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SpaceCadet

@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl

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SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Use Xorg with the proprietary driver instead of Wayland for the time being. Much less issues. You can always switch to Wayland later when either Nvidia support matures, or when your next computer has an AMD GPU.

Or get a cheap ass AMD GPU, like an RX6400, plop it in as a second GPU and run on that in Linux. Perfectly serviceable for plain desktop stuff.

Or run on integrated graphics, if you have it. Again, perfectly serviceable for plain desktop stuff.

Problems have solutions :)

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

It’s not just about trusting Microsoft, but about control over the technology. Users will never have real control over AI technology, it’s too valuable and the inner workings are anxiously being kept under wraps by the big techbro companies. It also runs on their computers for the most part, so of course we can’t trust what’s being done with it, regardless of whether Microsoft has been a good boy or a bad boy recently.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Yeah but you said you wanted a dual-boot machine for your next computer, with Windows only for gaming. What I meant is: why not get a head start and make your current computer that dual-boot machine?

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Why not your current computer? No time like the present…

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

in early 2000’s, internet access was extremely fucking expensive, so most software was peer-to-peer shared, not even by torrent, but on CD’s or floppys, or local neighborhood ad-hoc and internal ISP networks

Uh no. I was there. In 1995 or 1996, I may have still used a shareware CD-ROM, or some less-legal compilation CD-ROM, but in the 2000s the most common way to install software by far was to download it over the internet.

And there was no access control whatsoever. A literal spyware with full access to your system, that only puts a purple fucking gorilla on your screen, that runs around and does absolutely fucking nothing? Sign me the fuck in. If your virus did something even something remotely useful, like show weather and currency rates, then you could rest assured that it would infect every single computer in the country.

I think the point of the post is that back then people were warned against installing bonzi buddy and such, and we were told to install software only from trustworthy sources. Spyware software rightfully flagged such software as malware too. Nowadays, there are appstores full of banal apps which harvest much more personal information about you than bonzi buddy ever did and we’re not batting an eye about it, and even though we have “Access control” we just happily click accept when our calculator wants to read our emails, and we’ve accepted it as a normal way of doing things.

anders, to linux
@anders@theres.life avatar

Has anyone tried the DE for in the recent years?

How was the experience?

@linux

SpaceCadet, (edited )
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

There was a short period of time when enlightenment was the default window manager for Gnome, later to be replaced by Sawfish. It was a hideous experience by the way.

Early Gnome was weird. The Gnome File Manager was also originally based on the terminal program Midnight Commander.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Multilib packages aren’t installed by default just by enabling the multilib repo, so yes you need to find the lib32 libraries your application needs and install them by hand.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Perhaps it’s a 32-bit application and it needs lib32-zlib.

What does ldd ./runner say?

SpaceCadet, (edited )
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

How the fuck am I supposed to know that Network Manager won’t support DNS over TLS

Read the documentation? Use google?

The very first hit when you google “dns over tls tumbleweed” provides the answer: dev.to/…/using-dns-over-tls-on-opensuse-linux-in-…

A more generic query “dns over tls linux” gives this, which works just the same: medium.com/…/enable-dns-over-tls-in-linux-using-s…

Both google searches return several more hits that basically say the same thing.

Even the NetworkManager reference manual refers you to systemd-resolved as the solution: networkmanager.dev/…/settings-connection.html

Key Name Value Type Description
dns-over-tls int32 Whether DNSOverTls (dns-over-tls) is enabled for the connection. DNSOverTls is a technology which uses TLS to encrypt dns traffic. The permitted values are: “yes” (2) use DNSOverTls and disabled fallback, “opportunistic” (1) use DNSOverTls but allow fallback to unencrypted resolution, “no” (0) don’t ever use DNSOverTls. If unspecified “default” depends on the plugin used. Systemd-resolved uses global setting. This feature requires a plugin which supports DNSOverTls. Otherwise, the setting has no effect. One such plugin is dns-systemd-resolved.

I don’t use NetworkManager, I’ve never even used Tumbleweed and I found the answer in all of 10 minutes. Of course that doesn’t help if you’re so clueless that you didn’t even know that you were using DNS-over-TLS, or that DoT is a very recent development that differs significantly from regular DNS and that it requires a DNS resolver that supports it.

when every other operating system does?

Like Windows 10? (Hint: it doesn’t)

You use Arch. Mr skillful

Who cares what I use. When I’m messing with something I don’t understand, I at least read the documentation first instead of complaining on the internet and calling the whole community toxic and, I quote, “Butthurt Linux gobblers” when you get the slightest bit of pushback.

