Spectacle8011

joined 1 year ago

I approve of the BLOOD-C references. That movie had some great moments: https://files.catbox.moe/2xr0xl.webm

Yes, I like the default workflow. I always have particular applications on the same workspaces, and I close them as I need to. Sometimes I have multiple, usually a maximum of two on one workspace, because I can ALT+TAB through them. I like that the top bar is uncluttered. I don't use the dock at all, but Activity Overview is sometimes useful. I can operate the desktop completely with my keyboard. It's also very minimal without too many options, and it looks pretty. I find it very usable.

The only annoying thing was needing to manually create shortcuts inside of dconf for workspaces 5-10. I really don't know why they force you to do that...

[–] Spectacle8011@lemmy.comfysnug.space 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yay. It's fixed for my NVIDIA computer, too. All of the bizarre scaling issues and other nonsense is fixed.

  • The package manager.
  • New releases make it to the repositories quickly.
  • The software is as vanilla as possible; no changes made by the distribution except to get it working.
  • The wiki.
  • +/- No nagging graphical updater.
  • +/- Users can share build scripts for building software from source very easily
  • +/- No particular stance on free software licenses.

Oh, I didn't know that! All I've ever seen when this question gets asked in the BBS is "it'll be done when it's done :)" which is fair enough. If they're waiting for the .1 release as an indicator of stability, then that explains why it feels like a while.

[–] Spectacle8011@lemmy.comfysnug.space 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I usually don't mind when most packages get behind, but the one I always notice is GNOME. It's been taking longer than I would generally expect for Arch to ship a new major update for GNOME. Fedora seems to have more up-to-date packages in most areas and ships them vanilla like Arch, as well as coming with a host of other sane defaults, so I've been thinking of making the switch...soon.

However, there are independent engines out there. The first one that pops to mind is Gigablast, which does it’s own indexing/crawling.

Gigablast went down 2 months ago. The crawler is available as free software, though.

Mojeek's Search Engine Map gives you a good picture of the search engines out there. You can also see Seirdy's very informative post on all the different search engines out there, which is fairly regularly updated: https://seirdy.one/posts/2021/03/10/search-engines-with-own-indexes/

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