drink another coffee
Lol, was expecting to be drinking verification can next, perhaps by Meta, wonder how that would taste
Idk, it’s just awkward wording, that might be what they mean, like they don’t want money for what they do as to avoid creating an expectation, though that doesn’t come across at all from the original text, so I have no idea
Best use of the reference thus far, went from over to under the sea
Chimera is a FOSS project and therefore does not and will not take donations
Lol, what the heck is that supposed to mean?
Sorry, what does w.r.t. stand for?
No terminal emulator ever should affect the performance of the rest of your system.
No idea honestly, people are saying that certain heavy output programs might just slow down the execution of other graphics related processes because text is usually expensive to draw, haven’t tried it myself
By “can only be felt” do you mean in the way it affects the performance of your system?
Neat, it’s all in the right places, I’ve Aldo recently moved over to Graphene so I’m excited for that!
Thank you for the chitchat! I wish you the best!
Ahh same to you, happy holidays!
It supposedly supports fancy features, so I’m curious to see how those look, they also say it’s got top of the line speed, so maybe a screencast with side by side of reference terminal emulator (xterm?) and ghostty displaying heavy throughput output to see the smoothness goodness
Cool project and… no screenshots? 😭
Every. Damn. Time.
The Arch pantheon, progressive gods that bring revolution along with a bit of chaos.
That’s Fedora, really, Arch did cool packaging and bailed
That’s really insightful!
Also didn’t know about secureblue, it looks really interesting, hopefully it can all work together
This is serious, Tux fookin shot down a man
clicked on cancel instead of reply
Aw man haha
moved past Nix and use flatpak and brew
That sounds a bit funny, when those technologies are just (despite me not liking to use this term) inferior, in terms of packaging, only flatpak really shines because of its embedded permission model, one of the reasons why I also still use it, though there are ways to use bubblewrap with Nix packages which I honestly haven’t tried.
So, perhaps I shouldn’t be necessarily opposed to home-manager
Yeah, I think you should at least give it a shot and see how you like it, it’s not as easy right out of the box as the other 2 you mentioned, of course, so you should find out for yourself what you feel more comfortable using.
crossover between brew and chezmoi
That is kinda neat, but, to me, it really feels more like a last resort when you somehow can’t access Nix, Nix is just that much more structurally sound than all the other 3rd party package managers that you can install alongside your system’s, I say that mostly because of versioning that doesn’t break, and package manager as well as configuration being all cohesively described with a single language, it’s not exactly easy, so I won’t say “what more could you want?”, but look at the features of both to see what you really want first.
I don’t remember when this installer was declared stable for use on Fedora, I have installed it in May myself, so after that post.
In the issues tab there seems to be some problems still, like #1325, for me, at least, it’s mostly all fine, the only issue I still have is that some things don’t work due to the user’s home directory being a synlink to /var/home/<username>
, rare enough that I still use it
Sorry, can’t help you there since I’ve found out about that impermanence thing with this post, but I have a question, what is the problem that doesn’t allow you to use Home Manager on Fedora Atomic? AFAIK you just run DeterminateSystems’s Nix installer and everything is set up correctly, aside from maybe a couple of configurations, then you install Home Manager as usual, as the official documentation says
without strings attached
How does he read??
Don’t be ashamed, I think a lot here secretly like it, it’s just very extensible because so many use it in the form of VSCode and it’s just great for what it is, despite being Microsoft’s for all intents and purposes
I did too, I had installed with 2 drives, Windows first, then Kinoite, but the problem was that Windows automatically put its bootloader on drive 1 even if the OS was installed to drive 2, so when I installed Kinoite on disk 1, it naturally wiped everything that was on there.
My stupid easy solution was to reinstall Windows on drive 2 again, but with drive 1 disconnected from the PC at installation time, so it couldn’t mess up, other answers here might be more refined (no pun intended) though, if you prefer/need to salvage the Windows system and can’t just delete it.
Mine actually wasn’t that easy either, because the drive was ButLocker encrypted, so before I could proceed to destroy everything, to save my files, I also needed to boot from Linux, mount the drive, decrypt with the BitLocker key and copy over the files to drive 2
OMG one my favorite creators on my favorite platform, this will get my penguin panties wet 😳