So anyway, any beginner tips?

  • @[email protected]
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    15 days ago

    My best advice is:

    You should never blindly copy and paste commands form the Internet into your terminal.

    But...

    If your hardware is old and proprietary (designed for Windows), you might someday need to copy and paste a command from the Internet into your terminal.

    Joking aside, the key is to try to understand what it does, first.

    And feel free to ask the community for help if you need it.

    Edit: Nevermind. Your choice of immutable distro makes it less likely you’ll need this advice. Nice.

  • ada
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    4915 days ago

    The best tip I can give you is to get rid of windows, and, well, you’ve already done that :)

  • @[email protected]
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    2015 days ago

    +1 for Bazzite! I converted last year, and have never had to go back. My tip would be to make good use of ProtonUp-QT that should have come with Bazzite by default. Use it to get Proton GE which in my experience has been the best compatibility layer for Steam games. You can also batch update with that tool so that when a new version of GE comes out, you can set games en masse to the new version.

  • @[email protected]
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    8615 days ago

    You’ve chosen an immutable distro based on rpm-ostree. If you want to install a program/application/app then flatpak is the way.
    Heroic Launcher works great for installing GOG/Epic games but if you want to install a game or other program from an offline installer then I still fall back to Lutris.

    For more in-depth read up on rpm-ostree and flatpak

    • MudMan
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      2115 days ago

      Yeeeah, for a fresh Bazzite install I’d agree that “swap Lutris for Heroic” is solid advice.

      In Bazzite flatpak is the way so much that you will open Discover and only see flatpak, so if this was really, really beginner tips I’d suggest not learning what any of that means for as long as possible and just relying on Discover for your apps until you hit a roadbump. This guy seems well informed enough that is not a problem, but hey.

      I’m also mildly annoyed that ujust is important enough to still need that terminal splash screen but not enough to be baked into the config tools by default in GUI. So weird.

      That’s either another thing you should try not to learn about if everything works fine out of the box or something you really should look into if it doesn’t, and that’s not great.

    • Cethin
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      213 days ago

      Heroic I find is great for offline installers. I actually prefer it to Lutris I think. You set up your application and it creates a prefix. Before selecting the executable you press the “run installer first” button and it runs the installer on the prefix. Once it’s done you select the executable and it’s set up and good to go.

      The Lutris method, IIRC, is you create the prefix, select the installer to run, then you modify that to target the new executable after. It’s not difficult, but the Heroic experience is slightly more streamlined I think.

    • @[email protected]
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      415 days ago

      Meh, I’ve found that Heroic works just fine for most offline installers. YMMV of course.

    • @[email protected]
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      715 days ago

      Also worth checking out all of the pre-made “ujust” recipes.

      Just type “ujust” in the terminal for a list. Tons of useful shit.

  • @[email protected]
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    15 days ago

    Use alternativeto.net … not necessarily for just Windows programs alternatives; but it is also great for looking at popular utilities for any task in Linux.

    Some programs I use a lot were not suggested anywhere else (e.g. Pluma as a basic text editor and Pinta for basic image editing).

  • @[email protected]
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    1815 days ago

    Nice! I recently tried KDE Plasma and I’ve been really impressed not just with the polish but with the look and feel that still kind of reminds me of Windows without being Windows.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      915 days ago

      I’ve seen Plasma, Xfce, and GNOME. I like the last one the most, so I’m using it on all of my systems.

    • @[email protected]
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      515 days ago

      Love me some Plasma. I’m still running the default styles after over a year as well. It’s just nice.

      I really should spend some time experimenting with customizations though

    • Cethin
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      213 days ago

      Yeah, it’s like all the good parts of the Windows UI (whichever version you like best) without the bad parts, and also customizable so you can make it work best for you, and not what some corporation decides is best this year.

  • @[email protected]
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    3415 days ago

    A lot of games are going to work without you having to do anything and some will need some tinkering. In that case, https://www.protondb.com/ will be your best friend, telling you exactly what you need to do to get things running.

    That being said, some games simply can’t be run under Linux. They might work in the future as compatibility improves but some won’t. If it’s an issue for you, you might want to dual boot windows as a workaround.

