Fedora 38 reached end of support in May. So even if you could find an ISO of it, it is not supported at all anymore.
Linux enthusiast, family man and nerd
Fedora 38 reached end of support in May. So even if you could find an ISO of it, it is not supported at all anymore.
ETA: how do I install rpm fusion repos on debian? I only found instructions for fedora and rhel https://rpmfusion.org/Configuration
You don’t. rpmfusion is a repo for rpm based distributions. Debian is not rpm based, but deb based. There might be PPA’s for Debian instead.
I’ve used btrfs-autosnap for a while on Arch and it’s brilliant. Whenever you install or remove something with pacman it creates a btrfs snapshot of your subvolumes and if you have grub-btrfs install too they get added to Grub menu. Very handy.
You can define which subvolumes you want snapshotted and how many snapshots of each you want to keep. Which means it also removes the oldest snapshot when a new is created if it gets over the keep amount.
I think there are som non-free firmware stuff included in most distros.
My wife uses Linux and barely touches the CLI. And when she does, she is only running 1 or 2 specific commands I found for her, that are tied to her needs. But, her main computing device is her phone, so the laptop only gets use a couple of times a month.
Windows (up until windows 8 came out) -> Ubuntu for about a year -> Manjaro for about 6 years -> Arch so far for 2 years.
I’ve heard good things about RustDesk. Very similar to TeamViewer.
It’s a good way of solving it. It’s not scriptable though as it requires user-input.
My priority is: Official repo, AUR then Flatpak.
No matter what license it is. Although, if I need microsoft stuff I usually go flatpak there, so it’s sealed off.
Nonfree software does not have the ability to be rebuilt on each update anyway, since it’s distributed as pre-built binaries. So they won’t build anyway.
I tend to use AUR packages where possible if the package is not in the official repos. Only if the AUR package is broken do I turn to flatpaks.
I get the joke, but it is kind of a phishing attempt.
DD is the best for 1-1 copying, but I like to use CloneZilla, because it can compress and encrypt the images.
Can you replicate it? If you can, you can create a bug report. If not, it’s probably a one-time thing where the stars alligned and the conditions where just right for it to happen.
I hardly change anything in Plasma. In my experience Plasma 6 is about as stable as Plasma 5.27 is/was. I rarely see a crash, freeze or inconsistancy I didn’t cause myself.
Again, that’s a packaging issue, as the maintainer did not rebuild yum/dnf for against the new python. Aside from rebuilding those packages manually, the user can’t fix that either.
Having a release party 4 weeks after the release is weird…
Yes, but if it’s a broken package it’s usually something wrong in the packaging done by the distribution or the user did something they shouldn’t be doing. I have never seen a package break without me doing something to break it.
Like Wayland? /sarcasm
Why are everyone suddenly aware that Neochat is unmaintained. I mean, the last commit was 3 years ago and the last release alsmost 4 years ago. Just because the git repository got archived on a date does not mean that it was maintained up to that point.
As it’s running Ubuntu you could provide your IT department with the logs from the crashes, so they can see there is a problem.
If they provided the Ubuntu install it’s their job to support it.