Examples could be things like specific configuration defaults or general decision-making in leadership.

What would you change?

    • @[email protected]
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      3611 months ago

      Maybe you should switch your favourite then?

      The enshittification of Ubuntu will not stop on an enforced Appstore.

      • @[email protected]
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        311 months ago

        honestly canonical has always been like this.

        what do you suggest for an alternative thats similar to ubuntu?

        • Para_lyzed
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          11 months ago

          The common recommendation is Linux Mint, but there are lots of Ubuntu derivatives out there. Another common recommendation is Debian or a Debian derivative, and those will generally be similar to Ubuntu since Debian is the upstream of Ubuntu.

          You can feel free to ignore it if you aren’t open to other options, but my personal distro recommendation for a Gnome-based desktop is Fedora. It has a much quicker update cycle, so you’ll actually get feature updates on your packages (which is great if you use neovim plugins, since the neovim packages in the Ubuntu repos are ancient at this point, or you know, any other package that benefits from being updated). Of course it obviously isn’t as bleeding edge as Arch, though I personally see that as a benefit because I found Arch to be unstable (haven’t really experienced any instability with Fedora in the past few years though). But don’t be mistaken, I’m not saying Fedora is similar to Ubuntu, just providing an alternative perspective since you seem to be open to switching to a different distro (though the differences may be more minor than you think from an end-user perspective).

          BTW, Linux Mint isn’t just a “beginner distro”, it’s perfectly fine for anyone to use, and it fixes a lot of the Canonical BS from Ubuntu. I feel like some people get caught up in the thought that Mint is the distro that you ditch for another one when you become more comfortable with Linux, but that doesn’t have to be the case.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          There where Times when Ubuntu was Marks baby, but nowadays with pro, advertisement and tracking in the terminal an AppStore, everything has to have a businesscase.

          I would recommend just plain Debian either with flatpak or in the testing branch. It’s almost the same, stable as a rock and driven by a community.

                • @[email protected]
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                  111 months ago

                  Yes it runs quite stable. But the packages and their configuration can change.

                  If you’re looking for something more conservative, the stable branch fits better but on a desktop it’s very old (like an Ubuntu lts)

  • @[email protected]
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    4311 months ago

    Desktop environment should be separated from the OS. You should be able to change the de easily. Maybe in a container.

    Present the user with common software when installing the os. Ask the user if she wants to install any of it (as a flatpak).

    Ask for prioprietary codecs and install them if wanted.

    • @z00s
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      11 months ago

      Present the user with common software

      Manjaro does this with word processing software but I wish it did it with more stuff. It would be nice to not have to uninstall a bunch of apps and install my preferred ones as the first step after a fresh install

      • mac
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        711 months ago

        Like Ninite for Windows but at the start not manually downloaded

        • @z00s
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          111 months ago

          Exactly

    • @[email protected]
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      1311 months ago

      It is. I don’t know what you’re talking about. You can go ahead and apt-get xfce on Linux Mint right now. Back in 1998, I had Window Maker, Gnome and some other windows 95 inspired DE all installed in my Conectiva Linux. It was always possible.

      • Josh
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        -611 months ago

        Installing KDE Plasma on a Gnome installation breaks so much shit it’s not funny, but most of this seems to be a problem with the command line because doing it with YAST seems to prevent things from breaking.

        • Bo7a
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          811 months ago

          I don’t get this. It is a common statement on lemmy especially among the new users. I have been daily-driving linux for many many years, and every install of a new distro gets 3 or 4 DEs added to play around with and find the ‘flavour of the year’ for myself.

          I don’t recall this ever being a real problem. Ever.

          • @ikidd
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            511 months ago

            Been using Linux for 25 years, and I remember some of this from init script years, but it’s been a long, long time since it’s been an issue in any half-way decent distro.

            • Bo7a
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              311 months ago

              Roughly the same here. And yeah this hasn’t been a problem since the very first years. And even then it was just some config tweaks.

              • @[email protected]
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                211 months ago

                I started with Conectiva in the nineties. Back on Gnome 1, fvwm, etc. Never experienced that. The opposite, it was always possible to run programs from one toolkit in another. The only issue was the aesthetic clash.

        • @[email protected]
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          211 months ago

          I haven’t installed KDE in a long time. But installing both Gnome and Window Maker next to Mint’s Cinnamon was absolutely breezy.

    • @bia
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      811 months ago

      I’ve done this with debian in the past, you just install different DE in parallel. Works well enough, don’t remember it causing any issues. It just makes a mess of your home folder, so I don’t do it outside of testing purposes.

    • @AnUnusualRelic
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      511 months ago

      That’s plain wrong.

      Like so much of the Linux stuff that’s thrown around in here. It’s frustrating.

  • @[email protected]
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    3811 months ago

    As someone who’s an active user and contributor to Fedora: words cannot express enough how much I hate US laws.