    • @[email protected]
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      2015 days ago

      Personally, I recommend quitting Windows cold-turkey and not dual-booting at all. If a game genuinely doesn’t work without dual-booting, you don’t need it. No game is so important that it’s worth compromising your security, privacy, and property rights over.

        • Cethin
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          113 days ago

          If you do then you already know that. The recommendation is still good, and I’m hoping you agree, but sometimes it doesn’t work. Cool. We don’t need to hear that every time. We know.

      • HubertManne
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        214 days ago

        Im a wuss and have an older laptop running windows for some things. Its really just me being lazy and not wanting to bother with the high hanging fruit.

      • @[email protected]
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        414 days ago

        Unfortunately some of us need windows for more than games, and there aren’t Linux alternatives

      • Cethin
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        213 days ago

        Yep, and the more people do this then the more likely it will be that games support Linux (or are at least tested to work with WINE/Proton.

    • zombie bubble kitty
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      1715 days ago

      but dont dual boot on the same drive! get a second SSD or something because windows is a big bully and always wants to screw stuff up

    • @[email protected]
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      314 days ago

      Funnily, sometimes the pirate version of a game works whilst the official one does not…

    • bigb
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      314 days ago

      If you do dual boot, turn on the BIOS password to prevent Windows from messing with your bootloader.

        • Cethin
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          113 days ago

          I’m curious why you chose Bazzite then? I’m not saying it’s the wrong choice, but it does seem like a strange choice if you’re comfortable, well unless this is for a console-like computer, not a desktop.

      • @[email protected]
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        215 days ago

        I’ve seen some folks complain about its size, but it’s like 8 or 9gb. Small price to pay if you ask me for how turnkey it is. Besides storage is cheap now.

        Especially when you consider Windows is like 20-30GB

  • @[email protected]
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    1514 days ago

    Execute “ujust” and marvel at what’s possible right out of the box. If you used KDE check out some simple tips on how to configure cool windows effects. A little wobble makes all the difference. Browse the apps you can install, there are some pretty neat things in there you probably never heard of before.

    And don’t forget: once you got the things you want working, let the system fade into the background. No need to constantly tinker with your distribution unless you enjoy it.

    • @[email protected]
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      314 days ago

      Can’t live without my magic lamp animation for minimise/maximise. Feels so out of place without it

    • @[email protected]OP
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      914 days ago

      I’m using GNOME because I like it more

      And yeah, system fading into the background is the end goal

        • Richie Rich
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          1014 days ago

          ⚔️ You just started a war. 😂 KDE > Gnome. 🤭

          I can’t get excited about the Gnome interface. It somehow works in such an unfamiliar way. What is the advantage supposed to be?

          • @[email protected]OP
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            1014 days ago

            I’ve had to use it in vocational school, and after a few months I started to like it over Windows interface. Later on I’ve touched Xfce and seen people around me use KDE, but still prefer GNOME. I’ve got no idea why.

          • dil
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            14 days ago

            gnome with arcmenu (I like windows like menu - the ads) dash to panel (place window menu at bottom alongside commonly used apps, date/time, and the control center), window thumbnails (pip any window) and a few other plugins is very nice looking imo feela like an os from the future, and its clean, stable. I got kde plasma looking pretty close to it layout wise, drag and drop was a bit more finnicky than enabling extensions and clicking through settings.

            I just overall like the look better and it feels better to use, gnome feels like modern de, you can’t just throw something together (someone who knows what they are doing coded those extensions and how it could fit within your layout, they tested it over time) while kde plasma feels like a really feature rich de from 2012, layout placement is up to you to test and figure out, idk how else to explain it in my head

          • @[email protected]
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            414 days ago

            Completely agree. I find GNOME just annoying, ugly, and in some places inconsistent.

            KDE/i3/Sway 4evarr!

        • _cryptagion [he/him]
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          414 days ago

          I agree, Gnome 2 was better. Ever since then, however, Gnome has been the worst environment available.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 days ago

          I’ve installed Fedora 42 KDE to try out Plasma 6.4 as last time I’ve used KDE it was 5.x… Anyhow, I’m back to GNOME after 2h of messing with settings unable to get desired results. And the KDE animations are just bad… Still better than Windows though.

