same here, I can't justify upgrading for a few more years, but definitely planning on framework for my next laptop, what they're doing is really cool
Techies enthusiastically recommended chrome because it was by far the most stable and responsive and secure browser. Prior to quantum, firefox was a dog, and let's not talk about internet explorer...
ah yes, the most perfect thing to ever exist: https://i.imgur.com/X5BzWQj.jpg there's plenty of things I don't like in newer windows versions, but the introduction of compositing is not one of them
Near perfect gestures integration, and the touchpad behaves very consistently and reliably system wide (osx has system wide smooth/responsive scrolling for example), and the touchpad hardware itself is just very nice…
Gonna have to agree with you, I used desktop linux for years (even on one system76 laptop that had ubuntu pre-installed), and it felt like I was spending more time reporting bugs, working around bugs, and distro-hopping…
The one area where apple really exels though, in both hardware and software is the touchpad. I cannot stand using the touchpad on any windows laptop I used, the touchpad is 99% the reason I still use a mac/osx.
XFCE is definitely still a lot lighter weight than gnome or KDE. I think its continuing to fit its niche well, something between the main DE's (gnome/kde/unity) and lighter stuff like lxde
How so? I've found steam is by far the best digital distribution client when it comes to managing my game library, mainly because of the 'steam libraries' feature that lets you create a steam library on any hard drive…
same here, I can't justify upgrading for a few more years, but definitely planning on framework for my next laptop, what they're doing is really cool
Techies enthusiastically recommended chrome because it was by far the most stable and responsive and secure browser. Prior to quantum, firefox was a dog, and let's not talk about internet explorer...
ah yes, the most perfect thing to ever exist: https://i.imgur.com/X5BzWQj.jpg there's plenty of things I don't like in newer windows versions, but the introduction of compositing is not one of them
Near perfect gestures integration, and the touchpad behaves very consistently and reliably system wide (osx has system wide smooth/responsive scrolling for example), and the touchpad hardware itself is just very nice…
Gonna have to agree with you, I used desktop linux for years (even on one system76 laptop that had ubuntu pre-installed), and it felt like I was spending more time reporting bugs, working around bugs, and distro-hopping…
The one area where apple really exels though, in both hardware and software is the touchpad. I cannot stand using the touchpad on any windows laptop I used, the touchpad is 99% the reason I still use a mac/osx.
XFCE is definitely still a lot lighter weight than gnome or KDE. I think its continuing to fit its niche well, something between the main DE's (gnome/kde/unity) and lighter stuff like lxde
How so? I've found steam is by far the best digital distribution client when it comes to managing my game library, mainly because of the 'steam libraries' feature that lets you create a steam library on any hard drive…