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Günther Unlustig 🍄

@ Guenther_Amanita @slrpnk.net

Posts
9
Comments
150
Joined
2 yr. ago

Peter Lustig's unlustiger verschollener Sohn mit weirden Interessen und Gadsen.

🇩🇪 DE/EN 🇬🇧

Peter Lustig used to be the moderator in an old German kids science and nature series called "Löwenzahn" (Dandelion) who shaped our generation.He also shaped my childhood, and I want to honour him.

My real name also isn't "Günther", it's just a reference to "Olaf, Olaf, Olaf, Günther" from Spongebob: The Movie, because I wanted it to sound like a real name and it makes conversations easier.

  • @[email protected] I have nothing useful to contribute, but I fucking love your username. Thank you for the smirk you gave me, have a nice evening mein Genosse 👋

  • Removed

    Liquid Trees

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  • Does this count too?

    I already posted this on [email protected]. .

    I'm purposefully growing duckweed on my balcony.I'm doing [email protected], and by doing that, I have lots of waste water with still good fertilizer in it.

    Duckweed is one of the fastest growing, nutrient densest and least demanding plant out there, and you can just scoop it out with a strainer.

    It's exponentially growing and if you don't wanna eat it, it makes great organic fertiliser or animal feed with lots of protein and micronutients!

  • CasaOS isn't an OS, it's just the web interface you install afterwards you have Debian or whatever running

  • I can recommend you Debian, since it's the "default" for many servers and has a lot of documentation and an extremely big userbase.

    For web interfaces, I can recommend you, as you already mentioned, CasaOS and Cockpit.

    I used CasaOS in the beginning and liked it, but nowadays, I mostly use Cockpit, where I have the feeling that it integrates the host system more, and allows me to do most of my maintenance (updating, etc.) quite easily.

    CasaOS is more aesthetic imo, and allows you to install docker containers graphically, which is better for beginners.I personally do my docker stuff mostly via CLI (docker compose file) nowadays, because I find it more straightforward, but the configuration CasaOS offers is easier to understand and has nice defaults

  • I replied to @[email protected] and understood the question like "Is distrobox as secure as QubesOS?", which I replied with "No".

    I'd say Fedora Atomic is definitely a bit more secure than other distros (e.g. Ubuntu, regular Fedora, etc.) for reasons you mentioned, but if you are a user that thinks that only Qubes offers the security you need, than there's no alternative.

    I can recommend you Secureblue tho as a good middle ground.It's Fedora Atomic, but hardened, a bit like GrapheneOS. Still viable for comfortable everyday use, but much more secure.

  • What's your problem with the image based OS?

    If there's really anything you need, you can layer it or build your own image quite easily.

  • You don't run a VM for everything with Bazzite, Distrobox is more like Flatpak or WSL in that regard.

    It also isn't much more secure, it's just that everything is a bit more contained and comes with their own dependencies.

  • Thanks for the summary!

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  • I'm constantly switching between Gnome and KDE (Bluefin, Aurora, Bazzite, Kinoite, Silverblue, whatever) and I never had any issues.The only thing that gets messed up a bit is theming, where I have to change the GTK theme, and sometimes the window buttons when I go from KDE to Gnome, which is also reverted in just one click in Gnome tweaks.

  • [email protected]

    When I click on the link it sadly says "community doesn't exist". Maybe I'll have to wait until it's federated?

    Edit: I misspelled the instance, now I can click on that and followed it. Thanks for creating it! :)

  • +1 for uBlue (Aurora, Bazzite).

    Everything you want and need is already set up for you, and the OS is just in the background for your games and other software to run on. No need to install any codecs, or even updating it, because it's already done for you. And if something breaks, then you can just roll back in seconds.

    Very user friendly.

  • The Uncanny Valley is real.

    I was undiagnosed my whole life until early adulthood, and therefore always tried to pass as NT, because I never knew what's wrong with me.

    I trained myself for years to mimic NT behaviour, including facial expression, gestures, voice tone, and much more.Everyone here can probably relate to that how incredible hard it is to achieve that, but I somehow did! Great! Right? Right...?

    NOPE!

