Ah I see. Thank you for the precision. I might stick with KDE then.
Ah I see. Thank you for the precision. I might stick with KDE then.
What features would that be? Stuff for configuring controllers in the settings for example?
This isn’t really a big deal for me though.
Ah ok I see. Thanks for the clarification.
I don’t get the Gnome desktop. The vanilla one is unusable without adding a ton of extensions. But I do appreciate the simplicity in the settings.
I love KDE in the way that it keeps the traditional desktop paradigm that we’re all used to, but their configs are way too complex. There’s too much in one place.
In fact I’ve been thinking of trying out LXQT for simplicity’s sake.
Debian is great. The Ubuntus just add a few quality of life features that make it slightly better in my opinion.
So they’re actively involved in the development of open source projects then?
Mine will probably be Bottles.
The team behind that application did a fantastic job. Wine was due for something much more user friendly like this. And integration with Proton, allowing 3D acceleration is the cherry on top.
security patches for community packages (instead of waiting on community patches)
I’m not sure I understand that part. Is Canonical implementing the patches instead of the open source project/package developers? I’m confused.
Then do with Ubuntu or its variants. Kubuntu, Xubuntu, etc.
I can’t stand Gnome 3. That’s why I go with Kubuntu.
What are the benefits/features that this adds?
When using KDE, press meta-T to activate the equivalent of Windows Power Toys’ Fancy Zones.
You can then set tiling zones and when you drag a window, hold shift at the same time to lock it in one of the zones.
Aw dang. That sucks. But I understand.
I don’t see the clock tower…
/s 😁
Are you sure about that? I dunno if that’s correct.
This is the correct response.
At my job we’ve been asked to remove Docker desktop unless it is absolutely necessary for a client project.
I’ve just been using Docker through command line via WSL and that’s good enough for me.
I was in my second year of university when it came out. I was still using Mandrake Linux if I recall.
Ubuntu was so clean and had everything I needed right out of the box. It was also my introduction to a Debian based distro. No more dependency hell with my packages.
I eventually switched to the KDE flavor but went back to Gnome when KDE 4 came out because of all the problems. Then to XFCE and MATE when they went with Unity.
Today I’m back in Kubuntu and I’m about to install it as my only OS. No more dual boot.
At least Camacho was smart enough to listen to the world’s smartest person’s advice.
Especially if the topic is sex, as OP claims. Like WTF.