

Thats super interesting context, thanks for expanding on what they said!
Hello, my name is Cris. :)
I like being nice to people on the internet and looking at cool art stuff


Thats super interesting context, thanks for expanding on what they said!


What does make big rocks into little rocks mean?


While it is good to have empathy and understanding for less technical folks, OP may be in a better position to know what is realistic for their family and level of support they can provide


I mean linux distros are in effect kind of like a bunch of different OSes all based on the linux kernel.
It definitely would have been more helpful for them to describe it as a distro though
Glad you got it working!
I hope people remember when they downvote you that if we cant critisize the things we love, they can’t improve.
Sincerely, a long time linux user who thinks we shouldn’t downvote literally anyone even mildly critical of linux, often doing so in a constructive way


Ah, neat that makes sense, thanks for explaining!


I dont know much about this situation, do you have source where I could read more about what valve has or hasnt contributed, and them only employing one person to work on proton?


What are cue sheets?
On fedora I generally dont need the terminal unless something breaks. Which if I’m being honest with myself probably breaks because I tinkered with stuff via the terminal 🥲 (I’m bad at computer)
To add to all the other answers about what to use and whatnot: try a few distros and desktops out by putting them on a flash drive and booting from the flash drive (this is the same process for typical installations)
Distro, or who the linux based OS is built, updated, and distributed by, mostly matters long term, but something that will keep working and be stable (in the colloquial sense, not technical sense like for servers), and that has a friendly and welcoming community, are definitely things to look for. Mint and ubuntu both have stellar reputations in both of these regards, though many folks (including me) have issues with decisions being made by the ubuntu folks these days. Fedora is pretty stable but has less of a big community with support for new people, and manjaro has a lot of newer users and is built around serving newer linux users, but the project is sometimes run in an awkward way that can cause issues if you’re not choosing to manage your packages with intentionality (thats what I hear anyway). Debian is rock solid, and I dont know much about the community, but the versions of software available in the repos may be old unless you’re installing a flatpak
Keep in mind, not all distros will support every desktop, so you may find your chosen desktop isnt available on the distro you find most interesting. You can theoretically install whatever desktop on whatever distro, but as a new user I dont reccomend doing this.
Definitely try out a few different desktops. “Desktop environments” are bundles of software that make up the desktop graphical user interface, and will make a big difference in the look and feel, and general user experience that you have on linux. There are a bunch of options- the two biggest projects are GNOME and Kde plasma. Gnome has a reputation for being more mac-like out of the box and has very specific workflows and usage patterns, and kde, more windows like and flexible to what the user wants. But both are customizable. Kde has lots of built in settings and options, gnome offers very few, but supports user made extensions that change the desktops look and behavior. Give both a try and try out the customizations for each (play with kde settings, see if you can make it more what you want. Install some gnome extensions, see what the options look like). Cinnamon is another desktop thats very windows-like but has a great user experience. Xfce is a well run project but predominantly aimed at being lightweight so it runs well on older hardware, you’re less likely to be in its target demographic


I think I have the same issue on fedora using my tv’s speakers via HDMI. I pause a video foe 10 seconds and when I resume the audio takes a moment to cut back in with a slight pop. Its kinda irritating 😅
How did you remove the suspend node?


Sadly I’m a gnome fan 🥲
Thats super cool though, thanks for sharing, I’d not heard of that! I might try seeing if any of the cinnamon utilities work and are useful in GNOME though, just out of curiosity


God I wish the cinnamon interface was more my thing, I absolutely love the way they focus on user experience. I hope it continues to pay off for them and give linux users, both new and old, the best possible experience
Its worth acknowledging that Orion is proprietary, its based on WebKit but the browser isnt open source if thats relevant to you


I wonder if folks are just trying to make the concept more accessible so they can be a visible problem to more people


Infinitely better than ai lol
I for one appreciate your integrity in trying to set things up such that they’re working properly before you pass the machine off to someone else
Best of luck my friend!


I think the word interoperating kinda precludes the description being accurate to a hypervisor also
With a hypervisor they operate simultaneously, but he did say interoperating 🤷🏻♂️
Ahh, okay thanks for filling me in