        • @[email protected]
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          113 days ago

          I try once each year for about a month but so far I just can’t and I’m the opposite. Before the total style change it was also opposite and early kde was just kinda gross. Old gnome was my entry point with desktop environments and linux in general. When the change happened I tried literally everything else before kde because I didn’t like the older versions but eventually it came standard on a lot of distros and I just got used to it.

      • Lovable Sidekick
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        614 days ago

        I totally agree - distro hoppers who complain about the “nightmare” of finding the right distro are living in a hell of their own making.

        • Cethin
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          213 days ago

          I somewhat get it. I used Mint ages ago on a laptop I had. It was fine. Two years ago I decided to see if I could use Linux full time in my desktop, and I installed Ubuntu. It was fine. Windows decided to fuck things up and I never fully recovered the system, and decided to cut Windows out and start fresh, and I installed Fedora, and it was fine. I fucked that up somewhat while messing around and learning and heard about Garuda and tried that. I love it!

          I could have lived with any of the previous distros I tried. They did the job fine, and I didn’t think much of it. Garuda seems perfect for me though. Being Arch based is great, but it started with most of what I needed so it wasn’t the typical Arch install process (though I hear that’s better now than is memed). For someone comfortable with their computer skills, I think it’s the perfect option for gamers coming to Linux. I probably wouldn’t recommend it for someone coming from Windows who never learned computer skills, but anyone who edited registries should be able to handle it just fine.

          • Lovable Sidekick
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            212 days ago

            Almost everything is better than it’s memed. Too many people treat memes like information when they’re more like graffiti.

  • @[email protected]
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    1014 days ago

    Mess around until it breaks. It’s fun.
    Also checkout “ricing linux.” (There is a unixporn community here that can help you)

  • @[email protected]
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    715 days ago

    Less a specific linux tip but look into Ventoy, it can carry multiple bootable ISOs and its just useful (reduces the amount of ISO Sticks to 1)

    • zombie bubble kitty
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      815 days ago

      ventoy is awesome, my tip for OP is to always have a live usb in case of emergencies. you can just install ventoy onto a USB and drag and drop your bazzite ISO but having a live stick you can plug in and boot from at any moment is 100% a life saver. whether you broke something or you just wanna troubleshoot (think windows safe mode but better) you’ll be glad you kept that USB lying around :)

    • Doomerang
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      215 days ago

      i would suggest looking into alternatives to Ventoy, as the community has been actively discussing the ‘blobs’ of precompiled code. What this code does is unknown so you are trusting that there is nothing that could be harmful. I personally wouldn’t trust it until the below thread provides more clarity.

      https://github.com/ventoy/Ventoy/issues/3224

  • @[email protected]
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    214 days ago

    I did something similar a few months ago! But honestly it took me forever to pick between GNOME and KDE. Ended up going to KDE for certain things I wanted to customise.

  • @[email protected]
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    313 days ago

    ONE OF US ! ONE OF US !

    is this your production machine? If yes, dont type random commands until you know exactly what they are.

    I know it’s Linux and you can try many things as you want, but unless you are very experienced, dont do it on your main laptop.

    It is pretty difficult because you can do things like installing new enviroments or try out different hacks for free. If you really want to tinker, do it on a 2nd laptop or just in Virtual Machine.

    • @[email protected]
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      113 days ago

      As this is bazzite, an immutable distro, the neat part is: if you reach finding out phase after fucking around, simply reboot and chose the previous version during boot. Very convenient for people who like to mess around with their systems :D

  • Victor
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    214 days ago

    Curious about what you plan to play with them specs.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      314 days ago

      Runs pretty much everything in stable 60 fps, and I don’t see any difference between medium and ultra settings

      More specifically: DOTA 2, Pathfinder Kingmaker (took 4 hours to set this one up, and it’s the SECOND time), Chrono Ark, 1000x Resist, They Are Billions, Mechwarrior 5 with friends, TTRPGs in browser, and some souls-like once I’m done with one of the listed games

      • Victor
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        214 days ago

        Ah, okay. “Pretty much everything” in 60 fps at medium settings sounds reasonable.

        Not trying to hate here btw, I was just curious. 😁

  • Drunk & Root
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    113 days ago

    learn how to configure your shell now it will save you so much time and make it easier to learn if everything is already tailored to you just find documentation on your shells configuration its usually in ~/.zshrc or ~/.bashrc