

no fn way, the notification “falling knight” is sick. I’m starring this immediately.
no fn way, the notification “falling knight” is sick. I’m starring this immediately.
I’ve contributed thousands of games to a bot to play like shit. That is genuinely cool.
That fucking little rat, played this game so long ago but still remember his voice.
I remember Microsoft revoking my license keys for a 2011 Office Suite disk which were supposed to be a one-time purchase. Since then I gave them the middle finger and installed pirated copies on every single family member’s device.
They could have had a loyal lifetime customer but broke my trust and now they have a full family of non-customers.
Are these laptops provided by the faculty?
In any case I do not mind so much the “I should try to fix this on my own first”. If it’s your own device and accept the risks/consequences. But if it is a work/university provided laptop then it makes no sense to attempt to fix it on one’s own.
I can feel your pain trying to fix/repair something you have to figure out what kind of stupid stuff was done to the device.
ah well, then that is them being stubborn and being unable to troubleshoot.
People who don’t read error messages or do not take the time to see what is going on and just come to the technician/mechanic/doctor saying “it doesn’t work” or some half-assed hypothesis piss me off so bad.
I know that at some point we all do a little of this in our lifes, but some people don’t seem to be able to read one goddamn paragraph ever.
Disco Elysium
oh, that is the cartoonist from Exploding Kittens. I’ll add that to my bookmarks.
right? what the hell?
lol, you can just set it up to keep the latest snapshots only.
(noob here)
I responded this on an alt account:
The most important decision as a new Linux user is the desktop environment, the most similar desktop environment to the Windows desktop are KDE Plasma and Cinnamon. This means your best options are:
- Linux Mint (Cinnamon): They are the creators of the Cinnamon desktop environment and will be the default on installation.
- Kubuntu (KDE Plasma): This is Ubuntu’s official KDE Plasma flavour, it comes with everything as usual just different desktop.
- Fedora (KDE Edition): Same story as Ubuntu here, only that with Fedora’s own packages and environment.
First I would check if the hardware is compatible (99% of the time is). Then I would check what software you need and/or want and check if it is available at these distros, and get familiar on how to install the software packages (either with their respective app stores or in the command line).
There is a lot to learn but with these distros you can just install, forget and simply keep using them for eternity.
The last and more important tip I have is to not to worry about the sea of options out there, you will not be missing anything huge by picking one or the other. Which is how most of new users feel (I did in my time).
Hope you have a great Linux journey mate!
Thank you for sharing this knowledge.
I feel you, I also had to use either gmail or outlook in university. At the moment I’m trying to clean the mess of all the accounts I have signed up for.
It does support markdown??? I always thought it didn’t.
Interesting, I’ve heard so many people complain about Outlook, I guess its a matter of preference.
Great, thank you!
Ah, great then. I meant to set up a swap partition (and its size), and all that. I just wanted to know how could one do it because I want to teach my family to hibernate the computer instead of regular suspend on their computers. I’ll look it up, thanks!
It is very much compatible, haha. And usually comes pre-installed as the desktop office suite in many distros like Ubuntu and Debian that ship the Gnome desktop environment pre-installed.
It should not be impacted at all. :)
If you install any popular beginner friendly distro (like the ones I recommended) everything should work out of the box and it is very unlikely that any extra drivers need to be installed. For example on Archlinux no printing programs/services and drivers come pre-installed or enabled.
So do not worry at all, if your laptop cover the main requirements, the distro should handle the rest automagically. If you have any more questions you can talk to me directly here on Lemmy, or we can figure something out.
One thing though, Mint is based on Ubuntu which itself is based on Debian. But it doesn’t really matter.
Since you are going to check what software you need/want for your new Linux device, you can always fill the gaps with Flatpaks on Flathub, these are meant to be universal packages for every Linux distro and usually you can find there the packages that your distro does not package natively. You can even find proprietary software like Discord and such.
And again, if you have any more questions be sure reply or send me a message directly her eon Lemmy.