Just obering around

wiki-user: ober

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  • 23 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • Hoopla seems okay for people who listen to a lot of mainstream stuff. I’ve never actually heard about it before now or used it so everything I say is just coming straight out my ass, but, it seems their library is very limited. Orpheus has a very extensive library with almost everything on there having a lossless flac version. It’s still nothing compared to Soulseek, but as long as you’re into bands/artists with more than 5 listeners in their lifetime, you’ll be able to find everything. It all just comes down to what you’re looking for though.






  • This would depend on the distro you use. Most distros will require you to enable a non-free repository before you can install anything that isn’t Foss or open source from the official repos. You could also use an FSF approved distro. Keep in mind, the FSF will only approve distros that don’t include any non-free anything in the official repos. Besides that, you just have to know the licensing before you install it.








  • I mean to use something like htop, btop, or psensor to check how much of your RAM, CPU, GPU, etc is being used along with temperature. Also, what do you mean your RAM always shows as full? I get that Linux “uses” it all but most resource monitors should be able to tell how much is actually being used for programs.



  • I would go with option 4. I have a 1TB NVMe with /boot, /, and /home. Then I have two 1TB SATA III SSDs, one is for games and the other music. It makes more “sense” to have / and /home on separate drives but I don’t recommend this personally because / doesn’t need a whole terabyte of storage so it’d just be wasted. Swap is optional (I don’t use it even on Gentoo). Me picking option 4 over 3 is just personal preference though. I like having /home smaller because it just holds basic stuff and then I have my 2 extra drives as bulk storage dedicated to something.


  • i3

    • Great for beginners
    • Uses it’s own configuration language so no coding required
    • One of the most popular window managers so documentation and such is plentiful
    • Has a 1:1 Wayland fork called Sway
    • Is a manual tiling window manager which means you specify where a window will appear when you go to launch something.

    AwesomeWM

    • Is awesome
    • Configured in Lua
    • Has a great status bar built in
    • Great documentation
    • Is a dynamic tilling window manager meaning it places new windows in accordance with a preset layout.

    Qtile

    • My favorite
    • Has a 1:1 Wayland version built-in
    • Configured in Python
    • The best status bar I’ve used
    • Great documentation
    • Dynamic tiler

    XMonad (Note: never used this so take this how you will)

    • Configured in Haskell
    • Has a lot of dependencies
    • Extremely configurable
    • Dynamic tiler

    There’re many more window managers out there but these are the ones I’ve personally used (besides XMonad) and know the most about.

    If you don’t like a built in status bar then you can disable it in the config and use another one like Polybar. Distrotube (on Odyssey or Youtube) also has really good videos on all of these window managers and more which I really recommend you check out if you haven’t already.

    Personally though, I think Qtile will give you the best experience.


  • Personally I would recommend Linux Mint. It’s based on Ubuntu so any issues should be easy to find and fix online. It’s very similar in terms of the actual desktop to Windows instead of being completely different like Pop!OS. You should also be able to completely avoid the command line as well though I do encourage you to have your friend learn at least some of the basics so he at least knows how to use it.