redistributes that with the changes included.
In that way, the image from other users is the same as yours, with the same bugs.
This makes it more efficient and user friendly.
It also allows devs to make their “own” distro with only their changes included, while offering a very solid base they don’t have to maintain themselves.
Thanks for your answer.
This may sound harsh, but I’m glad I’m on Fedora Atomic. Suse sounds a bit shitty/ not much better than the regular edition.
As distro desktop hopper, the ability to rebase to other spins is one major aspect of using Atomic, and I use it all the time.
Please tell me more about OpenSuse Kalpa/ Aeon/ MicroOS.
I’m a huge fan of Fedora Atomic, but find Suse interesting as well.
What are the differences between the two?
Yeah, of course it is. I use it too for 3D-modeling, image editing and more.
For general purpose, it’s pretty normal. Its’ main advantages really only shine in gaming stuff.
But, to be fair, I don’t know if the tweaks optimised for gaming don’t negatively affect other stuff. I didn’t notice anything yet, but you can’t be sure.
Just use Bazzite. It updated automatically to F40 just a few hours after upstream, still has all security settings intact and is a joy to use.
Nextcloud mobile worked okay-ish for me, but it worked.
Another thing you could try is Syncthing.
I personally decided to pay for the sync, because I like Logseq a lot and wanted to support the devs. I also lost some lines and notes from time and time when using a local sync (Nextcloud), and that’s a thing that’s a deal-breaker for me, so I happily pay for that.
But I wish this sync-feature would be self-hostable soon…
For most stuff, you just write your things into the journal.
You usually don’t create pages on their own and open them, like on other note taking software, you link stuff to them with hashtags/ double brackets/ references.
It’s basically like a dairy with your thoughts that get connected to similar thoughts from months ago.
For to-dos, you just type “TODO” , optionally with /A, B or C for priorities.
I like to make my own journal template where a query of my TODOs is listed.
In general, I’d recommend you to watch a few guides on YouTube and read the docs for further instructions.
I found Logseq pretty unintuitive in the beginning, because I only knew traditional note taking software, but once I understood the concept, it made a whole lot more sense than the other approaches. It’s actually very simple, just like opening a note block and writing down stuff every day.
Now that you’ve convinced me this might be the best course (I only see less problems than other distros would have)
Sometimes, software, especially install scripts for something, are less common for Silverblue, but executing those is very risky anyway and I never felt the need for it.
And, as I said, some things just work differently. But NixOS is one million times worse than that in that regard, so don’t worry about it. You shouldn’t have many issues.
any recommended reading or key concepts I should look into? Any particular flavor(s) you’d point me to first?
I don’t know. In my opinion, my post should cover most stuff concepts and differences.
Don’t worry about it, you’ll use Flatpak anyway most of the time, and it updates itself automatically, so the package manager (rpm-ostree) doesn’t matter much for you.
You can still use your prefered package manager (apt, dnf, etc.) in Distrobox.
Other than that, just don’t worry and use your laptop for whatever you want to do.
And about flavor choice, there are a few options:
Just go to the uBlue homepage and see for yourself what appeals to you :)
Wow… Just wow! Thank you for your elaborate answer! I’ll check your profile out, maybe I can learn something.