@RokitDan

5 Followers
29 Following
48 Posts
Guitarist, graphic designer, web developer, gamer, home cook
@LGUG2Z that’s unfortunate, but for everything else there are Git repos lol. I’ve been using Komorebi on my Windows 11 laptop. I’m eager to see how it works on macOS! Aerospace on macOS has been solid, but I always like checking out new software. Keep up the great work
@LGUG2Z I’m not sure either. But Homebrew does have a mixture of FOSS and proprietary software, so I’d imagine they accept a variety of licenses
@LGUG2Z will Komorebi for macOS be available via Homebrew?

So far, I am really enjoying #CachyOS on my #Lenovo #thinkpad. It’s not a powerful computer by today’s standards, but CachyOS makes it feel snappy. I enjoy testing #ProdeusGame whenever I’m testing a #Linux install on this machine since it looks good at super low settings.

Surprise special appearance from my #cat Link

@binsk I used EndeavourOS when I was first learning Linux, and I liked the idea of Arch. I lacked the ability to use Arch properly at the time, but I’ve become a Linux nerd over the last 14 months, so I should be fine with CachyOS. Initial opinion is that my ThinkPad feels noticeably snappier than Nobara. I installed GNOME on both CachyOS and Nobara to get a fair comparison

The hype got the best of me. I gotta know, so I’m testing #CachyOS on my #thinkpad. If I like it better than #Nobara, I’ll install it on my #Lenovo Legion 5i Pro. I like Nobara, so we will see how I feel about an #archlinux system

#Linux #linuxgaming

@pinnecco I do like portable executables in Windows. Having that same functionality in Linux would be nice, and it seems AppImages could provide that experience. More Linux users would need to see the benefits of portable apps, but in order to gain more traction I think AppImages would need a package manager to keep installed AppImages up to date much like Flathub does for Flatpaks. If that already exists, then that’s great. I’ll have to look into it.
@andrebuilds I love Linux, but my Legion 5i Pro laptop with an Nvidia RTX 4060 simply runs Windows better; I need my audio production plugins to work, I want the gaming performance I paid for, and I want my external 4k 144hz display to work without lagging. I purchased a MacBook Pro recently, and it scratches that Unix itch while running all of my audio production, graphic design, and programming software. Linux is installed on my Legion in hopes the Nvidia drivers and Wayland improve one day
@CGM I’ve tried using Qwen3-coder as a build agent recently. It’s impressive that it can gain context about a project and write code accordingly. But ultimately what it provided was messy and didn’t work. However, I’ve found AI to be useful for explaining error messages and finding any syntax issues I may have. I don’t trust it to actually do my job entirely, and no one should
@jkntech I think the average user simply wants an easy to use computer that runs the software they need. If Linux can do that for them, then I’d argue Linux isn’t fundamentally at odds with average users. However, Windows and Mac run everything most folks need and are readily available, and Linux can’t run everything. People want their software to work. And the software they’re used to is generally proprietary (i.e. Adobe CC). And that’s arguably at odds with Linux and FOSS