Solaar seems to be for something else, but I'll try it nonetheless.
Health related:
- "Healthy food" is a grift meant to sell you shit. And by that I mean most "Healthy Foods" you find on the supermarket or are advertised as superfoods or are at the core of the latest fad diet are in fact just as trashy as any other ultraprocessed prepackaged food. Even if they are truly healthy foodstuffs, they are often something that isn't a staple of people's everyday diets (usually shit that is part of the diet in a foreign culture, but not on the West) that you get massively overcharged for because "Muh superfood".
- The real way to eat healthy is to buy fresh ingredients, cook your own meals, and inform yourself on what your body actually needs so you can be smart about what you cook... But that requires time and work investment, which most people cannot afford to do, which is why obesity is more common in poor folk than on rich folk. Have I mentioned that knowing certain stuff will make you, if not politically radicalised, very angry regardless?
Computer related:
- In windows 10 and 11 if you press Win+V instead of Ctrl+V you'll get the option to activate clipboard history. After that, you can use Win+V to get a little menu that lists things that were in your clipboard and which you replaced by copying/cutting something else. You can then choose what to paste. Linux has plenty of programs that add this functionality and was in fact there first. No idea about MacOS.
- Learning a bit of your operating system's command line interface will save you a lot of time and effort in the long run -- And you don't need to become one of those turbo-weirdos that uses nothing BUT the CLI -- But the reason the good ol' console-host/terminal-emulator has stuck around after all these years is that there is a lot of shit that is just faster and more practical to do by typing a few words vs. going through 10 different menus and tabs.
- Save yourself some money: If you're not gonna be doing hardcore state-of-the-art gaming or heavy video editing or some other intense task, a middle-of-the-road computer from ten years ago with some light upgrades will carry you just fine. Get a used PC, get a decent quality SATA SSD and some extra sticks of RAM (8 minimum, ideally 16 or more) and you'll be all set for everyday internet browsing and office tasks and shit. Heck, slap in a GPU later and you can get away with playing a lot of games, if not with DigitalFoundry tier performance.
Well my PC is dual-booted with Windows (I have to, for work reasons, my job pretty much requires the Adobe suite, though as another plus, having to reboot to a different environment where I have none of my games and shit does help my brain change gears from "fun time" to "work time") -- So right now (which is work hours) I have set things up on G Hub and saved it to the mouse's internal memory. I'll reboot into Linux later today and see if that made any difference whatsoever.
EDIT: It woooooorked! :D
It does not, because this button, like every OTHER button in the mouse, is configurable.
So if you don't want to change DPI at all for your gaming/work flow -- You can just give yourself extra buttons.
On Windows to get any functionality out of a Logitech Mouse's extra buttons you gotta get Logi's proprietary programme. On Linux, Piper/Ratbag does a great job, but I just couldn't find this specific mapping (and additionally when I first plugged in the mouse, meaning it'd be on factory settings, the DPI shift button wasn't doing anything) and that's why I'm wondering if it's unsupported.
Shit, I pick up stupid phrases "ironically" with such frequency it is not even a joke.
'wack', 'pog', 'bussy'...
Arch-based distro here, a lot of shit from AUR and such and it autoupdates from my package manager/aur helper.
The 2 or 3 flatpaks I installed I have to manually update... But to be honest I'm fairly sure that there's some config or change I could make to yay
that would make it update flatpaks too. And even if not... Well. I could do what the (as of now) top comment said and make a lil' script. Though running two commands is really not a huge sacrifice :P
Also back when I used Debian, apt had some hook in it that would update Flatpaks there too.
No Appimages for me though. Don't care for the entire format.
Anyhow to me the killer feature of Linux was never the package manager so much as it was how much liberty it gives me to customize everything. Flatpaks and such are just another aspect of that.
I'll do literally whatever if it can be a 4 day work week and support my life. Mines? Factory? Literally swimming in shit? I don't care
I work to live, I don't live to work. I don't need my job to be "fulfilling". It just needs to pay for my fucking needs
Then in the off hours I can do fun nonsense like draw furry dicks or whatever. Hopefully without having to turn that too into a job.
Unreal for "commercial, highly documented, also an industry standard"
Godot for "this is actually libre software and you can trust it to not enshittify itself in a couple years"
Yeah, NVidia+Linux means some jankiness.
NVidia+Linux+Wayland and at that point you're just engaging in self-flagellation.
Liking the fullscreen app search thingamafuck is your prerogative even if I feel this kind of UX is only at home on a mobile phone (also I'm fairly sure Plasma can also do that with some fennagling--)
The thing people (me included) detest about GNOME has very little to do with that anyway, peeps don't like how locked down it is and how it refuses to support certain features thought to be 'basic', so you have to use extensions.... Which can be janky on occasion -- And definitely will get abandoned by their creators and disabled when you upgrade GNOME version.
GNOME bad
Plasma good
XFCE better
The lack of love for Hydroelectric makes me sad
Hydroelectric power is the backbone of electricity here in Brazil :P