• flop_leash_973@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Thanks to the likes of Proton, gaming on Linux is a hell of a lot better than it was ~5 years ago. You can actually do it now for the most part without to much fuss in my experience as long as you stick to Steam.

    But once you leave Steam or get something brand new made by an EA type and have to lean on third party implementations of Proton or raw Wine to get things working it gets a lot worse.

      • Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de
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        2 months ago

        Lutris is also a great option, actively contributing to it. Got a slightly different focus than Heroic, but a lot more features as well. Basically a one-stop shop once you got familiar with it. Really needs more people that can contribute though given the huge amount of platforms and launchers it attempts to cover (literally all of them).

  • rovingnothing29@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Linux has been ready since 2008. Literally not had a single real problem since Ubuntu 7.10 kept turning my monitor off while booting. Everything just works and has for 17 years now.

    Every problem I see people have now (IRL not online) is ‘I don’t like the default theme’ tier nonsense.

    • wischi@programming.dev
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      2 months ago

      It might be nonsense to you, but that’s the first thing people see. No matter how amazing you business is, if your business card is a handwritten phone number on a piece of toilet paper, nobody will call.

      • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Yup. If the theme is causing a mental hang up for laymen, then it’s an issue whether you agree with it or not.

        But I suspect it’s more than that, and Linux stans are playing down the shitty UI.

  • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    I still haven’t got discord wayland screen sharing working. (No audio)

    Still on vencord in the interim

  • mlg@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    wayland clipboard

    Lol

    Also kdenlive was still a pain for me to work with, but that was mostly because of its layout, shorcuts, and wording of some features.

    Otherwise yeah, we’ve made it pretty far.

  • Aeri@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Requirement: let me play the video games I want to play that have anticheat

    A stiff requirement

    • _carmin@lemm.eeOP
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      2 months ago

      They run well on Linux, go complain to the devs who don’t allow them.

  • Kagu@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Can someone more plugged in than me show me what I gotta do to get that ‘Discord Wayland sharing’ working? I literally installed Vencord a month ago because every time I tried to share a window or my screen on discord it would hard crash.

  • m3t00🌎@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    all wife needs is Mahjong and shopping. not like I need to run Mine Sweeper. just a browser with Internet. Most could not install any operating system so charge for the install labor. lan-splaining is a waste of time. bring a book if Mom needs her windows fixed. thinking about putting her on linux when her machine finally pukes.

  • wischi@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    “Linux is ready” - which distro? Fractional (sometimes even non-fractional) scaling is a mess. Most things that go beyond changing the wallpaper image need some command line stuff. Linux Desktop is for nerds and definitely not ready.

    Yes it works fine if you know what you are doing but most people don’t. There is often not one thing of doing stuff, but hundreds. It already starts with the selection of a distro how would a “non-computer-person” decide on a distro. Just try them out? Install twenty different distros because reasons?

    Unless resources are pooled into a single distro to polish it and make a defacto standard for ordinary people, homes and offices, Linux is not ready. If I need the freaking terminal because I want to see the day of the week next to the date it’s not ready.

      • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Do some testing. Put a non-technical Windows or Mac user on Linux for a week. Don’t explain anything to them, so they can figure it out on their own. Let me know how it goes.

        • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          The average Steam Deck user does not even know it’s running Linux. How it’s going: millions sold and counting.

          • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Right. Because they’re interacting with an overlay the entire time, so they don’t have to deal with a shitty UI or manually performing any tasks.

            So that’s an irrelevant example.

        • rumba@lemmy.zip
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          2 months ago

          How about a few million school kids on chrome books. My 6YO is AOK.

          Can you open a web browser? Done, Ship it.

          My Parents and my Ex were fine on it 20 years ago. (given back then I HAD to do the setup)

          The only problem they ever had was when my mother bought bargain bin CD full of shareware and I said no, that’s not going to work. She shrugged and I pointed her to some online solitare games.

          • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Then they’re better off with a Chromebook or tablet. The only reason to be on a pc instead is to access all of the additional functions that would be a nightmare for them to figure out on Linux.

  • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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    2 months ago

    Calling Linux’s version of DVR a “viable video editor” is rich given that a. It doesn’t work on most distros (it’s designed for Rocky Linux. It throws a fit on any other distro. You need to jerry-rig it), requiring a whole thang to get it to play nice; and that b. It doesn’t support any of the video formats and codecs people actually want to use, for seemingly no reason, since the Windows version supports those formats just fine.

    KDENLiVe is like, fine for a simple project, but you quickly start hitting your head on its limitations. Plus its UI sucks just in general.

    Video editing is the reason I keep a small Windows install, because sometimes I need to do video stuff for work and – Sorry. No. No Linux video editor even compares to the likes of Premiere and Vegas. They’re still barely above Windows Movie Maker.

    GIMP is a perfectly serviceable image editor, and yes, GIMP 3 is a major improvement – But it’s kinda missing a lot of things Photoshop users take for granted, and its UI and hotkeys are very idiosyncratic, which makes migrating very hard (… I sorta have the opposite problem though. I learned image editing on GIMP and all my muscle memory is GIMP oriented, so even when I’m on my ‘time to work’ windows install, I only really open PS if I desperately need one of its exclusive functions, cuz otherwise I’d have to relearn my whole workflow)

  • HeckGazer@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    It certainly sounds like wayland is just about ripe. Any DE recommendations for a lifelong XFCE enjoyer like myself?

  • Limonene@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I worry about Wayland for the features it drops from X11. Wayland will never have xdotool support, due to its security model. I worry about onscreen keyboards for drawing tablets and screen readers for the blind.

    • Communist@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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      2 months ago

      This is not true, ydotool already works and there’s nothing against that in the wayland design, it just works differently than x, not not at all

      gnome is working on an accessibility protocol for wayland called newton, check it out.

      • Limonene@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        ydotool is missing a lot of features. It emulates an input device, so it can only send inputs to the active window. xdotool can send keystrokes to non-active windows, and has features for searching for a window to send to. xdotool can minimize, dismiss, or move windows around.

        I’m aware of newton. It’s a work in progress, though, and doesn’t have as many features as X11 accessibility has. Although it might have enough features eventually, I worry that X11 will be deprecated by operating system vendors before that.