Why are you using Chinese enumeration commas?
i.e. "、" instead of ","
Why are you using Chinese enumeration commas?
i.e. "、" instead of ","
All I know is wine-mono and wine-gecko doesn't come in any default package lists on apt that you get on Linux Mint (which should include Debian and Ubuntu packages), not sure if they exist on some other mirror list somewhere but it didn't seem like it, while on Arch I got them directly from Extra (not even AUR).
Well you technically don't need mono or gecko, especially not if you're just going to use Steam Proton to play, but I use pure WINE a lot and it was a pain having to install them manually. Eventually I gave up on using mono and just downloaded the .net runtimes I needed through winetricks.
There were also some lib32 package I got from AUR on Arch that didn't exist on apt. One of those gst plugins (ugly/good/bad/nice/whatever)
ZQ
yeah to exit without saving you do ZQ instead of ZZ
I thought about upgrading to AE a few times since it seems to have pretty much everything or at least replacements for everything now, but I guess I'll never upgrade from 1.57.97 at this rate
IKEA used to sell great mattresses, but when I had to replace my old one a few years ago they only had hard and semi-hard ones.
And over time the mattress I ended up buying because they didn't sell the one I wanted anymore sunk in and has formed an uncomfortable indent.
same reason why people buy games even though they can pirate them to get them for free
Been a while since I had a VM but iirc it was pretty easy to have a shared directory to the VM, which is very useful to (obviously) share files but it also means that since the files aren't actually on the VM itself they'll still be there even if you remove the VM since they're not part of the image.
How I learned my lesson to have a shared directory was this: I had been having audio issues on the VM and at one point just decided to start over with a new VM, completely forgetting that the files I had been working on for a project were part of the VM and would be gone.
Just the other day I was looking into how to use a single shared WINE prefix for multiple users since it's not like any 2 users would ever use the same PC at the same time... TIL I was wrong
Unfortunately I don't really have anything helpful to add except it seems like Linux is more or less inherently built to support what you're looking for.
Arch is made out to be a lot harder and unstable than it really is. And AUR is a great resource but realistically you won't even use it that much. At least I haven't. I used it for Brave Browser package before switching to Firefox, some WINE gst plugin, and some other small stuff I don't remember.
Also keep in mind even if it's a AUR package, you can just install the package like normal if it's a binary (it will be named with a -bin
at the end, like brave-bin
), so just because you're using some packages from AUR it doesn't mean you have to build lots of packages from source every time you update.
People hear scary stuff about some random update breaking the system but it's exaggerated.
You definitely can break stuff with user error and sometimes if you're not paying attention while updating you can get problems (combination of bad defaults + user error).
Main problem is that you can do whatever you want, but you might not actually know what you really want to do or you might not be doing what you meant to do, and Arch Linux will let you do it even if something breaks due to it.
And well that's going to be same regardless of OS but it's more accessible on Arch.
However you shouldn't be too worried about it, in the basically worst case scenario you might need a Live USB and another device with an internet connection to look up and what you need to do to fix what's wrong, but you can always count on that there's a fix.
Most other OSes if you have a problem, depending on what it is you might just be stuck with it.
Biggest noob mistake I recall doing was that I had my old windows hard drive as extra storage and slowly moving stuff over once in a while, so I hadn't reformatted it and I also wasn't aware of that the default Linux NTFS driver wasn't very good and that I should've gotten NTFS-3G if I weren't going to reformat.
Well one day while not paying attention while updating my system through pacman (yay actually) I was also copying files from my old windows hard drive and I didn't even look before just pressing accept on some AUR package rebuild.
Well it turns out that package was formerly part of Extra repository and thus it used to be a binary package, but now since it was moved to the AUR and it didn't have -bin
it was changed to a package to be built from source, and if I were to continue using it I should've changed which package.
But I just hit accept and it started chugging away, and it needed more RAM that I have and apparently there's no safe guard for this (at least not by default) and by the time I noticed that my RAM usage was getting to high the system already got too sluggish and I was too late to end the process.
I also didn't know about SysRq
at the time so the only option I knew was to force shut down by holding down the power button for 5 seconds.
My actual system was still fine and all but my old windows hard drive that was transferring files got borked. It wasn't completely bricked so I eventually salvaged it and it's since been reformatted too, but I thought I had bricked it at the time.
Well that might still seem a bit scary but that was me making several user errors in a row, and at the end of the day it still wasn't even a big problem.
I got through another few missions of Wargroove 2. It continues to be a worthy successor to Wargroove.
I didn't have high hopes for WG2 at first but I saw they made some really good improvements with the map editor.
I'm still on the fence about buying it though, I heard it doesn't have ranked match making so if I get it it would only be for the single player. Might get it if it goes on steam sale
I second the Lego games. Although the older ones (Complete Saga) & Lego Indiana Jones were annoying to play COOP because there's no split screen.
But Lego Star Wars Clonewars has split screen so you don't get in the way of each other. I haven't actually played other newer Lego games but I assume they will have split screen as well.