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Which USB drive brand is reliable for the linux distro?

I don’t want to be something cheap from AliExpress that can corrupt items inside of it, so any expert user of Linux distros can help me out with this question and recommend a good reliable brand of USB Flash Drive that can hold Distro without any issues since I want to test first and later buy a Sata SSD where I'll install in and use double with my windows 10 on the HDD.


I don’t want to move all the data to a cloud service and being all back later from there.

https://redd.it/1o8095q
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Is 51gb too small for my fedora root partition if I store files on another btrfs partition?

hi guys
im currently dual booting windows 11 and fedora (42 with kde plasma as its GUI)
before i installed fedora, i partitioned my 1TB D drive into 2 parts: the smaller 51gb one and the bigger 877gb one
(this was done on windows using AOMEI + windows is on a completely separate ssd)

later on i used gparted and made the bigger partition use the same file system as the fedora root partition so "btrfs" and now fedora recognizes the bigger partition and i can successfully store bigger files on that big partition

im curious on if this was a mistake or an ok move on my part since shortly after installing fedora i had some regret
was 51gb too little? its currently only using 16gb or so, i installed nvidia drivers, rpmfusion and all the codecs needed since fedora doesnt come out of the box with everything and yeah, everything works great on fedora
i only used fedora for a week, or about week and a half (and most of that time i still remained on windows since most of my stuff is there) so i dont know if this might be an issue in the future and i dont want to in the future reinstall fedora since i found no safe way of resizing the fedora partition

should i be worried about something and change things or is everything fine as is?

https://redd.it/1o81drk
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A wallpaper manager for X11 (feh) and Wayland (swww) written in rust
https://redd.it/1o84kyr
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Koncentro v1.1.0: Now with Subtasks and Minimize to Tray
https://redd.it/1o85ao8
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GRUB - boot loader

I’ve been away from Linux for a while (10+ years) and didn’t know how much I missed grub. From now on, every pc I have will have grub as default boot loader. It’s so much easier than having to remember which key to press when you want to boot into your bios - or to press any key at all, just wait for the menu to appear and then choose whatever you want. Changed my CMOS battery today and didn’t realize how much I love this little tool. Thank you once again, Linux.

https://redd.it/1o84tlm
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I feel like distro ISO sizes have bloated the last few years...why?

I started playing around with Linux in 2013, when the stock HDD on this machine crapped the bed. Win7 Pro's ISO is/was 2.7GB then, and tipped the scales pretty significantly. Nowadays that would be pretty lean - there were dozens of distros that tried to keep it under 650MB then, and did a pretty good job.

Every ISO seems to have doubled or tripled in size, especially in the last 4-5 years. What's adding the "bloat" to most of these distros (from my POV at least)? Or am I just crazy/misremembering?

https://redd.it/1o88jml
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Does the Linux kernel get bigger and bigger as more hardware support is added to it? Does that mean everyone running Linux technically has a ton of kernel code that doesn’t apply to their machine?

Pretty much noscript.

I’m just trying to understand these things a little better. Am I understanding it correctly that kernels contain a ton of drivers —> so they might have 100 drivers for different laptop speakers even though each individual user only needs 1 but they have to support everybody?

Does that imply on your machine you have a ton of unused kernel code? Or is there some process that removes the unused driver code?

It’s all so confusing to me man haha

https://redd.it/1o8aeie
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seems like the W10 EOL is actually bringing people to linux
https://redd.it/1o8edt8
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Collabora + MediaTek: Pushing boundaries on the latest IoT boards and Chromebooks

Collabora and MediaTek continue to advance upstream Linux support for the latest Genio IoT boards and Chromebook Plus laptops, enabling full hardware functionality, improved security, and broader access to the open source community.

https://www.collabora.com/news-and-blog/news-and-events/collabora-mediatek-pushing-boundaries-on-the-latest-iot-boards-and-chromebooks.html

https://redd.it/1o8frqy
@r_linux
Most people don't need a new laptop

I am currently typing from a Thinkpad T480S running Linux (KDE) and it feels fast. This is a laptop from 2018 (i5 8th gen) and was really cheap. I also use Windows 11 on my other laptop and I can say it would not run as smooth on this hardware.
Most people just use a laptop for: email, browsing, documents, presentations and music.
Linux prevents e-waste and saves money

https://redd.it/1o8ilrj
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Text Editor like Cool Retro Terminal

Hi everyone, I was wondering if there is a Text Editor for Linux that has the same charm as Cool Retro Terminal... so with a retro interface and colors (green phosphors, or amber) and a nice filter that simulates the cathode ray tube. Do you know anything?

https://redd.it/1o8g4fn
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A Crucial Time for Linux

This is my call to the entire Linux community. First some backstory. I am writing this from my Samsung NC10 with an Intel Atom N270 i686 architecture CPU and (barely) 1GB of RAM, running Debian 12 with xfce. I decided to install Linux on this machine to see if I could make use out of this old netbook, and with the end of support for Win10 I thought it would be a good idea to dabble around with Linux.

