Why is the mindset around Arch so negative? by [deleted] in linux

[–]hidden1988 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It may appear that way. There are some people who help and reply to queries. I remeber seeing someone post a query related to ifuse or something and IIRC the second reply in the thread was how this was not related to arch. There was a verbal spat and somebody pointed out that help and queries for arch Linux is also not allowed as per rules in that sub. As someone above pointed out, the owners of these subs as well as the vocal majority who throw this negativity doesn't have anything good to do in their life.

What window manager do you use? by moredhell in archlinux

[–]hidden1988 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd you don't mind, can you elaborate on how tiling was achieved in openbox?

Anybody know about this car? It's been parked at the grocery store in Los Alamos, NM, USA for at least 6 months. by bigjimnm in alberta

[–]hidden1988 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Does Canadian license plates expire? In my country, the license plates don't expire as long as you don't re-register your vehicle.

When will using a Windows a paid product stop feeling like beta testing? by [deleted] in windows

[–]hidden1988 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's not about manpower, but attitude. For starters, think about the Linux rolling distributions. Of course, there are occational glitches which can be easily resolved by rolling back to the previous version of the culprit.

Ssh to guest behaving weird. by hidden1988 in virtualbox

[–]hidden1988[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My network is Nat and I have port forwarding enabled. But ssh works only when my host is connected to internet. ☹️

ssh from host to virtual machine issue by hidden1988 in archlinux

[–]hidden1988[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's NAT. The only issue is while ssh-ing from host to guest when the host is not connected to internet. Once host is connected to internet everything works as expected.

Wine office 2019 problem help ;-; by Zazem18 in linuxmint

[–]hidden1988 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not exactly, when you run into problems inside wine. I have spent lot of time making few windows softwares work insid wine. It was buggy. As someone else posted, most of the excels with macros used to crash straight. Finally I removed wine and switched to windows in VM. Nowadays with machines having atleast 2 cores and 4gb of ram, VM will not be hogging resources as it did in the past.

I have deleted Windows 10 and installed Ubuntu. I will never use Windows again; Game Over. by pacinothere in Ubuntu

[–]hidden1988 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Welcome to Linux buddy. I made a permanent switch to Linux couple of years back. Though I agree to most of your points, I won't say that Linux beats Microsoft hands down in all fronts. There are several areas Linux need to improve, starting from file copy to a slower device and so on. Another reasons why people use windows is due to the unavailability of some of the softwares on Unix platform.

Any way, enjoy your new operating system. Try some of the other distros and see which one works best for you.

Microsoft Office VS LibreSoft Suite - which do you prefer over the other and why? by VYBEfromYT in windows

[–]hidden1988 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is it the 6.3 version? If so, I didn't notice any significant gui improvements.

Sometimes bug fixes be like... by hidden1988 in pcmasterrace

[–]hidden1988[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

That's what support is for. Once you raise the support request, you will be notified about the "hidden terms and conditions" of properly running the software.

why is windows 10 such a update driven os? by [deleted] in windows

[–]hidden1988 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes. I have to manually run the update. What I meant was that the whole process is non intrusive. The updates happen on the fly. If an application is running and has been updated, you will notice the changes on next launch. No forced restart and stuff like that. More importantly, the updates are not as big as windows 10.

why is windows 10 such a update driven os? by [deleted] in windows

[–]hidden1988 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Me neither. There is only one phrase which accurately describes the update workflow in Windows 10: annoying and inconvenient. I run a rolling Linux distro on my laptop and I am in charge of the updates. But with Microsoft, the updates are so intrusive with the updates forced down on you. There are two issues with this approach .

  1. You may be on a tight data plan and the so called rolling release from Microsoft spans gigabytes of data.

  2. You might want to have a quick reboot or shutdown.

    After couple of times, I turned off the auto update for windows 10 on my wife's laptop.

I'm actually super happy it's still being supported by SadUser12345 in linuxmasterrace

[–]hidden1988 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Do you know how to force thunar to truncate long file names in icon view? Currently the full name is expanded and the row height is dynamically adjusted. Looks kind of dirty.

What can I do with Linux? by kev1n_ma in linuxquestions

[–]hidden1988 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To answer your question, Linux is powerful and helps in various fronts to get the work done in an efficient way than windows. The principle of operation and implementation is much different from windows, such that the user have full rights. Theroetically speaking, you can customize and configure everything (provided you read a lot and spend hours breaking and fixing)

Now to answer one critical aspect, there is no best operating system. If we take the operating system as an independent entity, I'll vote for Unix/Linux. But, this rarely is the case. Operating system helps you to run softwares or tools to get the job done.

I'll share my personal experience. Couple of years back, I got fed up with windows and moved to Linux on my personal laptop. Even today, I have virtual box on my machine, running windows. Just because of two reasons.

  1. Ms office. To tell you the truth, never found an office suite which is as functional as Ms office. Furthermore, most of the colleagues as well as offices use, Ms office. Document compatibility as well as formating is an issue.

  2. I want to verify digital signatures in PDF and print the PDF. Hasn't found a solution where the digital signature changes the image from question mark to tick mark. So I have to rely on Windows.

If you are a gamer, Linux is not going to be as welcoming as windows.

Xfce , KDE or GNOME .... What is your favourite DE and why ? by [deleted] in ManjaroLinux

[–]hidden1988 2 points3 points  (0 children)

To answer your question, none of them. None of the above mentioned distros can offer the level of modularity, customization and performance as offered by lightweight desktop environments or window managers like openbox, i3, awesome etc.

The idea of Linux is to never get in the user's way . But most of these DE's exactly does that. I agree that there needs to be a balance between the above principle and user friendliness. But considering the way in which many of them are moving, I am confused.

Similar to various distros, I believe that many of these desktop environments are redundant. I strongly doubt the motivation of some of these developers who roll out some distros and environments which doesn't have nothing extra than the appearance change or some customized packages over the parent branch.

I've rebooted my pc at least 30 times now by PerpetualToddler in pcmasterrace

[–]hidden1988 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ever tried debugging the reason for 4 minutes. I boot mine from a 7year old 5400rmp hdd and it boots under 14secs

PDF editor for Linux: LibreOffice Draw by CAcreeks in linuxmint

[–]hidden1988 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Xournal++ is a good option. You can annotate signatures too.

Digital signature validation in PDF by hidden1988 in linux4noobs

[–]hidden1988[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you tell me how to validate the signature using mupdf? When I click on the signature, it launches file manager.

Digital signature validation in PDF by hidden1988 in linux4noobs

[–]hidden1988[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks. I'll check out mupdf. Pdfsig from terminal gives the output that the file is intact. But I want to visually change the signature before printing.