    It’s the reason we can’t ship with H.264 hardware decoding out of the box, it’s the reason why we can’t provide access to our project and our community to sanctioned countries (Cuba being one that really hurts me, but mainly Iran right now, which makes me really sad because I’m having to answer people from Iran almost weekly asking on how they can be a part of the project with “unfortunately you can’t”).

    I dream of a day where Fedora’s trademark changed to the hands of a non-profit foundation outside of the US.

      • @[email protected]
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        411 months ago

        I believe some other distros have this issue, but I’m not sure about specific ones. US laws are pretty complicated by themselves, even more when you try to understand how it affects projects from other countries that are trying to be available on US.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 months ago

      Responses involving, “Did you typo when you said you were from Tehran, Iran? Sometimes autocorrect changes it from sanctioned [foreign capital, foreign nation] - as we both surely know [foreign nation] is sanctioned allowing contributions to US based software projects. Anyway, check out the Git!” are probably forbidden, surely.

  • @Samueru
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    11 months ago

    Some defaults I would like to see:

    • Have zsh as the interactive shell (And also have its dotfiles in a better location like XDG_CONFIG_HOME/zsh)

    • Btrfs with compression enabled and subvolumes set. (Maybe also timeshift installed, not sure because not everyone uses timeshift for btrfs snapshots).

    • ZRAM (With proper sysctl.conf like PopOS does).

    • Pacman as the package manager with an Aur helper already installed.

    • No bloat™ preinstalled, nothing of shipping flatpak or snap by default or even a DE. So I can just boot into a tty without having to do the minimal install from zero.

    • Comply with the FHS and XDG specs (Arch fucking installs packages to /opt and doesnt set ~/.local/bin as part of PATH)

    • Dont break userspace (arch did this recently with an update to glibc that removed a patch that breaks steam games)


    Edit: Also forgot to mention:

    • Ship x86-64 v3 binaries, common arch, even Gentoo is doing it while on arch you have to use non official repos.
    • @bazsy
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      511 months ago

      Btrfs with compression enabled and subvolumes set.

      And enable/automate maintenance services for BTRFS. For example: balace should be run on heavily used system disks or scrub could help detect errors even on single disks.

      ZRAM (With proper sysctl.conf like PopOS does).

      Could you explain the preference of ZRAM over ZSWAP? I thought the latter was the more advanced and better performing solution. Is there some magic in Pop’s config?

        • @bazsy
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          11 months ago

          Thanks for the links! I updated my config from z3fold to zsmalloc and adjusted the vm.page-cluster to test these out.

          Reading a bit more, I think when using large max_pool_percent (>30) with Zswap the two solutions are more similar than not. A crucial difference is what use-case is more acceptable since Zswap can cause unresponsiveness (and potential lockup) under high memory pressure. While Zram could result in an OOM crash in a similar worst-case scenario.

          • @Samueru
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            11 months ago

            Oh I can tell you that zram will not result in an OOM that zswap would prevent:

            I once ran into a bug when using foobar2000 with wine to convert my music library that resulted in an insanely high ram usage, like my 16 GIB ram was filled and then my 32 GIB zram was also filled and the PC froze.

            I just went and edited my zram config to make my zram 48GIB and ran foobar again, it ended the conversion without issue kek. No idea wtf happened but whatever data was being written in memory was being compressed good by zRAM, like very few people would even use a swap partition or file that is more than 32 GIB to begin with.

            I also tested running Zelda tears of the kingdom in yuzu using 4GiB of ram with a big zram and it worked, that game in yuzu is a ramhog and on windows people need 16 GiB of ram and they still max out their swapfile.

            There is also a vid on yt titled zram vs windows pagefile where a user running endevour demostrates how zram can take a bunch of Minecraft mods while windows with the help its of pagefile cant

            Edit: Here is the vid: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMYTBsjeoTc

    • @[email protected]
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      311 months ago

      If you don’t want ANYTHING installed by default you should probably just go for the specialized distros that provide that.

      • @Samueru
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        11 months ago

        The issue with many of those distros is that it usually means that you have to install everything from 0.

        Arch is good at this because the archinstall script speeds it up and you don’t have to choose a DE. But with other distros that use a graphical installer, you are forced to use whatever they ship as the default desktop environment.

        edit: And holy shit properly configuring Btrfs subvolumes from 0 is something that I tried with voidlinux and I ended up breaking the entire install.

  • @[email protected]
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    Arch should have the same zsh profile you have on the live image, installed after the installation by default.

    • @[email protected]
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      711 months ago

      grml-zsh-config is its name, and it’s always one of the first things I install on a fresh system. I’ll never understand why it isn’t the default.

    • ichbean
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      411 months ago

      Arch doesn’t have zsh installed by default. In case people wanted this profile - it’s in extra grml-zsh-config.

