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Cake day: December 20th, 2025

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  • Neon doesn’t force you to actually update the ubuntu it’s built on unless you manually do it iirc. Update your shit and report back.

    Once you decide not to try that, top, btop atop or htop can tell you the amount of ram you’re using. They will all also tell you how your disk writes are doing.

    It doesn’t sound like you have a ram issue, it sounds like you have a disk issue. First and foremost, once you’ve verified that you have plenty of memory available using a tool described above, expand your windows vm to 8gb. Windows would aggressively page if it had only 4gb and windows in a vm will also aggressively page when it only has 4gb, except it has to go through kvm to access those qcows.

    It sounds like you have way too many tabs open. Close some and see if that helps you out. You can highlight a bunch of them by selecting one and ctrl-shift clicking on another one to get every tab in between. Right click and add to bookmarks then close them.

    Next, use spinrite with I think a level 3 scan on all your nvme drives. It shaves a write cycle off the top (you have hundreds of thousands at the very least) but in return makes everything fast again. Flash memory becomes less responsive as read cycles on a block pile up until it’s rewritten.



  • Is this hard to find because it’s something that people who don’t know what they’re doing shouldn’t mess with? Am i just looking in the wrong places, or for the wrong thing?

    Yes! Third party repositories are a good choice when they add specific software not present in the distros repo like mullvad, icewolf or (and this is approaching an edge case but I’m a big fan of it at the moment) nvidia.

    Third party repositories are a really bad choice when they cause conflicts with the distros repositories like adding Ubuntu’s main branch to any Debian in order to get a specific package.

    For xed, the editor you’re asking about, the git page describes Debian appropriate build instructions.

    You could always just use pluma, the editor xed forked from, which is in the Debian repositories.

    E: also stop planning and jump in. You’re not gonna figure anything out from analyzing and planning, just try what you want and solve the problems you come across.


  • The best tracking is through airtags. There are some circumstances where things even out between them and all the competitors/homebrew options but nothing else is better.

    The benefit of airtags over all the alternatives isn’t that they work best and most consistently, but that everyone understands the technology and isn’t going to give you the run around when you show up claiming that your suitcase is in the wrong country.

    Even though the alternatives use the same underlying technology, the branded airtag version and its implications are understood from the baggage handlers all the way up to the late night magistrates. Alternatives often need to wait for someone who recognizes that they’re near incontrovertible evidence of a fuckup to come around and whip all the rest of their colleagues into a frenzy over it.

    There are some cheap macos and ios doodads out there if it’s just gonna be a tracker.



  • Welcome to the year of the linux desktop. Now solving linux problems is big business!

    What you’re saying about drops on a lotus leaf hits though. There’s something weird about the prose on those sites that’s significantly different than even ai text I’ve made at home on my own hardware.

    Sometimes it feels like the opposite of meditation where I can feel something tugging “up” in the top center of my skull when “reading” one of those pages but don’t remember what the page was about.









  • Don’t.

    You like the user experience, you like the hardware, you don’t need to switch to linux to become independent from big tech.

    Even if you needed to switch your operating system, what computer are you gonna use it on that isn’t under the control of big tech (however you choose to define that)?

    Even if you had a computer you understood the hardware of and ordered in a group buy from a small manufacturer, and therefore wasn’t under the control of big tech, the linux operating system has thousands of core components maintained or developed by people who are in the employ of big tech to do just that! Are you really out from under the thumb of big tech when they’re paying the people that do the lions share of work in key components of your operating system who just so happen to always seem to make choices in that role which align with their bosses needs?

    What might be better than switching from mac to linux would be considering exactly what big tech you’re trying to get away from and why, then doing so on the system you already understand and feel comfortable with.



  • My brother or sister, this thread is literally about how the “solutions” to the “problem” you describe break one of the most common expectations users have of computers.

    The fact that python (and javascript!) create terrible dependency clashes is not a defense of static linking, it’s an indictment of those languages and the people who develop, maintain and use them.

    “Oh yeah? Try using the terrible software that breaks the computer!” Isn’t the powerful argument you think it is.

    Users hated Java because seeing the splash popup for it was the loading screen to what would inevitably be a barely functional pile developed by the lowest paid person in the company and because it was confusing to deal with, not because there were version conflicts. I remember Java being decent about that once the 0s hit at least, that you would need to upgrade the jre but never downgrade.


  • Ah, so back2nt4 like I said earlier?

    You don’t need to insult and attack in every reply. This isn’t reddit.

    It doesn’t make any sense to bring up avoiding dependencies in the context of personal computing (the context of this thread), because nowadays the user never sees it. Either deps are handled by the package manager or they’re shipped with the target software except shipping static libraries breaks the environment now so it’s a worse option.

    People don’t care if dependencies are installed, they care if the environment breaks. They care if the thing you just described, potential interference with normal operation, happens!

    Again: this was a solved problem for decades and now people are opening up the wound to implement stuff that’s only appropriate for use cases narrower than general purpose personal computing. It’s astounding and truly hard to explain.

    And no one but the poor schmuck computer janitor cares about making IT work easier. Shes being paid to do that work and the total extent of concern given to making the work easier is an equation that accounting solves each quarter. It’s the same as the countertops in the bathrooms: first, are they what the company wants? Second, do they meet the requirements, distant, unconsidered third: are they gonna cost too much to clean?


  • Rather than doing what you are asking about, why not swap them over to the 21h2 ltsc iot version of windows 10 that will receive updates till 2032?

    Doing that will improve their lives by rolling the computer back to what they expect and are familiar with, avoid the problems 11 is having and still keep them up to date.

    It’s probably best to do something like that instead of evangelizing linux to people who only want the computer to function in expected ways as opposed to learning a bunch of new stuff.