deleted by creator
Eugenia
Ex-technologist, now an artist. My art: http://www.eugenialoli.com/
- 22 Posts
- 479 Comments
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Linux distro/setup best at not crashing from sleep/wake?English4·4 days agoWaking up from sleep is of course part graphics card/drivers, and BIOS code. My husband had his share with his nvidia card crashing the system when coming up from sleep under Wayland, but I believe these things have been mostly ironed now. However, if you have a buggy BIOS, you’re out of luck. I’ve had such a DELL laptop, latest firmware installed, and no matter which distro I tried, it wouldn’t wake up from sleep properly. So, if that’s your issue, there’s not much you can do, apart from getting compatible hardware. There are hardware lists of compatible hardware in some places, including archlinux’s wiki i believe.
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•According to Pornhub data (yes seriously!) Linux market share in 2024 increased more than 40% relative to 5.1% of all users.English32·5 days agoiOS is only massive in the US, everywhere else, Android has a huge market share.
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•I'm putting my tin foil hat on and want to join the world of Linux, however I make music in Ableton. Do I just need to dual boot or does anyone have a better solution?English1·10 days agoThere are several commercial options for Linux. The most-Ableton software out there is Bitwig Studio that has a Linux port. However, it’s expensive. The cheapest commercial solution, with a bit of learning curve but powerful nonetheless, is Reaper.
However, if you want to go 100% open source, there’s Ardour and LMMS (which is a lot like FL Studio). Ardour 9, which is expected by the end of the year, will be more MIDI-friendly than it used to be. LMMS latest git version (offered as binary on their site) has some good new features compared to their stable version, however, there’s still no vst3 support.
I’m an visual artist and I used Photoshop for years to edit my hand-painted scanned paintings. When I moved to Linux, and Gimp3 was out, I was finally ready to leave Photoshop behind. Some features of Photoshop aren’t there, but I was ready to leave them behind. Same with video, I used to have a rather popular blog about color grading with Resolve. I moved to kdenlive, which has none of these tools or plugins. It’s a decision that I simply had to make. I wanted to use foss tools, and that was the price to pay. I’m cool with my decision.
If you gotta go commercial, go with Reaper. The people (a small team of 3 or 4 I believe) behind it are really cool, and they’re doing it for the love of it, their profit is very small.
Ι’d suggest you try another kernel. This sounds like a kernel/driver issue, since the ssd seems to be healthy. Mint lets you pick from newer kernels, from within the update app. This might solve your issue, or you might want to upgrade to 22.1 too.
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•I could use some troubleshooting help for a Linux laptopEnglish3·14 days agousb wifi dongles for $7 is the cheaper solution, not the internal module. I have some and they work fine with linux.
Your best bet is a secondary M2 slot, there are some laptops that allow for that. You install windows on the first, main ssd. Then you DISABLE that ssd (or you unplug it intenrally), you install linux on the second ssd, and then you enable back the first one. Then you can select using F12 during boot which ssd you want to boot from, by default it’d be windows.
I see you’re from Germany. Well, Tuxedo computers have many laptop models with two ssds in it.
Mine needs 1.3 GB with an itunes library of 160 gb.
Jellyfin music server. It needs about 1.2 GB of RAM for itself, plus the system.
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Technology@lemmy.world•The end of Windows 10 is approaching, so it's time to consider Linux and LibreOfficeEnglish3·20 days agoYeah, snaps won’t be able to access the “external” codecs (outside their jail). So either install the official firefox package from the firefox site, or chrome.
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Technology@lemmy.world•The end of Windows 10 is approaching, so it's time to consider Linux and LibreOfficeEnglish5·21 days agoYou need to install the codecs, there’s a way to do it on ubuntu, just google search it (and there’s an option during installation to do it too). The N150 cpu and its integrated gpu is not a problem for your codec problem, it’s a matter of installing the right software.
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Music Production and Software Synthesizers/VST's under LinuxEnglish1·21 days agodeleted by creator
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Music Production and Software Synthesizers/VST's under LinuxEnglish7·22 days agoThe reality is, to get these Windows VSTs to work on Linux, is possible via 2-3 ways, but they’re crashy, and sometimes will work, and after an OS upgrade might stop working (as it happened last year with yabridge under ubuntu) etc. The truth is, you can’t rely 100% on these VSTs anymore under Linux, it’s too hairy of a situation overtime. You might be able to get it working for a project, and two years later to try to reload that project, only to have these plugins not working anymore, so the project would crash on you and not be able to load it anymore.
If you want to switch to Linux, you will need to use the well supported, native plugins only that get updated regularly for new linux versions. Yes, it’s a waste of money for your existing purchases, but this is what’s true for everyone who have ever bought Windows software in the past, and they’re now switching to Linux. Maybe you can sell them?
Alternatively, use Windows for your audio work, and if you want to stay on Windows 10, make sure that this computer is not on the internet connected anymore (due to not receive security updates anymore), and use Linux for your everyday computer tasks.
Look at QCad. They have a paid ($40), and a free version that is fully functional and open source. It’s the most autocad-like app out there, so learning that has the advantage of learning the UI of autocad too.
LibreCad that others suggested was forked from Qcad about 15 years ago and hasn’t moved much in terms of features. While QCad has. So in my opinion, it’s the best solution.
Then there’s Freecad, but that’s more about 3D cad, and it’s more complicated overall.
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Just wanted to show off the lowest end hardware I ever ran Linux onEnglish1·22 days agoI’m telling you what htop reports.
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Just wanted to show off the lowest end hardware I ever ran Linux onEnglish1·22 days agoTrinity of course. That’s the point of low end computing with Q4OS. :)
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Just wanted to show off the lowest end hardware I ever ran Linux onEnglish4·23 days agoI don’t think the difference between 32bit and 64bit is 2x in memory sizes, it’s way less than that. I run Q4OS, it runs at 350 MBs here.
Eugenia@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Just wanted to show off the lowest end hardware I ever ran Linux onEnglish9·23 days agoAre you using systemd? Because 317 MB of RAM is really low for a normal Debian installation with XFce. At my mom’s 2 GB ram laptop, it uses 850 MB on a cold boot.
As someone now living in Europe, I find the US protests mild and small. When Europeans protest, they protest. I mean, my native Greece saw a massive protest in Feb, well over a million went out, in a country of ~9 million. This is how you do it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tm3vEKMnA-8
Use Talon with Cinnamon and Linux Mint, which still uses X11.