      • @harsh3466
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        311 months ago

        hahaha! I almost put Ubuntu, but I knew everyone would know exactly what I was talking about.

  • Domi
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    2711 months ago

    Fedora:

    • Put H264 and H265 hardware video decoding back in
    • Make Flathub the default Flatpak repository
    • Make the installer easier for beginners by hiding advanced settings most won’t need
    • Make their KDE spin more prominent, currently you have to look for it to find it
  • @[email protected]
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    2611 months ago

    I wish Debian picks KDE instead of GNOME as their default DE on the instalation menu. GNOME is so ill-fitted for point release due to its bleeding-edge nature. It works well with Fedora because the distro itself is bleeding-edge (same goes with Arch & Nix).

  • @Mango
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    2111 months ago

    I would change the name to drugs.

    I use drugs btw.

      • silly goose meekah
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        11 months ago

        There’s retroPie, based on Raspberry Pi OS Lite, which is in turn based on Debian. There ya go.

        Edit: never mind, I just learned retroPie is actually just an application, not a full OS

  • @[email protected]
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    Debian

    • Say the current stable and testing version number and name clearly on the web front page. Actually put it on every single page instead of burying it somewhere. It takes no space at all and is stupidly hard to find of you’re ootl.
    • Nicer installer. Make sure images with WiFi drivers and firmware are easy to find.

    Also I wish every distribution had a wiki as nice as Arch’s.

    • @[email protected]
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      511 months ago

      If I might add something: We could turn something like testing or unstable into a proper rolling release for desktop machines. It works reasonably well for that. However it is completely unsupported and would require some change to the release model and manpower dedicated to it.

    • Baut [she/her] auf.
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      311 months ago

      Make sure images with WiFi drivers and firmware are easy to find.

      That’s included in the main installation iso now.

  • @[email protected]
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    2011 months ago

    Just in general: More sane defaults, less RTFM. Sure, you can configure everything, but MUST you? A lot of opensource developers seem to believe that configurability is a get-out-of-jail-free card for having to provide a good user experience out of the box.

  • @[email protected]
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    1811 months ago

    I’d just want more package maintainers for Arch, some people maintaining 1000+ packages is crazy and would take a load off of them.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      I’d do something similar but not the same. Set up Deb, flatpak and snap support out of the box but default everything to Deb. And in the software center, allow you to change the default packaging of newly installed software.

  • @mlg
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    1511 months ago

    Stop using GNOME as de facto default standard. Fr I despise this crap

    I seriously don’t understand how anyone from windows is going to find stock GNOME even remotely intuitive or useful.

    What kind of sick bastard thought “Yeah you know what, people don’t need minimize and expand buttons.”

    And then on top of that, they put in the most basic default modern android chromeos looking shell/menu as if this is some mobile OS that runs all its apps on the JVM and that everyone knows trackpad kung fu.

    For such a “simple” desktop, it eats through ram like it’s KDE with all the fancy animations enabled.

    Frickin Compiz solved the problem of performance and features over a decade ago. Use the god damn thing. If you need wayland, then at least KDE please.

    If you’re coming from Mac, only then will GNOME feel somewhat familiar because of the shell. Otherwise, please just make the download either an ISO with several DEs or a menu to select the DE first. Or at the very least, make a better default GNOME setup.

    • @ikidd
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      711 months ago

      The truly awful one is “default the cursor on the save dialog to the Search input box, NOT the filename box”. I install Gnome every once in a while to check it out, and the second I encounter that dialog still behaving like that, I rip the whole marianne right out.

      Like what insane monster thinks that’s reasonable?

    • @[email protected]
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      611 months ago

      You didn’t even mention the worst part, you can’t change the default terminal emulator.

    • @YourMomsTrashman
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      411 months ago

      I do like gnome for how out of the way it stays. It’s easy for new users to understand its lack of distractions and start to actually just use software on it. It’s got its target audience.

      I’m not saying it can’t be done better. Cinnamon, my current personal choice, does most of the same things right.

      I haven’t used KDE much because of graphical issues on my device, but it seems like a nightmare getting workspaces or gestures set up. It seems like the polar opposite of ‘distractionless’, where you can spend hours learning and/or getting lost in a maze of submenus. I understand that’s an appeal to some.

      I want to love KDE, and I might retry sometime soon, but as a casual it does make me appreciate what gnome is doing.

    • @AnUnusualRelic
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      211 months ago

      Kde doesn’t use much ram. It hasn’t done so for ages.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      You made me chuckle :) True, if coming from macOS, Gnome can be familiar enough but the defaults are terrible. Even those used to Macs need to install/enable the basics like maximise/minimise buttons etc. I don’t understand why even a Gnome centric distro like Fedora doesn’t come with Gnome Tweaks installed by default… Let alone the fact that usually the average user will also install a bunch of extensions. That is why Ubuntu is arguably the one doing the better job out of the box: their Gnome is actually useful from the get go.