Everyone should. It’s wasted energy, bad for components and outright lazy in some cases.
Everyone should. It’s wasted energy, bad for components and outright lazy in some cases.
But some apps don’t function properly if not installed. So I think that chocolatey is better.
I find that winget tends to just grab M$ Store packages, essentially becoming just an alternative CLI frontend.
Chocolatey, however, actually grabs the native program. And it isn’t developed by Microsoft.
Even Scoop is good enough, however programs might not work perfectly because it uses portable versions of the program.
Choco > winget imo
SpaceGate
Wayland is necessary because Wayland will be necessary in the near future, if it was next year then that would put a lot of people who don’t know about X.Org and Wayland through a major shift which could rock-the-boat a bit too much and cause them to go back to Windows for the “just works” experience.
I think we need rock-solid Wayland before we can expect TYLD. So I’m feeling 2026 minimum, then add a couple for some padding; so 2028 realistically. Think of how far we’ve come in 5 years, then imagine 5 years more.
If Nvidia’s consumer GPU market share dropped a bit too, that’d help.
So then how come Nova Custom do modern intel CPUs?
From the looks of it Coreboot just doesn’t support AMD.
Same, I use Cinnamon
If you’ve only ever used Windows, Linux is like using a computer for the first time.
Great! So I’m following the Setting up taps on Linux part of the docs and I understand what it’s doing however I get caught up with the last 3 commands in the second block, it returns that the operation is not supported on my machine from RNETLINK. Also these changes don’t persist after reboot…
At that point you might as well turn it off.