Im on a Dell G5 15 laptop with a 1660ti. I set my built in monitor to 125%, and that looks fine, but for some reason my second monitor seems to be zoomed in a bunch, even though that is still at 100% I kinda need my laptop screen zoomed in since its so small, any advice? Pop!_OS LTS, dont remember version, but says “most recent”

  • 🧟‍♂️ Cadaver
    link
    110 months ago

    If you remake a new partition for a new install you shouldn’t lose anything if the partitioning goes correctly.

    • strawberryOP
      link
      fedilink
      110 months ago

      so like keep the pop parts, and then make more for other distros? id like to keep pop while experimenting with others

      • 🧟‍♂️ Cadaver
        link
        110 months ago

        Imagine you have a 500Gb SSD.

        If you allocate 100GB to Windows, 200GB to Pop and 200 GB to Fedora (or another distro) you will still be able to boot on pop and retain those documents while having an entirely different OS (fedora) from which you can boot with its own files and config which won’t impact your Pop.

        If you’re more tech savvy you can even create a share partition on which you can store files that are easily transferrable between these 3 OS.

        • strawberryOP
          link
          fedilink
          110 months ago

          yeah i was thinking to make just a new boot and root part for fedora, and somehow tell it to use pop’s home as its own

          • 🧟‍♂️ Cadaver
            link
            1
            edit-2
            10 months ago

            That would be a terrible idea, if you use the same username.

            Since each distro uses your home folder to store their configuration files, there would be a conflict and neither would function correctly.

            A solution would be to have your pop OS to have a user1 and your Fedora to have a user2. i.e. John for Pop and Jack for Fedora.

            But ultimately, what I would recommend would be the following :

            When you install fedora, you don’t have to use a different partition for home. It only has to use a single partition for everything. (iirc, fedora uses a filesystem called btrfs which is very practical for these cases)

            Let’s say your partition will look something like this

            • /dev/sda1 EFI
            • /dev/sda2 Win
            • /dev/sda3 Pop system
            • /dev/sda4 Pop home partition
            • /dev/sda5 Fedora (system+home)

            And if you want a shared space between all the OS you would then have another partition

            • /dev/sda6 share partition (exFAT or NTFS or FAT32)
        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          110 months ago

          Until Windows makes an update and breaks every one of those two others. No.

          Windows is very territorial and often breaks the bootloader. The best way would be to install one distro at one drive, but if that’s impossible right now, dual booting should be alright. Just be aware of the warning.

    • strawberryOP
      link
      fedilink
      110 months ago

      also, could you give me a rundown of the differences between fedora, ublue, silverblue, and bazzite? i see theyre all based on fedora, but some must do somethings better

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        1
        edit-2
        10 months ago

        Original replier here 😁
        They are all very similar.

        • Fedora (Workstation) is the “OG” Fedora. It’s the oldest and most wide spread one, and often considered as the best Ubuntu alternative because of its sane defaults and big community. I used it for years and it was good.
        • Silverblue is the “new” “immutable” variant. Check out my post why image based distros are so awesome. https://feddit.de/post/8234416 On the surface, it behaves exactly like the normal Fedora, but under the hood, it’s indestructible. There are other flavours of this atomic Fedora variant with KDE and more DEs too if you want.
        • uBlue is basically a “tool” to make custom Fedora Atomic installs. To make very deep changes in the immutable Fedora, you have to change the image itself. And those said custom images provide huge QoL benefits and better hardware support, especially for Nvidia.
        • And Bazzite is one variant of uBlue. It’s a gaming distro and provides many tweaks and tools ootb. I’m using it too on my gaming PC and the performance difference is noticeable.

        I recommend Fedora Atomic because, especially uBlue, “just works”. If something should ever break, you can easily roll back. And the small tweaks provided by uBlue provide you a very sane system out of the box.
        It’s way easier to learn imo than traditional systems. Yes, you might have to learn how to use distrobox, but that’s one single tool. Learning how to troubleshoot a whole OS is way harder, and you don’t have to worry about managing your OS.


        What I wouldn’t recommend is Nobara. It’s a one-man-project and very very insecure. Either go with the official Fedora, or go with uBlue.

        • strawberryOP
          link
          fedilink
          110 months ago

          so idk why but apparently silverblue and bazzite are very difficult to dual boot. I feel like I’ve tried everything the internet has to offer. so, do you have any other distros you recommend? unless the last thing I’m about to try just nukes windows, then I’ll go for a full bazzite install lol. wouldn’t be all that upset lol

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            110 months ago

            I just wanted to write “use a second SSD”, but then I saw you’re using a laptop. Shit.

            How often/ for what do you need to use Windows? You can always run it in a VM if needed.
            Either that, or use another distro.

            I don’t know the context here anymore, sorry! 😅

      • 🧟‍♂️ Cadaver
        link
        110 months ago

        I’m not the original replier. I’m not sure these differences since I’m using another distro. This is my best take : take it with a grain of salt.

        Silverblue is container based : each program is independent for security and stability. They are containes as flatpaks.

        Ublue and bazzite are docker based, meaning they are immutable, meaning they should work as expected and are very stable.

        Fedora is the base distro. It’s like Pop!_OS

      • RachelRodent
        link
        fedilink
        010 months ago

        So, I don’t reccomend jumping to an immutable distro if you are a beginner. Nobara is a gaming distro more in line with what I wouod reccomend

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          1
          edit-2
          10 months ago

          Read my reply from above. I personally would definitely recommend an image based distro.
          They only seem complicated for advanced Linux users because they’re different, but for noobs, they’re similar to Android. Getting your system managed automatically and not having to care about anything is great!
          Also, for Nvidia users, there’s always the chance of the install breaking, and then they have to troubleshoot.
          On Fedora Atomic for example, your now bricked OS is just one image rollback (takes 10 seconds btw) away from working again like nothing happened.

          They also provide a great ootb experience, especially the uBlue images, where small tweaks were applied and Nvidia drivers are already baked in.


          Another recommendation might be Vanilla OS. It will soon receive a huge update and be completely different. But that will take a few months until released.


          Nobara? No way! It’s very insecure.

          • It’s a one man project. If the dev quits, we’re all fucked
          • It disables many security features, like SELinux
          • It receives updates very late, including security patches
          • It’s experimental and might be unreliable

          If you want a “proper” gaming distro, check out Bazzite.
          It’s very similar to Nobara, but managed automatically due to the uBlue base, and way more secure and reliable.