They serve two different purposes - Gimp for image editing, Inkscape for vector graphics.
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Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Your phone isn’t secretly listening to you, but the truth is more disturbingEnglish1·5 days agoI have a Google Pixel with Graphene OS and I only install bare minimum of apps on it. I’ve never used Temu and don’t have an account. So not asking for myself 🙂 But I know many family members who have the most frustratingly ad ridden, notification nagging and invasive apps known to humankind - was asking to help them debloat, improve their privacy and free up some of their time and sanity.
It’s a shame there’s no list of those thousands of apps that take screenshots. While its not all apps, it would have still been a handy reference.
This discussion may be helpful to you: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=296931
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Do I need to update Windows 11 on a Windows / Linux Mint dual boot system?English5·6 days agoOr just ditch the Windows partition/drive and use a VM instead.
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Your phone isn’t secretly listening to you, but the truth is more disturbingEnglish5·6 days agoDo you know where in Exodus you can see if an app takes screenshots? Looking through the permissions of two of the most invasive apps I could think of off the top of my head (Facebook, Google, Temu, Instagram, some popular mobile games) I couldn’t find any permissions specifically related to screenshot. If most apps tested are taking screenshots, I would have thought it would be easy to see :/
Thunderbird is independently developed from Mozilla and has been since 2020. It’s driven by the Thunderbird Council which is community elected. Its only link now with Mozilla Foundation is that it’s a financial subsidiary. But as others say, there’s also Betterbird if one still fanatically hates Mozilla.
Betterbird
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Bring Affinity Suite to Linux Sign the PetitionEnglish3·7 days agoI’ve also seen Serif saying that they won’t. It was someone else that linked it. I have tried to find the link again but could not and I’m too tired and sick to keep looking. The TL;DR was that they tend to be good at stringing people along but they’ve definitively said its not on their roadmap, won’t be added and supporting Affinity on Linux would be too expensive/difficult.
Canva has little financial reason to invest in Linux users either.
Enshittification also adds to making it incredibly unlikely.
People have been begging Adobe to port to Linux or at least make their products work with WINE for more than a decade now to no avail and Adobe, unlike Serif, has the budget to do so.
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Bring Affinity Suite to Linux Sign the PetitionEnglish132·7 days agoIts moot because Affinity have already said they will not, not ever.
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•What was your first Linux distribution?English2·7 days agoMy monitor is visible to a public footpath and I honestly am waiting for the day that I get a knock on the door from the cops because Jo Public saw me do a system update
sudo pacman -Syu 💀
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•What was your first Linux distribution?English3·7 days agoThis was very similar to the box I had but in my case it was mostly white. And the manual was waaaay bigger. Like almost the size of a phone book. I bought mine in 1999 too. Installed from CD. I bought mine for $110 from a stationary shop (since I lived in a student flat and my flatmates would have probably murdered me if I’d downloaded it over dial up that also had a monthly download limit). Good times lol.
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•What kind of mindset do you need to be succesful starting and continuing to use Linux.English2·7 days agoPersistence, willingness to learn or open curiosity, and responsibility.
Persistence because sometimes when learning things, you’ll run into problems and will need persistence yo overcome them.
Willingness to learn or open curiosity because otherwise you’re in a rut and inflexible which makes learning differences between Win/Mac and Linux almost impossible or at least much harder.
Responsibility because you are in charge of your system and your laptop/pc. You need to take responsibility for learning how to do things, solving problems, doing updates, etc.
Sadly, these days people lack most of these qualities. So many people want things handed to them on a silver platter or to have their hands held and told exactly how yo do something instead of working it out for themselves. And people don’t want responsibility - they want someone else to be responsible, someone else to blame and someone else to do the thinking.
A lot of Linux adoption won’t change until there’s also a culture shift :/
I have been an Arch user for a decade. This year I switched to CachyOS to give it a go. Performance (for me at least) has indeed improved but its not a massive jump.
I don’t find it particularly ‘bloated’. There wasn’t much I had to uninstall after installation and the installer gives you the option to deselect packages. List of packages here: https://github.com/CachyOS/cachyos-calamares/blob/cachyos-systemd-qt6/src/modules/netinstall/netinstall.yaml
Its also not as simple as many people claim to switch to CachyOS just by changing repos. CachyOS also has some of its own configs that would also need to be imported. I found it was easier just to install Cachy and remove unwanted packahes than switch repos on my Arch install and fiddle around with a bunch of configs and change some packages and settings.
So far I have found CachyOS a little more buggy than my install of Arch. But not so much that I want to switch back. So far the slight performance increases are keeping it worth it.
If, gods forbid, CachyOS ever stopped being maintained, it will be easy to switch back to vanilla Arch.
What would you recommend then?
Default but In use fstab to keep my home folders (Documents, Pictures, Music, Video) on a separate HDD.
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Atomic Linux Distros: What Barriers Stand Between You and Making the Switch?English31·10 days agoDoesn’t mean you have to repeat it 🙂
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Atomic Linux Distros: What Barriers Stand Between You and Making the Switch?English1·11 days agoThis is my usecase too. I don’t personally feel any need for an immutable, but for family that regularly jams up their systems, bit makes sense. Unfortunately when I tried Aurora, it just wouldn’t boot no matter what. No idea why. Mint on the other hand just worked. Hopefully Aurora will get developed more and just work also because I would love to use it for family.
Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•Atomic Linux Distros: What Barriers Stand Between You and Making the Switch?English81·11 days agoUpvoting but please stop using the term “bricking” this way. Bricking is permanent and there is no recovery. You have turned your device into a useless brick.
Its not just about us using Linux though - it’s also users on the other end that were interacting with. If I handle sensitive information, use encryption and disappearing messages and what have you, that doesn’t mean squat if I have to send some sensitive information to someone using insecure email and Recall. Microsoft, Google and whatever other gods awful privacy invading service and companies the person on the other end now have that data.
And a lot of people just don’t even think about this stuff. They could be the type of person who will promise yo keep your secrets or sensitive stuff and actually do that, but keeping that away from privacy invading companies isn’t even on their radar.