I switched to FreshRSS which works just as well, and doesn't have a toxic dev
bisby
Windows is only $price if your data and privacy are worth nothing.
Stars don't have a solid core or a defined "surface". They have more in common with Jupiter than Earth.
Where is the "surface" of jupiter? There is no solid ground to define as "the surface." The entire planet is just a mega atmosphere, so once you are within the atmosphere, you are within the planet.
From very far away, we can clearly define "This pixel is jupiter, this other pixel is not"... but when you're up close there isn't such a clear separation. It doesn't go from "Here there are 100% gas particles, and suddenly there are 0%" Just like Earth's atmosphere. It doesn't just suddenly go to 0 oxygen, and there have been plenty of debates about what counts as "outer space"
While I would agree with you that "landing" is a dumb word, because there is no ground to "land on." The probe isn't going to come to rest on a surface. But at the same time, for a "simplest explanation" case, its close enough. They are crossing the boundary into "inside" the sun (which again, is not the same thing as "inside the earth", because rocky vs gas/plasma)
Refreshrate is the magnet probably because it feels like the only one that isn't covered by "yeah, ubuntu is shit. I agree." And I understand fully how much refresh matters. I use 144 and 240hz monitors because low refresh bothers me. It was intended as less of a "this shouldn't bother you" and more of a "this is an edge case feature that not even my blu ray player handles, and that's built for the specific purpose of watching videos." It's purely a use case I had never heard of before, so declaring Linux not ready for desktop over a completely niche feature feels unfair. (But again, I would check for Xorg vs Wayland)
Ubuntu has been moving more and more of their software away from deb packaging and towards "snaps" which are their own thing. And snaps are terrible. imo, Canonical is basically trying to figure out how to turn Ubuntu into a walled garden like Microsoft and Apple have.
So Ubuntu handling it's packaging poorly and having out of date software with poor configurations doesn't surprise me at all. I can't counter your argument there because I agree with you that Ubuntu isn't good for desktop. I'm not ignoring those issues, I'm agreeing (just about Ubuntu, and not necessarily Linux as a whole, which has a separate set of issues, like driving you towards Ubuntu in the first place)
"Stable" here means "unchanging" and not "crash proof" unfortunately. Shipping software that is already 1-2 years out of date for a server that I intend to stay up all the time means that by the time I get a chance to run updates, the software is even more out of date.
The OP's SMB issue is exactly the kind of thing that would be WORSE on debian. "We're going to stick with SMBv1 by default, because not changing it is more 'stable' even though it's incredibly out of date"
And now you are stuck with this decision because you can't afford downtime on your server to resolve it. Shipping drastically out of date software isn't always a good thing either. Refusing to ship SMBv2 (again, I don't know what version of SMB Debian ships, using this purely as an example of the type of thing they do) in the name of "stability" even though it solves a ton of problems with SMBv1 is not a good experience.
They try to backport security fixes, but there are times where those get missed, and it also means that they aren't backporting bugfixes that they don't find "critical" enough.
So yes, Debian is only good for the scenario where you would prefer to have the same bugs for a year on end because "unchanging" is more important than "up to date, and patched"
I understand that 24/60 doesn't divide evenly. My point is just that televisions don't have this feature either. When I watch movies, even if the source is 24hz, my TV stays at 60hz.
Either way, there certainly is "an API" to do it. With xrandr
you can just xrandr --refresh 24
and it would work. It's something that is absolutely doable. Whatever xrandr is doing clearly the X server is exposing ways to change it. So anyone saying "X can't do that" is probably wrong.
I don't know much about Ubuntu other than everyone recommends it because it's overly simple and then inevitably things go wrong with it and it's impossible to fix because its overly simple. If I had to guess, this is something specific about Ubuntu and it using wayland by default. Wayland is the X replacement, so any fixes for Xorg refresh rate changing definitely don't apply.
Potential solution : if you log out, on the log in screen it should give you an option of which desktop environment to log into (a gear in the bottom right corner with an option for "Ubuntu on Xorg")...
It's possible that Ubuntu has removed this option recently. Wayland is the future, but it is different from X and not all software is ready for that change. My guess is that the checkbox in Kodi uses the Xorg APIs to change refresh rate, and Wayland doesn't use those APIs, so it just doesn't work. Wayland is in awkward teenage years where it's trying to pretend like it's ready to take on the world, but it's got a lot of rough edges still.
I would say that refresh rate changing doesn't really reflect on "linux on desktop" (a normal desktop use case doesn't have refresh rates changing regularly), but rather "linux as a HTPC/media center". And furthermore, most of your complaints are specific about Ubuntu. The biggest "Linux has issues" problem is that people are still using Ubuntu and picking a distro is way too much work, and the wayland transition is breaking some functionality of some software that hasn't updated yet.
I would like to point out that you have come into a Linux community and lead off with "this is a terrible experience" and then described quite a few issues that either "Ubuntu" (not "Linux") issues or otherwise somewhat non-standard uses. So if you're getting a weird mix of "defensive," "agreement that Ubuntu sucks, use something else," and "utter confusion about the use case" ... its probably the way the conversation started.
Also, this wouldn't be the first thread where someone shows up and complains purely on the basis of "linux isn't windows" so the community is already primed to be agitated about threads like this. Kneejerk reactions aren't the best, but I'm sure you weren't trying to come in here and coming across as aggressive either.
I have literally never in my life had my monitor’s refresh rate switch to match the framerate of the video I’m watching. What refresh rate was it, and what’s the framerate that you wanted it to match? I’m trying to wrap my head around what it is that you’re watching that just letting the screen refresh at 60Hz or whatever speed it was going at won’t cut it.
was also heavily wondering this. Most TVs don't change their refresh rate to their content. they just output 1080p 60hz (or whatever) and only do the updates every 24hz and will just double up frames. Expecting to change your output based on the content feels real weird.
if this person has stuttery video, its something else or they have a very niche use case.
"Plain ol debian" is the kind of distro that will ship SMBv1 without SMBv2, because "stability" (to be clear, i dont know if they do, but its the kind of thing they would do)
Debian loves to ship out of date garbage, because "out of date, but unchanging" is better than just shipping up to date stuff
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=188fipF-i5I
This video goes over a lot of metrics about how far you have to move your fingers to type certain things, and how we wound up at qwerty in the first place. The truth of it is though: different layouts are better for different things. He shows in the video a bunch of keyboard layouts optimized for things like youtube comments, the script of the Bee movie, wikipedia, etc.
At 7:12 in the video, he cites Dvorak as 26.2% more efficient than qwerty for how much your fingers need to travel to type. This covers letter frequency, but also sequencing (ie, typing the letters "un" on qwerty means i have go from top row U to bottom row N with the same finger).
I don't use dvorak, because if I want to use someone else's computer, I don't want to have to fight with muscle memory, but it is "superior" in many ways.
nnoremap <C-q> :q<CR>
This works for me to bind control+q to quit.
edit: easier to upload an image because lemmy is eating the "html" characters
In the 1960s we built a moon rocket. Single purpose built for going to the moon and back.
Today, companies are trying to build general purpose ultra heavy lift rockets and slapping a moon mission on them. Starship? Not a moon rocket. New Glenn? Not a moon rocket.
Its like living in an RV and saying "living in it isnt the problem, its the plumbing!" Plumbing is an easy solved problem for fixed houses. You've only made the situation harder on yourself by trying to be dual purpose
FF mmos and their job systems are the best "alt handling" out there.
GW2 has the best AH and gear dying system.
WOW has the best UI customization options (via arsons), and there is something about character movement that just feels right.