Looks like the Gnome Disk Usage Analyzer but for KDE.
Looks like the Gnome Disk Usage Analyzer but for KDE.
Elderly people in my family use Ubuntu (LTS) for over a decade. In one particular case, all LTS updates are performed remotely, without issues.
One important thing the centralized sites like Bandcamp enable, is discovery of new music and artists. I’m afraid that this is such a big deal that Faircamp won’t be able to take off until that problem is addressed and solved somehow.
Install some software on your server […]
I’m afraid that this is a big no-go for most artists, which just want to make music and don’t want to be server administrators.
Thanks. I didn’t even know that Nerd Fonts existed! :D
That sums it up quite nicely. Thanks
I don’t think I change anything except the monospace font nowadays
Which font do you use?
It works great and gets out of the way.
I think that that’s why some Gnome users just stick with it. I personally don’t want to customize anything, if possible. I don’t even want to concern myself with the DE at all if possible. Any time I spend on the DE is time I don’t spend doing the things I actually want to do. But that’s the beauty of Linux: everyone can use whatever fits their needs best, be it Gnome, KDE, xfce or anything else.
Aim for a more open solution, like a Tolino or Kobo.
Pocketbook runs Linux, IIRC.
I use syncthing for synchronizing photos and music between phone and my computers.
The feature I probably use most ist sharing links from my phone to my laptop to continue reading web pages or researching something on a bigger screen.
As far as my experience goes, all you can do with Gnome Software is to install and uninstall software from various sources which need to be added separately. There’s no option to manage any remotes/sources even with flatpak support installed. I hoped to be proven wrong.
How do you manage flatpak remotes with Gnome Software?
Do people still use emacs to code, for example?
Sure. Why wouldn’t they?
Are you saying that Arch is the new Ubuntu?
You and the person you replied to are both correct. Yet people herded around and followed well known persons through history. Unfortunately people don’t always look up to and choose to follow wise people. Yet the kind of hardwiring the person you replied to mentions is obsolete in my opinion. Never before was information as accesibile as today and ideas (no matter what kind) were exchanged as fast as these days. Critical thinking and the ability to filter through all the informational mess is probably the next evolutionary requirement if we wish to avoid becoming drones in a dystopia.
Must have to do with the fact that in the meantime I use nala more often instead of apt.
I never saw an ad in Ubuntu.
I assume that they already decided that such accounts aren’t profitable anyways and that management and migration isn’t worth the hassle.
That’s a good strategy and it makes sense. Don’t forget that you don’t have to decide for one alternative or the other. You could always have multiple options available and use them as suitable.
Just out of curiosity: when was the last time you looked into Linux?
You can’t lose what you never had, though. ;-)