Basically. Using windows after spending a decade plus with Gnome and macOS is cumbersome.
jollyrogue
The *nix desktop space.
Year of desktop Linux is when? 😆
Yes, but not to Texas.
It still weirds me out thinking how mega fauna existed much more recently then we think. Like we could be chilling sloths, or, you know, running in fear, but now the largest animal I encounter on a regular basis is my neighbors fat cat.
Let’s bring C into this discussion if we want to talk about overused languages which aren’t fit for purpose. 😂
The ergonomics of Rust are better than C and C++, and programmer productivity is the metric which really matters.
Rust is compiled, and compiled languages are easier to deploy. Especially statically compiled languages like Rust.
Ada might better, but it needs to be updated.
Ada compiler development is also tied to a company which is moving to Rust, and the gnat toolchain developed by Adacore is “Open Source”, eventually, maybe.
I don’t have a reason to move away from the Fedora defaults except for monospaced fonts.
Terminal wise, terminus is my default. It’s so clean, and it looks good without anti-aliasing.
Roboto Mono is my current preference for monospaced fonts.
Adobe Source Code Pro and JetBrains Mono are good alternatives as well.
Mineral and Rainer Maria. Pretty solid.
Another reason to get out of this state.
Gui to manage firewall. which one? did you try firewalld or opensnitch?
Which which one?
I use firewalld regularly. Firewalld isn’t a GUI, and it’s a wrapper around Nftables and/or iptables depending on the distribution.
I haven’t tried opensnitch.
Desktop icons. you mean the specific icons of an other OS, or something else?
Not having to use a Gnome extension to get desktop icons. 🙂 Although, other DEs aren’t much better.
Not having to recompile out of tree kernel modules after a kernel upgrade. manually, or even automatically? if it's the first, check out DKMS
DKMS is setup, and I still have to plan my kernel upgrades due to the compilation time.
That would be Windows.
For server config management there are lots of tools. FreeIPA and Ansible will do quite a bit, but when getting into stuff to manage Linux desktops fleets there isn’t a lot of endpoint management out there.
Fleet Commander is the main effort out there, and then Red Canary.
There really isn’t.
It’s only every so often with extensions, and every release reduces the number of extensions I use.
Sounds settings have at least 3 places where they can be set in Windows, and the places don’t necessarily implement all of the functionality of the others.
Windows settings are a mess.