I started this project about two weeks ago. I tried to install Arch first because I wanted to be a hackerman like that. Unfortunately me being a noob probably caused the install to fail multiple times, yet I've learned a lot about partitioning and mirrors and all that fun stuff. I have since moved on to Debian which was a much more noob friendly install and it's running pretty great. I have since decided to give this laptop a musical use (which I still have to experiment with).

I have learned a lot in these two weeks and there are a few things I would like to share from a newbie perspective.

* End of native 32-bit support on Linux

Writing this post to you from a 32-bit i686 architecture machine speaks of the great versatility of GNU/Linux. I have since learned that this support will be coming to an end in the near future. I hope this will be reconsidered. The efforts put in these systems are not in vain! Keeping this support going will keep old systems like the one I'm writing from useful and thereby potentially save a lot of machines turning into E-waste (don't be like Microsoft).

* OS Exodus

With Win10 support ending and a lot of people having Microsoft fatigue there is a substantial migration to Linux. This is the time for developers of all sorts to be on top of their game. Every effort to make Linux user friendly and more compatible with crucial hardware and software has the potential to build the user base that Linux has been waiting for. When Linux will have won over a substantial user base, the "pro" creative applications (Adobe, DAW's, etc.) might follow to cater to these users. (Yet I hope that open-source alternatives will break the power of some of these companies)

* On device tutorials

The learning curve is real. Personally I enjoyed diving in deep and figuring out how to make the most of this stupendously outdated and under-powered (from the start) system. Yet whenever I would write "help' in different parts of the terminal it didn't help me much. It obviously gave me overviews of different commands and functions, yet it usually wasn't clear to me what they did. Maybe a 'tutorial' command can become a standard. Obviously I also think that graphical tutorials would be very welcome to new users that don't want to dive into the terminal. Including for the installation process.


I hope my noob insights will inspire. Thank you to those who took the time to read through the whole thing. I'm very curious about your thoughts and feedback.

https://redd.it/1o8lhsm
@r_linux
Can I use a bootable USB Linux to inspect and test a machine with no HD/SSD?

Hey friends. I've been using different flavors of Unix and Linux for over 30 years, but haven't really administered or set it up on a PC in the modern era.

I was recently gifted a fairly powerful PC, without any drive in it. I believe that I should be able to boot it from a USB stick with a simple Linux that I could use to just look around and get info about the CPU, GPU, and RAM. I'd rather do that than open the case and try to find stickers and labels on stuff.

If anyone has advice or pointers on what I'd use for this, I'd really appreciate it

https://redd.it/1o8rm4n
@r_linux
Konsole making new lines

I'm running debian (trixie) with kde plasma and wayland, I recently started using krohnkite with it cuz it looks interesting but I realize that konsole would start a new line everytime I resize using krohnkite, (I'm using ohmyzsh if that is relevant), is there any fix for this and would there be another terminal that you would recommend?

https://redd.it/1o8w7am
@r_linux
Switched to mint! (Finally)

Im proud of myself for finally plunging myself in linux mint!!! My friend helped me a shit ton on setting up and they dont seem to finished (at least not yet) but i am so grateful i switched, unfortunately no i didn't dual boot it with windows (too much bugs :( ) so im diving right in ig lol

Honestly, the main reason i switched is cuz of the EOL of win10, not being able to switch to 11 and just, the want to customize/rice my laptop so it can truly be, my own pc :3

So yeah! Uhh wish me luck? Idk man but overall hopefully my schoolwork doesn't get fucked cuz of dis

https://redd.it/1o900kl
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Could not make chicago95 work. then updated Fedora to 43, installed XFCE, and got jumpscared with chicago95
https://redd.it/1o93m3u
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Beat Saber does not recognize WiVRn OpenXR server - any fix?
https://redd.it/1o98n8d
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why is no one talking about ATL?

https://preview.redd.it/6bb5uouwaqvf1.png?width=1889&format=png&auto=webp&s=00072dd25564433f2b0e2e3b3b637e86daa9755c

I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.

It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.

The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).

Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it.
Why is no one talking about this?I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.

It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.

The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).

Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it. Why is no one talking about this?

https://redd.it/1o9bsjj
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