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Joined 5 months ago
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Cake day: June 29th, 2025

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  • It is out of the box. Meta + Arrow Keys and/OR Meta + PgUp.

    Ah, OK, nice! I didn’t see it as it’s not available via mouse, but found all those threads saying it doesn’t exist. Good to know!

    Confirmed works by FarrellPerks@feddit.uk in above comments

    Doesn’t work on Garuda (Arch-based) with KDE.

    Or rather: it used to work, but then just stopped.

    I don’t know about desktop towers, for laptop it is always only one instance — my laptop display, monitor is dark before I hit enter

    Interesting! On my laptop I also had two instances of SDDM.

    same happens on KDE Plasma.

    Not where I’m sitting. Tested via cat accidentally turning a monitor off. The browser window just stayed on that screen - the process was there, but the application was not available.


  • Stability? Update management? Window tiling? What? Linux does have all of these things.

    No.

    In fact Linux is way more stable than Windows

    I install Windows and forget about it. I install Linux and have to do all this, and then it still might do this or this.

    Mind you, it does depend on the distro

    Agreed.

    and the amount of stability you want

    I want all the stability.

    but I have been running Debian servers for years and I hardly run into problems.

    Not talking about servers.

    But even then - at my last job we finally killed off a Windows Server that had an uptime of over 1000 days, just chugging along like a little trooper. At my previous-previous job I was responsible for the WinServer updates, every single one of them was getting monthly updates and reboots, didn’t have a single issue in 7 years. It was just shy of 100 servers.

    The only thing windows offers over Linux is gaming and a better UI. Even both of those are dwindling away. I hate the new windows 11 UI and most games work on Linux unless you require a rootkit for some anti cheat software.

    Agreed. I have Garuda Linux installed on my gaming PC and only had minor issues with three titles. It’s surprisingly frictionless.


  • Especially when you’re on Arch with KDE, you don’t have:

    1. good update management
    2. window tiling
    3. saving window positions

    I know because I’m on Arch with KDE.

    By “good update management” I mean what MS does - all updates are pushed once a month, on Patch Tuesday (second Tuesday of the month). You can put it in your calendar and plan for a necessary reboot.

    I know Arch is a rolling release so it doesn’t have that on purpose, but it’s not much better with Ubuntu - I was getting updates every couple of days, once a week at best.

    Window tiling doesn’t exist “out of the box”, you need third party software (which, apparently still doesn’t give you what Windows has out of the box) or a switch from KDE to COSMIC, which still doesn’t give you the freedom of choice that Windows has (it’s either “everything is tiled” or “nothing is tiled”).

    Saving window positions (on Wayland) is the most confusing one, because it seems like the one that’d be the easiest to implement, but KDE devs just flat out refuse to do it. I hear that it works on X11.

    Multi-monitor support is piss poor. If I spread my windows across multiple monitors and then turn one monitor off, those windows are no longer accessible. SDDM displays the same interface on each monitor, and each is a separate instance of SDDM - meaning, you can type in your password on monitor 2, and if you press “OK” on monitor 1, it will fail, because the password field is empty. It’s just silly design. On Windows, if you disconnect an extra screen, all the content gets dropped on the main screen. Since Windows 11, if you then re-connect the screen, all windows will pop back into their places before the disconnect happened.







  • It’s not “bollocks”, it’s a fact. Lots of businesses that go cloud replace API calls with external apps. People used to do human resources management via Excel and Outlook with macros and plugins, now they use BambooHR or Workday, for instance.

    Of course there will also be lots of businesses that don’t, but I haven’t seen that in the last 13 years of working in the field. And in that time I went through companies as small as 200 users to as large as 180 000 users.

    That is being cut off in an anticompetitive move by Microsoft

    Agreed. Kinda. Email should be email, nothing else. It’s not secure enough for anything else. If you want fancy features, get a fancy app that can do them, maybe have it send notifications to your mailbox, that’s it.

    It allows for information management and automation to be verified by people with simplicity and a familiar UX

    With this I don’t agree. Again, email is email - third party (or custom) software can do these things infinitely better. As for “familiar UX” - come on, it’s 2025. If someone can’t handle a new UI/UX, they shouldn’t be doing office work.




  • Right, you only said it was “idiotic” to claim that any military was anything but moral

    Umm… Can you not read? Like, do you actually just see the letters and then just assume something about what they mean?

    Spend a month helping out with natural disasters, but then you go and murder one bunch of kids and everybody just remembers you as a child-murderer

    Yes, because that’s exclusively what soldiers do when on deployments. They literally only shoot children.

    EOT on my end. You’re just shouting naive platitudes from an imagined moral high ground, when in reality you’re just ignorant. No point continuing this thread.