Share Your Desktop

With the second picture I first thought of the defragmentation of Windows …

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some bloath in my private iso :slight_smile:

image

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How is it in the pi? I’m looking forward to dusting of my rpi4 for it.

Greetings from the edge of “bleeding edges”…

ksnip-edit

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kernel 6.0.0 :racing_car:

Works even on my legacy-hardware (2011 Macbook Pro).
Still highly unfortunate for me, can’t get EnOS to work properly here… (I know, I’ve said it many times already).

Huh, rc5, bleeding edge? rc6 is already out for almost 24 hours now… :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

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compiling takes time on the bleeding edge. :laughing:

I’ll get with my next…
sudo dnf upgrade --refresh -y && flatpak update -y
…tomorrow! :wink:

It works just fine on my unit (RPi 400).

There are a couple of issues though: non-functioning WiFi and Bluetooth which I believe it might be due to the software being still in Beta.

Try it. You might like it.

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test2

My current desktop

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I love the desktop background. Is that one of the default backgrounds available in Fedora?

this is default i think…

share my desktop bootscreen :stuck_out_tongue:

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how i’m lookin rn on my main machine. blurred up neofetch bb but ill have you know my uptime was at 4hours 20mins

Screenshot from 2022-09-19 19-12-46
Screenshot from 2022-09-19 19-28-49
Screenshot from 2022-09-19 19-25-19

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Dark Days Ahead…

Screenshot from 2022-09-19 19-55-24
Screenshot from 2022-09-19 19-58-30
Screenshot from 2022-09-19 19-59-46
Screenshot from 2022-09-19 20-00-39
Screenshot from 2022-09-19 20-12-51

Edit: snap-free, btw :wink:

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How did you gnomify ubuntu?

There’s 2 ways you could do it. One is to install the vanilla gnome package by sudo apt install vanilla-gnome-desktop and log out and use the Cog wheel to select the different session.

But I found it far easier, to simply disable two extensions Ubuntu has on by default, Ubuntu Dock and Desktop Icon NG, and that gets you the ‘classic’ Gnome 42 look, while still retaining the Yaru session, which is a theme I’m very fond of.

Honestly, nearly everything was already set up the way I wanted, so in terms of tweaks, surprisingly I didn’t have to fight with Ubuntu with much, everything just worked, including nvidia/intel graphics, which I’ll admit I did not expect at all.

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Thanks! I used to use Ubuntu, but I get annoyed pretty quick when I type sudo pacman and get an error. :wink:

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There was a handful of Ubuntu-specific things I had to get rid of to not get annoyed myself (e.g. removed snapd, auto updater, diagnostic/bug reporting, etc), but I’ve used all the main package managers in the past that I can more or less adapt to any of them and apt is no exception. Once you’re all setup, it feels very hands-off, which is definitely like the polar opposite of EndeavourOS :wink:

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