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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)S
Posts
10
Comments
223
Joined
12 mo. ago

  • Smooth as butter on a chromium browser, which is nice but also annoying haha

  • It's x11, when I check my desktop environments I only have gnome and gnome classic

  • I checked in about:support and Firefox is using x11, so maybe wayland isn't installed

  • I don't have experience with wayland yet, so I'll need to check if it's available on my installation. Do you now how I can run Firefox in wayland?

    The drivers are the latest officially supported Debian ones, they should not be the main issue here. But I can give it a look, thanks!

  • I installed MX Linux on my 32bit system with low specs and it runs fine

  • Really tending towards AirVPN for my setup

  • Can you elaborate? Do they support P2P and port forwarding? How is their speed?

    No one mentioned them because they're American

  • Unfortunately they don't support port forwarding

  • Thanks for the detailed description! Their speeds are good?

  • In what way a honeypot?

  • Thanks, but in my post I mentioned I'm dissatisfied with Goose, so just wanted to get people's input. I read the page

  • Thanks for sharing your experience! I run Debian so I'm considering it

  • Both of these support port forwarding, what are your experiences with them?

  • No port forwarding unfortunately :(

  • Yes, this would be greatly preferred

  • I'm thinking of making Linux my daily driver apart for some software I need for work. People are super positive about it on here, but isn't it still the case that some peripherals won't work? Or that I'll spend a ton of time making the system work instead of actually using the system?

    It would be for gaming that I'd use the Linux installation mostly.

  • This was just two weeks ago, and it's a relatively old device, from 2014. It's proprietary bullhonky all over that device unfortunately, from the screen brightness to the webcam to the bloody power button.

  • This was the result of much research, I'm not entirely new to the space. No one got these peripherals to work on that device, unfortunately.

    I don't understand what you mean by this isn't an issue for most people. Most people do care about a webcam not working right. Or do jou mean my device isn't representative? That could be, but it doesn't mean people with this device have a good Linux experience if they install it.

  • I wanted to give new life to an old acer laptop/tablet hybrid. I installed Linux, but the webcam and microphone just won't work no matter what. The power button also doesn't work.

    There's still a long way to go before any casual user would accept this.