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Posts
2
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115
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • J'utilise /e/os sur un Oneplus 7. Un fork de lineageOS, avec beaucoup d'outils maison, forké sur d'autres applications open sources disponibles sur fdroid. Il y a le safetynet fonctionnel sorti de la boîte. et des outils anti tracker /anti pub.

    Il y a un market maison (app lounge)qui permet de rechercher des applications du play store et de Fdroid (avec le même principe de jetons de connexion anonyme que l'aurora store). Il a un système de notes pour la confidentialité/pistage des applications qui utilise exodus privacy (comme l'aurora store).

    L'application n'est pas exempte de défauts, mais elle n'est pas mal. J'ai quand même dû installer fdroid parce que le lounge ne permet pas d'ajouter les dépôts style izzyondroid.

    J'ai du utiliser L'Aurora store pour installer les 2 émulateurs que j'utilise et que j'avais payé sur le play store (myboy pour GBA et drastic, gratuit depuis quelques semaines, pour DS ).La connexion via le lounge ne fonctionnait pas.

    Je suis root pour pouvoir installer Google auto sans les services Google (magic earth est une alternative viable à Gmaps pour la majorité de mon utilisation).

    La majorité de mes applications vient de Fdroid :

    • fossify pour les contacts, agenda, téléphone
    • newpipe YouTube frontend,
    • openboard/heliumboard : clavier
    • quik sms : fork de feu qk SMS
    • mull : fork de Firefox, avec une meilleure sécurité contre le pistage.
    • threema pour la messagerie avec les gens qui l'ont...
    • kotatsu pour la lecture de mangas
    • eternity : fork d'infinity, mais pour lemmy
    • webapp pour les sites qui fonctionnent bien en version mobile, ça diminue le nombre d'applications dont j'ai besoin. Mais elle n'est plus mis à jour depuis plusieurs années (je cherche toujours un remplaçant).

    Pour le reste (application de banque, etc...), c'est installé via le lounge.

    édit : mise en page

  • Mint is far better, I usually recommand it. But Ubuntu is still more popular.

    I didn't use Manjaro in many years, so I can't judge it. The biggest problem I see with Manjaro is that it has access to AUR.

    Manjaro has its own repos, and they take more time to release packages than Arch, which can be a good thing stability wise. But if you have applications from AUR installed then you might have conflicts with the dependencies needed and the dependencies used by the system.

    As I said, I didn't use Manjaro in a while, so I don't know if it still a problem. If it is, then it's a shame that the biggest advantage of Arch, the AUR, become that much a risk for the system.

  • I've seen a video where the guy installed steam on Ubuntu 24.04. Of course it was the snap. The guy usually tests distro to see of it's easy to game on it. If the drivers are easy to install, etc...

    He usually launches steam, then tests Valheim, Overwatch, Tomb Raider and cyberpunk.

    Overwatch didn't launch, cyberpunk neither. Valheim reported that a service didn't launch. Tomb raider was OK.

    Then he uninstalled the steam snap and installed the .deb one. Everything worked.

    Enforcing packages is already something that people don't appreciate on Linux, enforcing packages that don't work is surprisingly hated.

    Ubuntu is supposed to be a distro for beginners, how am I supposed to recommand a distro when I have no confidence the applications will work ?

  • It is on izzyOnDroid repo :).

  • It depends on the DE you use. I only know about 3 of them :

    KDE can put as many panel as you want with all the system tray you want. You'll have to pine the applications on each panel individually.

    On Gnome, you'll have to install extensions as dash to panel to have a panel that can be cloned.

    On Cinnamon, you'll be able to create a panel on the second screen, pine applications on it, but not all of system tray can be duplicate. There is a ticket opened for that : https://github.com/linuxmint/cinnamon/issues/9889

  • Mon historique de périphériques :

    souris :

    Razer copperhead => bonne durée de vie,agréable à utiliser

    logitheque 500s => agréable à utiliser, le clic de la molette est mort rapidement (3-4 ans)

    corsaire m65 elite => renvoyée au SAV pendant la période de garantie, souris agréable à utiliser

    Razer basilisk v3 => souris actuelle depuis 2 ans. très agréable à utiliser.

    clavier : je n'ai jamais utilisé de clavier orienté gaming

    casque :

    HS70 pro wireless => 2 ans d'utilisation, les mousses sont déjà bien abîmées, bonne autonomie,un peu lourd.

    tapis de souris :

    tapis en métal Razer => il a plus de 15 ans, increvable

    Pour l'instant, c'est Razer qui me convient le mieux. Je n'ai pas eu de problème avec la marque, il y a openrazer sous linux pour paramétrer les périphériques.

