GOD DAMN! I knew seagulls were powerful. I didn’t know that seagulls had the power to smell through chip bag plastic.
This is especially shocking for someone who lives in the lower half of southern California, 30 minutes away from multiple beaches.
The audacity that people have to assume that you, me, or anybody has a head.
I HATE that I am still in the habbit of doing esc :wq whenever I want, or need, to save and quit.
But you should be using Arch instead ot Mint.
(I use Arch BTW)
You Should. Firefox has gotten so much Better. Not to mention all the literal BULLSHIT Google has done and will be doing with their browser.
The way Chrome works now, every tab is its own instance. Firefox, each window is its own instance.
I am an Arch user and have been using hyprland on it for a while.
I only asked about how it is on fedora cuz I’ve been considering switching to nobara. The only thing keeping me back is that I love to tinker. I know Arch is the best for that, but I’m considering dual-booting both with Nobara being used for gaming (although I will switch to like kde (x11), or i3 for gaming along with any graphically intense programs due to having an Nvidia card) and just about everythung else but will be keeping arch for whenever I want to like really tinker with something.
Checked out that repo and may have to check it on a computer later.
Thanks a lot!
How has your experience been with hyprland on fedora?
Since hyperland is bleeding edge and almost always requires like the latest versions of some packages, did you need to use packages from fedora rawhide, or use an older version of hyprland due to the versioning of hyprland’s dependencies?
What is needed to keep it well maintained? I know there’s a copr repo due to being a package that is too bleeding edge, and assuming you are using the copr repo (that is mentioned on the hyprland wiki), does the hyprland package get updated whenever the dependencies, not including the build dependencies, are updated in the main repo?
I would love to try it out, though I’m an Arch user, but it all depends on what needs to be done prior to installing it, or how much maintenance is required to prevent it from breaking or even just crashing.
Yeah, that would make sense.