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75
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1 yr. ago

  • I dont have the knowledge to help you. But I know enough to be intrigued by your usecase. Can you share what you are trying to do? Is it a corporate job? Or a personal collection or sth?

  • Or a proportional voting system, that doesnt produce a two party situation.

  • For me everything more than 10' of walking from my home is a bike default. Except i need to transport bulky equipment or it rains very strongly. Then its walking with umbrella + bus/train. (I dont own a car, as I live in a City.)

  • Almost all parties that refused the first time were for it this time. It is completly differently inplemented this second time.

  • To be fair: Every single appartment/house stayed in in the UK was so poorly isolated that it felt fresh and cold already when entering a room with outside walls/windows. In Germany/Switzerland many modern houses are basically pretty much airtightly sealed and well isolated

  • Wait till you hear about fruit salad

  • Symphonium supports playlists. You can make a own manual playlist or a "smart" playlist, which has the x amount of least listened to songs, the 10 highest rated ones and so on. Everything is on the listening device local, so you have to backup for yourself. Symphonium is really really customizable.

    Sorry for german. A setting for an intelligent playlist for all highly rated songs which I havent listented to in 70 days. (AND/OR) can be set for rules. Its amazing.

    Music recommendation is not really a thing unfortunately by the nature which most of download->server->jellyfin->client systems run.

    You really need the "big data"-aspect which spotify or similar providers have to have good recommendation, so no local solution is possible. I sometimes use listenbrainz (by the musicbrainz team) like lastfm and then manually aquire new music I want to have on my musicserver.

  • The german Youtuber AltF4Games has some good reviews (almost a series now) about the game and the very shady company behind it. The current splitgate 2 is apparently back in their second beta phase, after they didnt achieve what their countless investors wanted (to be the new definitive fps). And now its a game with everything and nothing, kinda generic.

  • Jellyfin works nicely for music, as long as you use a good client. The native jellyfin mobile app is not optimized for music. I use symphonium for android listening and am very pleased with it. More settings than Id ever need, different options for downloading/caching songs on device, support for subtitles and all.

  • Nonviolent but measures like unions and strikes do very much work. I just say that annectotaly but there is probably some study about it.

    They are probably considered "violent" or maybe only "agggrssive" behaviour by the capitalist class, because it threatens their income/revenue. Thats enough to make them change.

    Completly overthrowing a whole economic system might work but is a big ask. Everyday people can do little things. Like unionizing, standing up to the boss or maybe even stand together with the boss and against the next higher-up.

  • Most important question.

    Also try to transition her slowly from outlook -> Thunderbird and chrome -> firefox and so on. Then after a few weeks at least do the switch to linux mint. Then the shock of all the new things is smaller

  • I think they mean that it not only isnt tied to a specific plattform (PC, Mobile, Laptops,...) but also it isnt tied to a platform (like Whatsapp, Instagram, Facebook or Signal). This also means that there are different clients for that protocol

  • Jacob Geller is fascinating. He handles videogames like real, serious art, I really like that.

    Mostly he takes concepts (Headshot, Hostile Houses, Empty Spaces,...) and talks about them by taking examples from different art genres. From games to music and painted or digital pieces.

    Can recommend for gamers interested in art/philosophy!

  • True! And for an enthusiast who wants to spend only a few days on finding a distro and setteling into it, like me, its nice to have only three (big) DEs, which you can test and choose in one day and then are set for the further journey.

    Now "bundle" a distro to each DE and a newbie would have that experience for the whole distro-finding-experience

  • So addicting, lost several hours to it and i dont even like mobilegames...

  • I couldnt figure it out, probably because I am a CL noob. Do you use a gui for it?

  • I have to interject: It is not like bread, as it is a bigger commitment (as I dont want to distrohop for longer than a week) and also it is more complex to create an OS than to create a bread (so more manpower is needed). Choice is a good thing. But too much choice can be bad. Imagine someone is directing a "linux curious" person to distrowatch. There the newbie will be overwhelmed. Maybe not and he just clicks on a distro and tries it. Probably a bad idea as the change from his previous (corporate) OS is a big change already, now the newbie uses a distro which probably doesnt fit his needs.

    My case is that, like with the fediverse, the different options hinder the wider adoption, as potential new users have a problem with it during onboarding. Which is a difficult time as is. Even for someone who is switching from Windows to MacOS, two polished and widely adopted OSes, they are gonna have a hard time. Now add the choice from dozens of distros and the very vocal linux community and the switch is impossible for many potential new linux-users.

    I'd like to say that I am not brainwashed, I am currently using Debian+KDE in Dualboot wuth Windows and Linux Mint for the selfhosting server. (Yes I know, this is the wrong distro for a server, it was my first contact with linux so I just picked the most polpular among newbies. Which is kind of the point of the whole thread.)

  • Well put, thanks

  • Linux @lemmy.ml

    There are too many distros. The diverse distro-landscape hindering Linux adoption.