Well, I certainly agree that Markdown is a lot more popular. I just wanted to hear your opinion on it.
theshatterstone54
Why not just use org mode if you're doing literate programming? Have you considered it?
omz is bloat and slows fown your shell a lot. Just do this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21_WkzBErQk
And I'd recommend starship for a custom prompt, it's really good: https://starship.rs
Edit: For other ZSH nice-to-haves: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLEo4OQ-cuQ
I think you can run paru without sudo and it should still do privilege escalation no problem
It's been abandoned btw. People recommend to switch to alternatives. Fastfetch and hyfetch seem to be the best ones rn.
Though I can't confirm as I wrote my own minimal fetch
Isn't that what Explicit Sync was trying to solve? Check your Nvidia driver version, as well as your KDE Plasma version and see if they both support Explicit Sync.
I've said it before, I'll say it again. Snap slowdowns have been supposedly fixed, but the only snap that updated their packaging to apply the fix was Mozilla's Firefox (from what I've heard).
And there is a way to create a custom store other than Canonical's (but it's obscure and hidden, so I bet nobody would bother).
And snaps have better support for cli programs.
If snaps were as good as flatpaks (which I don't think they are yet), and they were not made by Canonical (got them some extra bad rep), they could have been the dominant packaging platform. The issue is that their reputation precedes them. I don't think Canonical can ever fix that.
TLDR: Snaps are not as bad as people make them out to be (anymore). It's just that their reputation precedes them, and some of the solutions are there but are not in use.
I've been trying the same with Bazzite and ublue. Also gave it 2 days, and then left it as well, right before doing that with NixOS.
Personally, I use cal
all the time.
Exactly. And here I am, after 2 days of trying to bend NixOS to my will, and I gave up. Tomorrow, I'm going back to Fedora, where everything worked perfectly, because I fell for "Shiny thing sindrome", or the "grass is greener on the other side" stuff. Should have never doubted it. After 2 years of full time Linux and a lot of distrohopping, one would think I'd have known better.
Makes sense. Ubuntu just works and is popular. Debian is the same, some people are just more conservative.
Trust me, it's noticeable. Or at least it was for me. Numbers wise, it doesn't sound like much, but the difference between 0.05s and 0.5s (which are roughly the times I was experiencing) is very noticeable, at least for me. One is done before you've even fully lifted the finger off the key, while with the other you're preparing to press (or maybe you're already pressing pressing) the next key, by the time you see a reaction.
Your mileage may vary.