
It’s annoys me that there’s no way to set a default posting language and have lemmy honor it.
Lived offgrid in a campervan 2018-2025 w/ pibble+boxer Muffin.
LIKE dogs, books, thoughtful people of all flavors DISLIKE bullies, sh1tposters, partisans, noise

It’s annoys me that there’s no way to set a default posting language and have lemmy honor it.


No.
People who say “I’m switching to linux” are like people who threaten to leave the country if [fill in the blank] is elected. I pay attention more to people who say “I switched to linux” or “I left the country”. Or those who revert the decision later.


Evolution.


I’m running MythTV front/back on a Pi4 with one of those generic handheld keyboards. Power consumption is important to me because I live off solar power in a campervan.
If the Pi4 died tomorrow I’d probably replace it with a ~NUC.


Ncdu
I learn something new every day. I’ve been running du -a | sort -rn | head like some kind of animal. ncdu runs very fast on my systems and shows me what I want to see. Thanks!
Do you think servers have it easy compared to personal computers? No pesky audio/video cards, bluetooth, etc…
My server upgrade to Trixie had no issues. That’s good because it’s several thousand miles away on another continent… My laptop had a few burps with ranger, jekyll, and autokey that required googling.
I see a lot of complaints about various issues stemming from an upgrade. I do not remember this many after an LTS Ubuntu version
Selection bias? I suspect Debian folks are more likely to notice problems and start looking for bug reports, talking about it, etc. Like my dorky blog entry above.


I set up my ex-MIL with Mint and it worked fine. Also gave my 70-something father a Mint USB and he installed it on his own.
I’ve used other distros for that purpose in the past but since they no longer exist I’m not listing them.
She is getting her masters in nursing online so it def needs to be able to accommodate that
I’d check to see if any proprietary software is required, if there is a linux or at least WINE-friendly version available. Hopefully it’s all web-based so no proprietary stuff needed.
90% of the time I use web interfaces, but I often have spotty connectivity while boondocking. So I need a client that can get/send gmail POP3 in narrow windows of connectivity.
I started with thunderbird but something (can’t remember what) wasn’t working well. Ended up with Evolution. It also syncs well to google calendar and google tasks.
What do you guys use for Windows to Linux remote access?
Putty
I want to see desktop
Some kind of VNC setup
I generally only reboot for stuff like kernel updates.


Saw the .de domain and my first thought was this was about using a potato ricer to make spätzle. I may not be normal.
What tips/ideas do you have for getting better at navigating the terminal, and getting a better understanding of how the os works
Running an OS as a virtual is liberating. Dive in, make mistakes, fix them (or not and have to reinstall or redo from the last save). No real consequences for exploring.
distrohoped
This should be a word. It would mean “trying yet another flavor because it might be The One”
My father switched to linux (Mint, I think) in his 70s. I was in another state so he did it solo. He had a few questions but otherwise it was smooth sailing.


Traditionally I’ve been running lighter desktops like opebox, xfce, or lmde. Last couple of years I’ve been using MATE with good results.
In my country that would cost me 20 dollars
The first RAM I bought (SIPP for a 386-16 IIRC) was $50/MB. Jay-sus.
nowadays Mint is Ubuntu with sane default settings that will run out of the box
There’s also an official version of Mint based on Debian (LMDE)


What’s on your “Everyday Carry” USB stick?


Do normal people who don’t do this stuff for a living use Linux now, outside handheld gaming devices?
I run into folks using linux fairly often in tech hobbies. Ham operators, DIY solar folk, people dorking around with a RasPi, etc. And some Normals who want a lighter experience than Win.
Last dedicated windows box I ran at home was Windows NT 4, IIRC. Last time I had to use it at work was Win7 (?) before I retired. I do have a Win7 virtual somewhere around here I spin up every couple years to run something obscure I can’t get to run in WINE.
I have a Amazon thermal printer (“TATTMUSE”) running on vanilla debian. related blog post.