    While I was 99% there, the 1% missing made everything worse.Those are the tiny tiny nuances that you just can't replicate, like microexpressions, or some minor mistakes you made, like looking at the wrong direction while "thinking" or whatever shit they made up.

    And those tiny incoherences are what will destroy everything. Many people will dislike or mistrust you, and the worst thing about that is that they don't even know why!They'll accuse you to being a liar, because you act sketchy, or that you are "fake", or whatever you can think about.

    I'm currently in the process of un-learning all of that and stop being someone else. Sure, many people will dislike you just for who you are, but seriously, if someone doesn't have a good time around you just because your voice sounds too flat or because you don't laugh back at them then fuck that person.We have 8 billion people on this planet, there will be at least one person out there that appreciates your weirdness

  • No, don't. Good idea at first glance, but horrible on the second, at least from my experience.

    While work will be way more pleasant, it might be too pleasant, and you'll spend more energy and focus than you might realise.Your boss will notice that too, and give you a heck lot of more work to do than your colleagues, for the same wage.You'll work and work and work, and then you wake up with a burnout.No one, except you, will notice that.

    And then you can't give 200% anymore, but only 100% from now on.

    In your bosses eyes, you have gotten just lazy and not interested anymore, just because they're used to you overstraining yourself.

    And last but not least, they'll dump you into the trash because they can't extract even more resources out from you, and no one will care. You are just a human resource, that's why the department in companies is called that way.

    Don't be stupid. Don't be me!

  • 100% AMD, for sure. AMD won't make much problems and works ootb.

    Nvidia on the other hand... if you already have a Nvidia GPU, then the proprietary drivers work pretty well, but even those won't work flawlessly and still cause problems for many people.And the FOSS drivers are still in the early stages and won't cut it. So why spend lots of money for a piece of hardware that won't give you the performance you paid for?

    Also, Nvidia clearly doesn't care about PCs or its' users, so why support such a shitty company with your money?

  • I've also got my first "Hot chicks in your area, click this link for a hot chat 🥵" message in my inbox.

    Guys, we've made it. We're officially mainstream now! Yay!

  • 1. Distro choice

    I would recommend you either Aurora or Bluefin.Both are pretty much the same, but differ in their desktop environment.

    Traditionally, Gnome (Bluefin) always has been the champion in terms of being tablet-like, but from what I've heard, KDE has surpassed Gnome in terms of how well it works as a tablet UI.

    You can install the one or the other, and then later "rebase" to the other variant without needing to reinstall anything if you want to try the "competitor" or if you're unhappy.

    This basically switches out the base system, but your installed apps and pictures are decoupled and kept. Like just doing a big update :D

    Why do I recommend you exactly that, and not just base Fedora or Kubuntu or whatever?

    Simple - you need to install the linux-surface kernel (and stuff), because without it, nothing will work, no stylus, no sleep, no battery, basically nothing.

    But said modified kernel is nothing ordinary, and might shit itself randomly.

    Not only would you have to install everything by hand, which was a task that not only let me return to Windows once, but twice as Linux noob! It also causes a lot of headache when you have to spend your evening fixing it via CLI or whatever.

    Here uBlue comes handy: you can "fix" your system with just one click.

    • Smort silica rock not thinking?
    • Grub says "NØ" after system update?
    • Me not care, me pressing space while booting, me selecting yesterday image, me watching YouTube when eating because me don't care, knowing that dev daddy is already working on fix that ship tomorrow.

    You don't even have to do manual updates or whatever, everything is done in the background for you, just like on your smartphone.

    You have to select the "I have a Surface device" option, and then everything comes pre-bundled and (hopefully) just werks™

    2. Note taking and PDFs

    I don't know 🤷

    3. SD card

    🤷

    4. Stylus

    I believe KDE is better, because it has many wacom tablet input settings and features, but I sold that crappy Surface ages ago when Gnome was the obvious choice. The 🤷 also applies here I guess, because it was two years ago and felt like a completely different age compared to today.

  • I've tried pretty much any FOSS launcher out there, and I always return to Kvaesitso.

    It feels very natural and smooth, while being minimalistic and extremely functional.

    Especially the search is the best there is. The built in calculator ("1+1"; "3 inch in cm"; etc.) is so fucking useful and finding stuff is blazing fast.