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2 yr. ago

  • Hésite pas a utiliser --help:-l, --files-with-matches print only names of FILEs with selected lines

  • grep -rl cherche de maniere recursive et te donne une ligne par recherche trouvée| pipe le resultat dans une autre commande xargs -n 1 transforme le resultat en une liste d'arguments que xdg-open peut utiliser xdg-open ouvre chaque argument avec ton logiciel préféré

  • grep c'est plutôt pour chercher dans des fichiers de textes simples, notamment pour les fichiers sources, c'est pas approprié pour faire une recherche dans des documents qui sont encodés.

    Pour ouvrir tous les fichiers avec un certain nom ou une phrase tu 'pipe' la commande find ou grep avec xdg-open example: grep -rl test | xargs -n 1 xdg-open ou quelque chose comme ça.

  • Yeah GNOME exposes a bunch of settings for advanced users and extensions, you can look through them with dconf editor. PopOS isn't the best distribution for GNOME though as it's stuck on GNOME 42 so you're missing out on 3 years of updates.

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  • They set the 70$ price point and they set the gamepass price, it's all abstract values that they decide. That's price anchoring at play, you think you're getting a good deal in comparison, so of course you get the gamepass, but no matter which product you buy, microsoft wins.

  • It's in the article. Each different version you maintain is an additional strain and added cost. It's why applications are increasingly moving towards web versions.

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  • Opening the phone to other app stores is just the first step. The second is letting the user choose an app store when they first start their phone similarly to how they already enforce browser choice.

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  • Yeah... no, they already have access to all that. It's the good ol', if it's gonna happen anyways might as well get behind it and get some good PR.

  • They also stay pretty current with the kernel and many other packages.

    I guess that's better than nothing, that doesn't make it a rolling release though. It's an unstable point release that got half-stuck in the past until they get their cosmic shit together.

  • Tried the iso in a VM, gnome is still very much on version 42. They obviously abandoned shop to focus all their resources on their shiny new DE.

  • Hard to recommend a distro that hasn't seen a new release in over 3 years.

  • Fedora

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  • I've installed fedora thrice last year, and each time, I've had to enable rpm fusion in the terminal and download ffmpeg to get youtube to work. This is something that can't be fixed afaik, because it's a copyright issue.

  • At some point you need start cutting stuff or nothing happens and you're the one still maintaining the 32 bit packages 15 years later.

  • There's plenty of different solutions, but anything that isn't what people already have is gonna upset.

  • It's one of those changes that will happen sooner or later, bazzite and steam need to figure out a solution because fedora, and other modern distros can't and won't keep dragging around 32 bit libraries forever.

  • Fedora

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  • Fedora doesn't enable non free repositories by default, and that's a big deal for new users. Telling someone they need to run commands in the terminal to get their nvidia drivers, or even get youtube working is a problem.

  • Even if it's out of beta for 26.04, you'll probably want to wait a few releases before giving it a go. It's bound to be quite unstable for a few years.

  • I don't know much myself, check the fedora thread where they go into more details.