Fedora 41, on a Dell xps 15 with a 3050ti, Driver Version: 560.35.03. I got the solution from an Arch board, so I wasn’t the only one. I’ll have a look at the gitlab.
Fedora 41, on a Dell xps 15 with a 3050ti, Driver Version: 560.35.03. I got the solution from an Arch board, so I wasn’t the only one. I’ll have a look at the gitlab.
Tried it out and had an issue where GTK apps would not load. Eventually solved it by changing a setting in /etc/environment, but this is the first time a fedora beta lets me down.
Seems pretty incremental to me, but this one is an important one: Notes are now available as a collapsible pane under the slide in Normal view.
When I used Pop!_OS I disabled their extensions because it felt way more clunky than stock GNOME. The applications menu looks out of place and the bottom bar wastes so much vertical space by default. In the end I just switched to Fedora when I got more comfortable with Linux. I’m a little sad that this looks exactly like GNOME with the extensions baked in and not something novel entirely. It is, however, exciting to see a new player enter the field and learn from their approach.
https://github.com/conda-forge/miniforge with mamba is so much better
Also the teeth that keep expanding and shrinking. But if you just lowkey watch something it is really hard to notice…
200/30 + 6GB on mobile for 58€/month in The Netherlands
I already ran Linux when the API blew up but now I’m a girl…
Yeah at my previous job I was forced to use Windows for Office/Adobe, but now I get more freedom and use Linux. Really depends on the organisation and how you’re expected to collaborate.
They indicated that they want to switch, but if work forces you to use Office and Adobe then that is what you’re stuck with.
Eva Under Fire fits that list perfectly!
I kept this one, even after upgrading to F39 https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/File:F38-01-night.jpg
It is only bad in the sense that it could be so much more, but it certainly is the best we have for phones atm.
https://nobaraproject.org/ There is really no reason not to try. You can just try a bootable USB first to see if Linux works for you and your hardware config. It’s a great way to test things and determine what distro and desktop environment works for you.
I’ve been using Piper for my logitech mouse: https://flathub.org/apps/org.freedesktop.Piper
Same here! It’s such a lovely engine. Conceptually a lot easier to grasp than other ones and first class support for Linux.
YOUR HOPE ENDS HERE! AND YOUR MEANINGLESS EXISTENCE WITH IT!
Honest question: what are the limitations? Most articles online compare it with FAT, which isn’t really an interesting comparison.
One of these a few weeks ago, because I went on a walk and it was really sunny outside!