Does it also restore the content of unsaved files of the application? If not, I’ll prefer systemctl hibernate
. I wonder, what this new feature is for. Gnome had it in the past, MacOS has it, but I don’t see what the use case is.
Does it also restore the content of unsaved files of the application? If not, I’ll prefer systemctl hibernate
. I wonder, what this new feature is for. Gnome had it in the past, MacOS has it, but I don’t see what the use case is.
Try gnome-calender as a evolution-data-server frontend.
Evolution here. I will likely never go back to Thunderbird.
PHP likes to have a word with you. (:
Yes, totally agree, and it applies to formats and language syntaxes even if braces are used.
Try Niri (a linear window manager), I have tried it already for a short time on a seperate computer. It is very good! I just not got around configuring it for my main machine, yet.
And I need to test how well Xwayland works, because I need it for Steam and some games.
Did they not have a way of installing binaries more easily? I could be confusing it with another derivate of Gentoo.
Anyway, Gentoo has now a binary repo to speed up updates for some packages. No need to try NixOS or Gentoo forks anymore. (:
I recently (months ago) switched back to Evolution from Thunderbird. I used both of them several years. I had a webmail phase in between. Thunderbird has/had enoying issues displaying mail threads.
For calender I switched to gnome-calendar, because it looks very modern.
You could try Niri. I have tested it with a ~10 year old notebook with a 1st gen Core i5 cpu.
But, even newest Gnome runs smooth on this machine.
Even on Windows I try to avoid Powershell. I use bash through GitBash there, too. But, I don’t mind using Powershell for work, because some workflows are already implemented in ps1-scripts.
It is nice to see improvements to the file chooser, but why do buttons look so different from all other buttons in Gnome? What was wrong with the less rounded buttons?
I recently switched to gnome-web (epiphany) from qutebrowser because it has gotten better in the past months. If a page makes the browser slow, I blame the webpage. In most cases, I can avoid the shitty webpage.
But still, I hope it catches up for the instances I have no choice and open a different browser for a specific webpage.
I wonder what someone has to do to have worse looking font rendering on Linux. I find the font rendering on Windows worse in every regard and inconsistent (size). On Linux I just set hinting to slight and anti-aliasing to greyscale and all my fonts look nice. Same font with same size on Windows (VSCode is the only program I use on both OS) looks slightly blurred; only the fact that my work display has a higher pixels density makes it ok for me.
Yes, the minimize button can go away as soon there is an extension that re-adds it for users running gnome classic (a set of gnome shell extensions which includes a classic task bar).
Thx, that was what I needed to understand Fedora atomic a bit better. Cool concept!
Does Fedora atomic use a rolling release model?
Had to do this on Win11, it worked.
Exactly, this is the reason I use Gentoo on my Zen3 12c w/ 32gb RAM. Smooth and clean. Nothing should stutter below 60 FPS or lagging when I hit a key on the keyboard.
Gentoo user here. I look at system load while compiling. (: But most of the time I can use my PC while portage is doing it’s job.
I see, I thought is was meant for restoring programs after login. Thx, for the clarification.