SpaceCadet, (edited )
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Read the post. The user obviously didn’t even know that Mullvad uses DNS over TLS and that the other providers used regular DNS, nor did he know how to properly troubleshoot a DNS issue, which is a skill you should have on any OS if you’re going to mess about with DNS settings.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

I have had so many instances of having to spend hours upon hours upon hours just do figure out how to do some basic shit on Linux that I can do on every operating system within a matter of 5 minutes

skill issue.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

LOL this isn’t even a Linux issue. This is an “I’m confused about how DNS works” issue.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Without knowing what was being hosted, the only surefire way would be pulling a complete disk image with cat or dd.

That’s not surefire, unless you’re doing it offline. If the data is in motion (like a database that’s being updated), you will end up with an inconsistent or corrupt backup.

Surefire in that case would be something like an lvm snapshot.

If you wanted to stay on a similar system, RHEL 9 would be a good option or one of its “as similar as possible” like AlmaLinux.

No love for Rocky?

Also Oracle Linux is still free, and fully compatible with RHEL.

SpaceCadet, (edited )
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

I don’t think the word Reich, without further context, is by itself suspect in German. It just a generic word for realm, and is not bound to any specific political system. Even their parliament building is still called the Reichstag. In German it’s also common to refer to modern day monarchies as Königreich. Even the Belgian constitution, where German is one of the three official languages, refers to the country as das Königreich. And there are even two whole countries that have it in their German name: Österreich and Frankreich.

Where it becomes suspect is when inexplicably the German word is used in the English language in a certain context by certain politicians with certain ideas, as it is here.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Actually, are these 2 forks of another, when?

Yes forgejo was forked from gitea in 2022. It was a soft fork at first, but became a hard fork earlier this year.

Full story here: forgejo.org/2024-02-forking-forward/

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

videos above 1080p can sometimes cause problems if they have heavy encoding like vp9 or av1

Yeah they’re probably decoded in software because I doubt that the integrated graphics supports hardware decoding of those recentish codecs.

At that point, just put a gt1030 in it.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

I ran it perfectly on a 33MHz 486 with 4mb RAM for a long time. Even Doom II with some of its heavier maps ran fine.

“Perfectly” would mean it ran at 35fps, the maximum framerate DOS Doom is capped at. In the standard Doom benchmark, a dx33 gets about half that: 18fps average in demo3 of the shareware version with the window size reduced 1 step. Demo3 runs on E1M7, which isn’t the heaviest map, so heavier maps would bog the dx33 down even more.

I’m sure you found that acceptable at the time, and that you look back on it with slightly rose-tinted glasses of nostalgia, but a dx2/66 and preferably even better definitely gave you a much better experience, which was my point.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

It ran like absolute ass on 386 hardware though, and it required at least 4MB of RAM which was also not so common for 386 computers. Source: I had a 386 at the time, couldn’t play Doom until I got a Pentium a few years later.

Even on lower clocked 486 hardware it wasn’t that great. IIRC, it needed about a 486 DX2/66 to really start to shine.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

If anyone can enlighten me, This is pretty much why you can find DooM on almost any platform BECAUSE of its Linux code port roots?

I mean yeah. Doom was extremely popular and had a huge cultural impact in the 90s. It was also the first game of that magnitude of which the source was freely released. So naturally people tried to port it to everything, and “but can it run Doom?” became a meme on its own.

It also helps that the system requirements are very modest by today’s standards.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Don’t you control your dhcp server?

SpaceCadet, (edited )
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

True that. Hadn’t thought of that as it’s not my typical VPN use case.

I’m not sure what a VPN provider could do about that though, they don’t control the operating system’s networking stack. If the user or an outside process that the user decides to trust (i.e. a dhcp server) adds its own network routes, the OS will follow it and route traffic outside of the tunnel.

The defenses I see against it are:

  • Run the VPN and everything that needs to go through the VPN in a virtualized, non-bridged environment so it’s unaffected by the routing table.
  • Put a NAT-ing device in between your computer and the network you want to use
  • Modify the DHCP client so that option 121 is rejected

Edit: thinking about it some more, on Linux at least the VPN client could add some iptables rules that block traffic going through any other interface than the tunnel device (i.e. if it’s not through tun0 or wg0, drop it). Network routes can’t bypass iptables rules, so that should work. It will have the side effect that the VPN connection will appear not to work if someone is using the option 121 trick though, but at least you would know something funny was happening.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

If it’s just two PC’s and no video, it’s easy. There are plenty of cheap USB hubs in the €20-€30 range with a toggle switch.

I have a good experience with a ugreen branded switch that I got from Amazon. I bought it to toggle between my PC and work laptop when I started to work from home during covid.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

It’s like those websites and applications that ask you:


<span style="color:#323232;">Hey do you want to turn on this bullshit feature?
</span><span style="color:#323232;">
</span><span style="color:#323232;">[Yes] [Ask me again later]
</span>
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