Hi Kangie
Ok, I think I need to rework my fastfetch config, it's a little barebones
edit: here we go
Hi Kangie
Ok, I think I need to rework my fastfetch config, it's a little barebones
edit: here we go
well, you can't keep every weird american racist issue in mind, there are too many
cool stuff but what about packaging the games? only transfering files is most of the time not enough and games need registry stuff and what not and on games that need a setup.exe to be run, is that unattended like on steam or do users need to click "next, next, finish"?
I concur. Jerboa has become unusable recently and thunder now provides all the necessary basics (many improvements in recent versions)
interesting, I could use that for telegram groups, if this is available. less talking to my family in person :-)
# systemd-analyze time
Startup finished in 39.050s (firmware) + 6.680s (loader) + 993ms (kernel) + 3.519s (initrd) + 22.326s (userspace) = 1min 12.570s
graphical.target reached after 21.680s in userspace.
for me, most time is used until the bootloader shows up, because I had to disable "fast boot" in bios because it made some problems on rebooting. pressing enter in grub could speed up 5 seconds more ;-) gentoo, systemd, 2x2tb nvme, 32 gb ram, 4 hdds. could be faster, but it mostly doesn't matter because I power on the system every morning but don't use it right away
edit: on my server, which is not UEFI, therefore has no "firmware" part:
# systemd-analyze time
Startup finished in 1.814s (kernel) + 47.640s (initrd) + 36.602s (userspace) = 1min 26.057s
graphical.target reached after 36.602s in userspace.
and on my laptop, which boots fast AF
# systemd-analyze time
Startup finished in 4.242s (firmware) + 14.631s (loader) + 1.737s (kernel) + 3.210s (initrd) + 5.136s (userspace) = 28.959s
graphical.target reached after 4.936s in userspace.
I use both on gentoo for some obscure or proprietary stuff that is not packaged in portage, like filebot, authy desktop, discord, steam and foobar2000 (including wine in 1 bundle to avoid dependencies and switching all portage packages to 32bit abi). It works well and opens me up to loads of stuff. It's freedom in some way.
Snap or flatpak makes no difference to me, they're just different backends for kde discover
No because Op's question is, what about those who do not confine to xdg config home?
this "takeover" is imho a good thing. the greeter/login manager is an essential part of a desktop experience and I was sad that sddm was so left behind until now
I use Strawberry too and in general it is great. Sadly it still lacks some features I need, so I still need foobar2000 with wine on the side (for library management, stuff like viewing and editing all custom tags, renaming files according to tags instead of copying them, ...)
Kpat is one of the best solitaire implementations that exist. I play daily
I use mozilla thunderbird for rss feeds but it depends on your OS. Desktop? Phone? Windows? Linux?