I don’t remember it well, it was probably around 3 years ago. IIRC I had issues with looping.
I don’t remember it well, it was probably around 3 years ago. IIRC I had issues with looping.
I paid for a binary of Ardour (music production software). The version in my distro’s repo was very outdated and had bugs, and I wasn’t able to successfully compile it myself.
Last time I tried Windows (with Windows 10), I actually struggled properly installing my graphics drivers. IDK what the issue even was, but after trying unsuccessfully for a while I just wiped the Windows partition and stuck with Linux.
Where did that come from, anyway?
You cannot, no desktop environment except Gnome and KDE has Wayland support beyond experimental status.
If I was content with running no desktop environment at all, I could already do that on Xorg.
Extreme shortage of desktop environments that support Wayland. I don’t want to use either Gnome or KDE, I’m currently using LXQt with i3wm.
Every piece of code will stop working at some point if you keep working on the software (and the software itself will probably stop being compatible with other softwares if you stop working on it).
And, if it stops working, do we have some reason to conclude that we won’t know why?
If you don’t know why it works in the first place, it’s a pretty good assumption that you won’t know why it doesn’t work, either.
Until it doesn’t and you have no idea why.
How did they express their annoyance, other than looking at the driver?
Are you sure they’re not just doing normal eye contact to make sure they’re not getting run over? It’s more or less taught like that here in Germany.
Meh. I did that kind of thing for maybe a year 4 years ago and then I just stopped changig it.
Now, I’m not productive (mostly because of health reasons), but I’m certainly not busy with editing dotfiles.
“unixporn wm” and “productive” is not a contradiction at all.
Some people are running Linux but just don’t care that much about linux-related content.
Yep, don’t have the headspace right now to deal with any issues that pop up, and TBH Canonical’s flavor of corporate-ness kind of takes the excitement out of getting updates, too.
I haven’t even updated to the current LTS yet.
Ubuntu didn’t have snaps when I installed this system …
We need to lobotomize our “smart” devices …