I used it for quite a while, but with most of the Google apps. One morning RCS chat stopped working and would not reconnect, since I use RCS for texting most people I’m back on stock for now. I know it’s not graphenes fault, but I didn’t want to have to keep dealing with Google randomly disabling stuff. Up until then, everything worked as it was described
heleos
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I have not had a single issue with a right click menu or a window not remembering size or position with multi monitors on tumbleweed
You can use gconnect on gnome
heleos@lemm.eeto Linux@lemmy.ml•I've never played games. Suggest a couple of addictive games I can play on Linux3·1 year agoFalse, I have 0 issues with DRG (ryzen, 7900, tumbleweed)
heleos@lemm.eeto Linux@lemmy.ml•OpenSuse Tumbleweed: Update to KDE6 - Throws you back to login screen mid update/upgrade2·1 year agoI was on Wayland and it kicked me out to login, I tried again and it did the same thing, each time installing a couple more packages. The last time I logged into icewm and completed it and it worked fine. I did wipe out my .config folder so I could start fresh with kde6 though
heleos@lemm.eeto Linux@lemmy.ml•Where, and when, did you start using Linux? Where are you now?3·1 year agoI started with Gentoo in college back in 2004. I recently got rid of my windows partition and am rocking tumbleweed
I had heroic games launcher as a flatpak and my FPS was 33% lower than a native install of heroic
heleos@lemm.eeto Linux@lemmy.ml•I had a dream about windows and have decided to setup Linux on my laptop. What distro should I use?3·2 years agoI like bleeding edge (or leading edge as they call it), but leap is their slower release distro
heleos@lemm.eeto Linux@lemmy.ml•I had a dream about windows and have decided to setup Linux on my laptop. What distro should I use?5·2 years agoI’ve been using arch for years, but finally removed my windows install a week ago and ended up on opensuse tumbleweed. It’s rolling release like arch (so there’s never a need to reinstall or have a big update once a year) and it has some extra fail-safes for when updates go wrong (there’s an automated QA that tries to find package breaks before they’re pushed for updates, and they have a tool called snapper that let’s you revert back to a working state if you run into problems)
Will look into it, thank you!