    Corsair, j'ai l'impression que la durée de vie de leur produit n'est pas énorme. Leur SAV est réactif, de mon expérience.

    Logitech, je n'ai eu qu'une expérience, plutôt courte, mais le problème du double-clic fantôme ne me donne pas envie de tenter leurs produits.

    Édith : mise en forme et correction

  • there are a few options to make gog/epic games works with heroic, if it doesn't work out of the box :

    • using proton from steam/GE
    • using steam runtime
    • using protondb to know what to tweak the launch options or windows component to download via wine tricks
    • copy the game in steam.

    I've seen that a protondb user posted about cyberpunk 2077 working on heroic launcher. I hope you'll manage to have it too.

  • "Nous partîmes cinq cents ; mais par un prompt renfort Nous nous vîmes trois mille en arrivant au port,..."

    Les inconnus m'ont conditionné, j'ai vu 500, j'ai direct pensé au cid...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N7xW0owFrQs&t=83

    Édith : bravo à tous ceux qui entretiennent la communauté :).

  • It depends of your definition of "hassle".

    I have 2 screens, I like to have the same panel on each screen, so when I use one in fullscreen, I can use the other one. So far, the only Desktop Environment that can give me that without too much difficulties, is KDE (even if I had to do it manually).

    If you have the same use, maybe Kubuntu is a great choice. Tuxedo OS would be the same as Kubuntu, but you don't have to change the priority of the package manager, because the snaps are already disabled. ( they got another load of malicious softwares in the snapstore recently, and some snap might not be as good as .deb or flatpak).

    If not, Linux Mint is an out of the box distribution. If your hardware is the most recent one, they have a "edge iso".

  • There was once a legend about vehicle's size and ... Well...

  • I would stick to basic recommendations and go from easiest to more and more advanced distribution, to avoid scaring beginners :

    • graphical installation + easy to setup (nvidia + codec )+stable : basically Ubuntu based distribution (but not Ubuntu, some snaps, i.e. steams, are more bugged than the flatpak and the .deb . I wouldn't recommand a distribution that force bugged app for beginners ) + others
    • graphical installation : user will have to install nvidia drivers, codec or other useful things manually. The distribution can have several update a week with more risk to break, but is still considered solid and has a preconfigured way to roll back (snapshot) or more lightweigth and stable depending of the choice : fedora, opensuse tumbleweed, Debian+ others...
    • do it yourself distributions : for advanced users or motivated people that want to learn it the hard way. Distributions are up to date and have either a risk to break or user has to manually configure about everything (or both ) : arch, void Linux, gentoo, ...

    "Gaming" distributions could be placed between the 2 first categories as they are a kind of out of the box distribution but more up to date than the stable distributions.

    Low ram/CPU consumption could be a side option at every step (easy, mid, hard)

    I didn't tried immutable distributions in a while, so I don't know how to place them. My experience one year ago (kinoite, silver blue, blend os), was that it was more complicated than a regular distribution to do what I needed, but it was 1 year ago, so I wouldn't know where to place it.

    I'm quite a beginner in Linux, I love to test distributions to see how far I can go without using the terminal, and without breaking the distribution. So my vision can be quite narrow comparing to more experienced users.

  • This is exactly what I did on my OP7 (only 4 years old). A new battery, a new USB port and a new back (thank you OnePlus for the back in glass).

    I installed another ROM... And the only drawback on that "brand new" phone is that the camera is slow and not as good than the stock one ( even with Gcam or others derivative).

  • Maybe they are not Linux users, maybe they are Microsoft employees trying to keep you on Windows by making Linux users look obnoxious.

  • Yes. Check yourself :). https://www.protondb.com/

    Not all will run out of the box. Some require tweaks, some won't run as good as on windows. But many games will run day one nowadays .

  • I'm looking for a stable rolling too. But since yesterday, I've quit tumbleweed for fedora.

    I left tumbleweed because I wasn't able to find/install/update non flatpak application. The bug is only for KDE (gnome last ISO works fine, but not the KDE ISO). It was not much of a problem since everything else worked for me, but I find it weird to not fix that kind of bug, even on a ISO.

    I guess void Linux would be the answer, but it requires a bit of work to set it up. Maybe, when I'll have time to learn a bit more about it.

    Slow roll would be another option I guess : 1 month slower than Tumbleweed, but it is still flagged as experimental by suse.

    Solus has been revived last year. I tested their first iso from 2023. I found it laggy and didn't liked the package manager, but 1 year can make big changes on Linux.

  • "Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should."