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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 7th, 2023

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  • I wonder if it was an edge case that the Linux driver didn’t account for, like a minor incompatibility between the two devices.

    You’ve just reminded me that I had a Bluetooth problem with my laptop a few years ago. My headset would connect and work properly, but wouldn’t be recognised after the laptop had either been to sleep or shut down. I had to go through the bluetooth device folder, something like /dev/bluetooth/, find the folder that corresponded with the headset’s address, and delete the cache folder inside. It would then work until the next sleep / shut down.

    I expected problems with the Pi because USB wifi has always seemed to be a bit dodgy, even on Windows, and wifi is apparently still a problem area with Linux. Add to that the Pi’s limited distro, and I thought it was bound to go wrong.







  • Yes and no. There are the type of people who will go ‘Aaarghh! I can’t open my Microsoft Edge through Microsoft Cortana to use Microsoft Bing! Linux sucks!!!1!!’, but there are also things in Linux that are frustrating.

    The biggest annoyance to me is how small the border around windows is. On Windows, I can grab anywhere around the edge of a window and resize it, including in both directions from the corners. In Linux, I need an electron microscope to find the edges, and the hand of god to find a corner.

    If I want to paste something in Windows, it’s ctrl v. If I want to paste in Linux, it’s ctrl v. Unless it’s the terminal, which is shift, ctrl v. Or edge cases where it’s shift and insert.

    They don’t tend to be major problems, but they break your workflow, and that makes them feel a lot worse.


  • This exact thing actually was user error. I mean, I like my people Linus, Luke, Emily and the others like every other average tech person… But when Steam is the absolute first thing you go for after installing your OS, then, sorry, but then you have only yourself to blame.

    Your exact words, taken from your post. You literally said that he has only himself to blame.


  • Because it’s not a habit. It’s a deliberate choice to pick up their instrument and play. Every time.

    Muscle memory helps, because that seems to be separate from forming habits. Once you’ve got it, it seems to stick.

    I was in a band in my late teens, and I had to force myself to practice if I was alone. Practicing with the band was much easier because it was something that I really enjoyed, but even then, I’d almost always be late, or have to be reminded to go.

    This was something that I loved to do, but still really struggled with. As soon as something else came along that was a bigger distraction, the band was done.


  • That sounds more like the muscle memory isn’t there yet. I can play a few instruments (badly), but it’s because I really wanted to do it when I was younger, and developed the muscle memory.

    I haven’t played properly for a few years, so now I’m back to a similar place to you, and have to think about what I’m doing again.

    What I’ve been finding helpful is making a playlist of the songs I want to learn, or to play again, and putting it on nice and loud. It makes me want to play along, and seems to let me concentrate on the songs.

    Good luck :)






  • They’re for me to test. I’ve got an SSD in a USB3.2 enclosure, so the live ISOs run fast enough that there’s no noticeable difference to an installation on my main PC.

    I’ve been using Xubuntu on my server for years, and Mint on my laptop for the last few years, and have been trying to switch to Mint on my PC, so I thought it’s about time to try some other distros before I fully commit.

    I’ve got all the main distros, so will be distro hopping for a while to see how I get on, and if any of them jump out at me. I’ve always used Debian based distros, so I can see me sticking with one, but I’ve added the others to see if they’ve changed much in the last 20 years, and if I like the way they do things :)




  • I’m actively trying to switch to Linux, so it’s not from a lack of effort.

    The main two reasons are Photoshop and scanning. I’m a photographer, and I’m scanning and restoring old photos of the family. There’s no decent alternative to Photoshop, especially now that it has the neural filters, so editing and colouring photos is in a different league.

    As far as scanning goes, I was getting better results in Windows 20 years ago. I’ve got an Epson scanner, and the software can automatically crop, as well as restore the colour balance of a photo. Using Linux, I was lucky to get more than a dodgy .bmp through an interface that would have looked clunky in the 90s. I could open it in GIMP, but then couldn’t save as a jpeg without either exporting the file or installing addons.

    On top of problems like these, there are issues that crop up because of an apparent need to be different to Windows.

    My Xubuntu server won’t let me resize windows unless I grab the top left corner. Any other edge of the window is apparently half a pixel thick, and too small for my mouse to register.

    Smooth scrolling by clicking the mouse wheel has been replaced with the paste command, as if pasting into a browser window is something that people do dozens of times a day.

    Mint’s settings window constantly resizes itself, no matter what I set it to. I can resize it, open a setting then click back, and it’s back to the default size again!

    The universal paste keyboard shortcut, ctrl & v only works in some programs. Others need shift, ctrl, and v!

    Silly little things like this spoil my workflow and take me out of what I’m doing. They’re the minor annoyances that frustrate people and encourage them to switch back to Windows. Yes, they can probably be changed, but why were they changed in the first place? I could paste with ctrl v in DOS 6.22 and could trust a window not to resize itself in Windows 3.1, long before any modern distro was dreamed up, so why are the basics different?