ipacialsection

joined 2 years ago

It's a good thing that KDE 6 is coming out soon because holy cow, that's a big secondary version number.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 160 points 1 year ago (12 children)

I remember when gitlab.com was the most accessible alternative to GitHub out there, but it seems they're only interested in internal enterprise usage now. Their main page was already completely unreadable to someone not versed in enterprise tech marketing lingo, and now this.

Thankfully Gitea and Forgejo have gotten better in the meantime, with Codeberg as a flagship instance of the latter.

Debian needs a better installer. It'd be awesome if it had something more akin to Fedora/RHEL's Anaconda, or even just made Calamares the default (so long as it didn't install every single locale available like their live inages currently do).

No, but I do remember using the autism(at)a.gup.pe group. Not sure it still exists but I had some nice interactions there.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 14 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (5 children)

Used to, left recently. But the autistic community there was easily one of the best parts.

I really liked the simplicity of GNOME To Do when it was around. The successor seems to be GNOME Endeavor, which I haven't tried extensively.

I tried this yesterday and it looks like a great alternative to Puppy Linux, or even its base distro AntiX. The software selection is pretty well thought out; I'd never heard of BadWolf but it sounds like an excellent project. Way heavier than the original DSL, but once it's stable it'll be an easy addition to my list of recommendations for really old PCs.

Though - to make a minor nitpick - I have to disagree with the games selection. I can think of plenty of lightweight X11 games in the Debian repo that I'd rather have than volleyball or TuxPuck. (XBill and Koules for example - lots more action in those.)

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It still sounds to me like something's up with the disk. Can't think of any solutions to suggest but I would run a SMART health check on it:

sudo apt install smartmontools  
sudo smartctl -a /dev/sda

If you prefer a graphical tool, you can do the same thing with GNOME Disks, which also has options for disk benchmarking.

In the resulting report, the overall health state should be "PASSED", the "Type" column should show "Pre-fail" and "Old age" values, and the "Media-Wearout-Indicator" should be close to 100. If the overall health state is "FAILED", then you will want to back up your files immediately and consider getting a new SSD.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Details:

  • OS is Debian bookworm, DE is Plasma 5.27.
  • Plasma theme is Oxygen.
  • Icon theme is a slightly modified version of Oxylite, only changes are that it follows my system color scheme, the "inherits" list is different, and the start-here and preferences-system icons have been changed.
  • Wallpaper is Haenau.
  • I'm using Oxygen for Qt widgets and decorations, with the Obsidian Coast color scheme, and standard Breeze Dark for GTK2.
  • Layout is entirely my own. I'm showing my Games activity because the main one contains a folder view that might expose info I don't want to expose here.

Hopefully this is original enough? I'm not sure. I've gotten away with posting desktops with mostly existing themes before, but on other occasions I've had posts removed for it. At least I mixed and matched some icons this time.

bonus screenshot with apps:

A KDE Plasma 5 desktop disguised as Plasma 4 with Neofetch in Konsole, KPatience, and Plasma Discover open

What makes this extra confusing to me, is that this doesn't seem to happen to the same extent for Invidious instances. I've only needed to swap between two instances on Clipious, whereas on LibreTube I was hopping across their entire instance list and sometimes not finding even one working instance.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 2 points 2 years ago (5 children)

This is weirdly common, from what I've heard. You'd think it would be obvious that a disorder (or neurotype, or whatever you call autism) requires accommodation, which requires self-advocacy, which requires being allowed to know what's going on with you.

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