

3rd for Fedora. Stylus support is great on the latest stable KDE Plasma release. So, I would go for that.
3rd for Fedora. Stylus support is great on the latest stable KDE Plasma release. So, I would go for that.
People still on Windows 10 by next year: I never got a virus.
Bro, you never got a virus that you know of.
That is your / (root) partition. You can’t write to it because Aurora is an atomic & immutable distro.
Source: I use Aurora & Bazzite.
I use Plasma now, but I miss the cohesiveness provided to developer by Gnome’s Human Interface Guidelines, the result is a vastly unified design language across core, circle and some other 3rd party apps. Plus, I appreciate that their design language is very simplistic and easy on the eyes. While Plasma tends to be more condensed and explicit even for non primary features, while on GNOME, secondary features tend to be hidden from plain sight.
That said, Plasma has been faster to adopt some gaming and design related features due to their collaboration with Valve and from what I’ve read in the fediverse, they are more open to other people’s opinions.
There were a few Figma mockup leaks that looked FREAKING amazing in these regards, but that mockup has been taken down by KDE and is no longer public. I can’t even find screenshots now. If that mockup ever becomes real, I won’t miss GNOME at all.
That said, GNOME is freaking amazing, I had an awesome time with it, and it’s a perfectly valid option.
It also integrates well with Home Assistant and supports OBD2 devices, which is a very nice bonus.
What do you mean? It’s just like signing up for an email account, and you get access to a forum like experience. Same thing for any other fedi app but the UI looks like something else.
OPDS is the standard for ebook distribution. Most eBook apps support it, I bet your boox does too.
You can subscribe to a feed and browse the catalogue and download a book. Some popular OPDS catalogues are:
If you use Linux, check out Foliate reader from Flathub.
I work with figma using the browser. What are the benefits of the desktop app?
Right now on Linux, it’s only possible with Nvidia, right? I have an old 1060 on my server. (all-AMD on my Desktop).
Tons of reasons. My reason is that it felt like the first skate simulator. And the control scheme was freaking brilliant and intuitive. I couldn’t adapt to Session… too complicated.
I guess I’ll play SKATE on RPCS3.
If we all spent that money on gimp, scribus and inkscape, they would be so much better in just 2 years.
I use KDE for technical reasons, but I pretty much prefer Gnome’s settings and generally their whole UI design.
Speaking of the image, I prefer KDE’s settings. Apple’s is too dumbed down and slower to navigate.
This would make for the perfect setup.
But wait, you’ll be able to climb towers to unlock Ubipoints. If you grind for a year, you’ll be able to redeem them for a different colored costume.
For anyone thinking this is the solution, it’s not. This technique produces a rasterized circle in a destructive editing workflow. What people that are complaining actually want, is a non-destructive tool, like the planned shape tool that will let everyone easily make vector shapes, like circles. It is part of the ongoing plan to add non-destructive workflows to GIMP, it’s a game changer and the gimp team is doing great progress, so kudos to them.
KDE Plasma.
It has been great for gaming, adopting Wayland protocols at a faster rate than other DEs due in part thanks to Valve’s contributions.
I freaking love GNOME & Adwaita, but I’ll switch back when I deem it better than Plasma.
What’s Vanilla Linux? Vanilla OS?