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Don’t like it for one simple reason: no integration with the distribution. Flatpak is this sort universal solution that works, but doesn’t necessarily work hand-in-hand with the distro, unlike package managers.
And less stable than Arch, and more bloated than Ubuntu… If that is something you want for whatever reason! It is the most versatile distro in existance because it’s literally anything you want it to be - clean and nice, or total chaos. What is there not to love?
Gentoo <3
Gentoo, because if it exists - compile it.
That’s the point of the game - it doesn’t tell you where to go and what to do because you’re meant to explore the environment yourself. And the debris you scan, the screenshots you take, and the thrills that you get - are the real reward here, and not some goal that game artificially imposes on you. So I think you were just playing it wrong.
This is a literal box with text on your screen, what do you mean by “smoother”?
If you want features, I suggest you try Kitty. It is probably the terminal with the most features. I personally prefer Alacritty because it is quite bare and doesn’t have all that fancy stuff that I don’t need (and that takes up cpu cycles).
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These two off the top of my head:
- 3Blue1Brown - Higher mathematics with nice animations.
- EEVblog - Various EE-related stuff.
- Edit: Also, Ben Eater - Computer engineering.
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kaidezee@lemmy.mlto linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Who needs stable, feature-rich desktops anywayEnglish8·2 months agoAs a Gentoo user, I can say that qtbase is probably the one piece of software that caused me the most failed emerges due to some conflict of python packages.
kaidezee@lemmy.mlto linuxmemes@lemmy.world•They'll cast you back to the Windows realm with all their toxic mightEnglish2·4 months agoI have nothing against Nano, but after just a few months of using Neovim for basically all my text editing needs, Nano is completely unusable to me.
Err… I don’t even know how to understand that. Eaten by kraken?
So, you’re basically saying that doing things the way you think works the best and not being afraid of new things, instead of simply choosing the path of least resistance gets you on the autism spectrum? If that’s the case, then I think “normal” might be the biggest lie I’ve ever been told.