ipacialsection

joined 1 year ago
[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 2 points 10 months ago

Kaya turned away from the scene, focusing on a distressed Kellan. “Nothing ever really changes, does it?” she asked. “It puts on a new coat and calls itself remade, but it’s all the same under the surface.”

Ravnica Remastered comes out next week. I am very funny.

I got the jab when I first read the story, but did not think it was intentional. Nice one.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 1 points 10 months ago

Looking online, there are some suggestions to either (re)install xapp:

sudo apt install --reinstall xapp

or a related library:

sudo apt install --reinstall gir1.2-xapp-1.0

However, usually I find that errors like this mean nothing, so I wouldn't be surprised if these steps change nothing.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 2 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Definitely flatpak related then. Try running one of your flatpak apps from the terminal, and post the output here; might help pinpoint the issue. You can list the ones you have installed with flatpak list, then flatpak run <one of the listed apps, e.g. org.videolan.vlc>.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 2 points 10 months ago

/dev/nvme0 is probably your SSD. But if it passed you probably have nothing to worry about

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 10 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (16 children)

It still sounds to me like something's up with the disk. Can't think of any solutions to suggest but I would run a SMART health check on it:

sudo apt install smartmontools  
sudo smartctl -a /dev/sda

If you prefer a graphical tool, you can do the same thing with GNOME Disks, which also has options for disk benchmarking.

In the resulting report, the overall health state should be "PASSED", the "Type" column should show "Pre-fail" and "Old age" values, and the "Media-Wearout-Indicator" should be close to 100. If the overall health state is "FAILED", then you will want to back up your files immediately and consider getting a new SSD.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 51 points 10 months ago (2 children)

GNOME and Plasma are so far separated that a merger would be impossible, without either eliminating one of the two or completely rewriting both, and I think they cover different niches. GNOME is for people who want a tightly integrated experience, and KDE is for people who want to customize their system. (I would also argue that it's not possible for there to be only one distro or DE, so long as all the components are open-source. Savvy users will always make their own stuff if they're allowed to.)

There's already plenty of cooperation between GNOME and KDE devs on common standards, support for each other's apps, etc. I hope this continues, and makes both desktops better. A lot of behind-the-scenes stuff, like Wayland extensions, could definitely become shared between the two desktops.

I suspect Plasma 6 will remove it. Though I'm liking this desktop setup so much I might just keep it for the rest of Debian Bookworm's lifespan.

This is nice but there are already tons of "how/why to start using Linux" websites. Not sure if we need another one.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You can start anywhere you want! I often recommend starting with Star Trek: The Next Generation, since it's aged a little better than the original series. You might prefer to jump ahead to season 2 or 3 to get to the really good stuff, but even season 1 is worth watching.

Up until Enterprise season 3 it's pretty much all episodic (or in DS9's case, mostly episodic with a subset of the episodes forming a series-long story arc), so you can pick a random episode or movie with a cool-sounding description and start there if you want. That's how I got into Trek, just picking random TNG and Voyager episodes.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (7 children)

Whenever you install or remove software, be sure to read through what's being removed. You don't want to accidentally uninstall something important. This is very unlikely to happen with official Debian packages, but you should be especially careful when installing packages outside of Debian's repo, as they may not be fully compatible with your version of Debian.

In any case, I'd log in to a tty (ctrl-alt-any function key) and install whichever desktop environment you had before using apt.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Debian 12 ships with the non-free-firmware repo enabled by default, including firmware-iwlwifi, but a few Broadcom cards, and maybe others, still require software in non-free if I recall correctly

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