[-] pistapopper@lemm.ee 3 points 6 months ago

Wait till someone tells him about vanilla soy mocha... 🤯

[-] pistapopper@lemm.ee 24 points 9 months ago

One particular pain for me in VSCode is that it puts a .vscode folder in my repo, which I have to specifically exclude from git every single time. I can't expect other users of the repo to use vscode, let alone my settings synced to git. In firefox, it sometimes gets tricky finding the profile folder, as it changes across distros. Similarly, I always find it difficult searching for service files (there are at least 4 folders that I now know of). All of this searching around and doing little things used to be irritating - though you get used to it, and figure out shortcuts. TBH - windows has some of this too - I had to customise a bunch of stuff on first boot.

No clue about Nvidia - I hear they make something called GPUs but I have not been able to afford any, so can't say I relate.

[-] pistapopper@lemm.ee 2 points 11 months ago

There's this one Bluetooth speaker with a microphone that I have, that I had hoped to use for calls, that has just refused to work. Spent hours trying to get them to work but had to admit defeat. But yes, things have improved significantly.

[-] pistapopper@lemm.ee 2 points 11 months ago

Lime Survey. I needed a self hosted solution and after a long search and evaluating a lot of alternatives, finally settled on this because a lot of advanced features were needed.

Pros: all possible features that you could need and a lot more. Admin interface is very powerful. Easy to install, extend. Cons: PHP. Complicated (as it' has a lot of options). Scripting language is a pain in the butt.

[-] pistapopper@lemm.ee 16 points 1 year ago

My 2¢: Pick a free time, make a small list of tasks that you do in Windows and spend time diving into what options exist for doing that in Linux (usually there will be multiple). The aim should not be to remember how to do it (less memory used 😁) but on figuring out menu structures, terminologies, etc. While going through your lists, you'll end up familiarising yourself with (hopefully) gimp, the terminal, libreoffice, etc. You'll hopefully also develop some tricks for searching for information on stackoverflow, GitHub, or in the various forums. That should help resist the urge to just switch over to Windows, and find a solution quickly.

It will take time. Sometimes, things will just not make sense - but finding solutions to problems is (probably) what is making you interested to begin with. Don't look at it as a decision, more as a journey to start.

pistapopper

joined 1 year ago