Once Windows got rid of the gorgeous Aero theme starting in Windows 8, plus the shitty UI/UX that Windows got again starting in Windows 8, pushed me to Linux.
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Honestly because it’s quite customizable, that’s about it. Being able to customize my software to look and work the way I want them to is a big reason why I use certain programs over others.
EndeavourOS as the distro of choice for easy installation and AUR access.
Depending on the DE, if it’s not MATE, I almost always install Caja, Engrampa, and MATE Calculator since they just have the most sane look and UX to them for my use cases.
- Waterfox as my browser of choice (reason over Firefox is that it offers tabs below address bar as an option in Preferences rather than mucking about in userChrome.css files that often break on updates)
- Vivaldi as a secondary browser for websites that only render right in Chromium
- Kitty as my terminal of choice.
- Clementine as my music player of choice
- yt-dlp for downloading Youtube videos as mp3s
- htop over top, also have gotop for a more graphical look
- exa over ls
MATE as is or Xfce with some MATE software (swapping Thunar for Caja, swapping the XFCE calculator program for MATE’s calculator, using Engrampa instead of whatever Xfce uses for a file archive manager, etc.). I like things simple and following roughly the same paradigm that I’ve used for years.
And for the love of god, PLEASE KEEP MENU BARS AS THEY WERE IN THE PAST! Stop removing menu bars from programs in favor of “hamburger buttons” or whatever nonsense modern programs like to use! That’s honestly one of my biggest gripes with “modern” software, they keep changing the paradigm to something that I haven’t used and I can’t be bothered to relearn everything.
Vorthas@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Most of us hate Microsoft, and yet many of us use VSCodeEnglish
42·2 年前I disagree. I actually like the LibreOffice, non-tabbed, UI. It’s a UI/UX that I’m used to from Office 2003 and honestly prefer. The 2007+ ribbon interface makes things harder for me to find.
Vorthas@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.ml•Microsoft might want to be making Windows 12 a subscription OS, suggests leakEnglish
51·2 年前Anything after 7 is bad in my eyes. I HATE the direction Windows went with the UI style, doing away with the Vista and 7 Aero look. Plus Windows 10 drives me up the wall trying to find the proper settings (is it Settings or Control Panel? Why do we have both?!).
Vorthas@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Ask Lemmy: Traditional vs natural mouse scrolling; which do you use?English
7·2 年前Traditional for everything. Scrolling down means the view goes down. The mouse controls the camera (the reason why I always invert Y axis on controllers).
Been using kitty for a while now, though honestly any terminal emulator works for me.
X11. It just works for me, no reason to switch. Plus I exclusively use Xfce or MATE which as far as I know do not have Wayland support.
Nope, never learned. I’m 31 in the US. Never had the need to learn as I was raised with automatics only.
Vorthas@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.ml•ARMORED CORE VI FIRES OF RUBICON runs well on Steam Deck and desktop LinuxEnglish
1·2 年前Plays somewhat well, but I get an amdgpu gfx_timeout crash within seconds of starting the Baltheus fight. This is apparently a known issue with the game itself (something about shaders not being calculated properly, which given the boss has a ton of particle effects, makes sense) so I’ll have to wait til that gets fixed. https://github.com/ValveSoftware/Proton/issues/7045#issuecomment-1693816570
Apparently there’s been a patch made here: https://github.com/ValveSoftware/Proton/issues/7045#issuecomment-1697542953 so I’ll try that out.
That’s why you install an adblocker like uBlock Origin in Firefox. The browser isn’t responsible for blocking ads, that’s what add-ons are for.
The Caja file manager. Hell the MATE desktop environment in general is just perfect for me. Xfce is acceptable too, though the inclusion of CSD in recent Xfce releases has made me a bit more wary of it when it comes to theming.
I also use Waterfox as my browser. A Firefox fork that has the option to put tabs below address bar (where they belong imo) out of the box without needing to muck around with the userChrome.css file.
Vorthas@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Is there really no viable alternative for Photoshop on Linux?English
4·2 年前This exists, but it has the downside of being a web app rather than a native application. Can’t use it offline for instance.
It’s just what I grew up with and am used to mainly, plus it’s a shorter mouse distance to reach the tabs from the content than having it at the top. And before you mention Fitt’s Law, I have my taskbar on top so that law doesn’t apply to me for tabs anyways.
Vorthas@lemmy.mlto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What operating system do you use on your main computer?English
4·2 年前EndeavourOS on my desktop and Pop!_OS on my laptop (it’s a System76 laptop).
Nope, the bottom right quadrant is the acceptable one. Z is up and follows the right-hand rule. I will die on this hill.
Xfce overall, but I like MATE a lot as well. Just give me a traditional desktop experience, I don’t need mobile-like options on a desktop.
I actually switched to MATE primarily because I like its suite of software a bit more (calculator, file manager, file archiver) than Xfce’s, though I use some of MATE’s stuff (Caja mainly) on Xfce on my laptop.
Tabs belong below the address bar on a browser, not above. Also the menu bar should always be a thing and there should be a title bar as well, not merging the two or three (including tabs) into one single bar.




Dreamberd starts array indexing at -1 instead of 0 or 1.
https://github.com/TodePond/DreamBerd