Ultimately, it's for you to decide whichever suits you best. But I understand why that initial impression may have made you cautious.
Does anyone happen to know if bubblewrap is more powerful than bubblejail (or vice versa). Or how they differ in the first place (beyond CLI vs GUI)?
Links to bug reports are found below:
In both cases, the kernel has been assigned as component.
Alright. Thank you for reporting back!
Uhmm..., so, the good thing is that it's reproducible, a bug report has already been issued for it and should (therefore) eventually get a fix in upstream. The bad news, however, is that you may experience the same issue on every other relatively bleeding edge distro until then... But, there are two ways around it:
Thank you for the reply!
I’ve tried rebooting it like that.
And..., what's the result? Does the problem persist? Or is it resolved? (Under strict adherence to rebooting as described*)
Distrobox FTW!
While distrobox works well, I am worried that mismatches in packages could cause issues.
That should not be a thing in the first place. Though, if you prefer to designate a different home folder for the distrobox container, then it's worth noting that Distrobox does offer support for that.
Pushing aside that the last paragraph isn't as carefully written as the first, I feel very conflicted with the main recommendation. On one hand, the Linux enthusiast in me absolutely agrees with it. While on the other hand, I remember how 'second-day-on-Linux'-me (while not using any of the recommended distros for beginners) struggled hard to fight against the temptation of returning back to Windows.
IMO, if anything, we need better platforms that function as guided tours for newcomers.
Until now, I had been under the impression that KDE was just arch Linux itself.
Like others have already noted, KDE Plasma^[1]^ is widely available and thus not only limited to Arch Linux. Heck, the same applies to 99% of the available software on Linux; universal package managers^[2]^ have been vital to this.
Would you happen to know a good way for me to learn more about Linux, and how to put it to good use from a beginner’s perspective?
As you already own a Steam Deck, I assume you want to look into how you may improve your mileage out of it. Others have already noted how you may do so for more traditional systems. But the way Linux is utilized on the Steam Deck is rather unique. It utilizes immutability^[3]^ (i.e. the inability to make certain (permanent) changes) which makes it rather harsh to change certain parts of the system; SteamOS' implementation might even require you to redo some of these changes every so often... which is probably not what you were expecting. To circumvent this, perhaps it's worth exploring other SteamOS-like distributions that are more friendly towards tinkerers. There are many to choose from; perhaps this breakdown may help you with making an informed decision (even if it's found on a page dedicated to the Legion Go).
A quick search revealed that others have experienced issues that may be related. In order to disclose that this is different from the issue reported by others, please consider the following:
After updating to the latest kernel, shut off instead of reboot. After which you turn your device back on. If strict adherence to 'rebooting' like this prevents the issue from coming up, then it's likely the aforementioned known issue with the latest generation of AMD GPUs and recent kernel updates.
Please consider to report back on your findings.
Thanks for the conversation! 😊
Yeah for sure the not-badness-enumeration approach would be to not use the GPU and set a defined screen size and pixel density.
Hopefully one day.
ungoogled chromium is likely less secure, no 1 is to have regular updates.
Agreed.
With CI/CD those patches should be applied automatically. Would be a cool project but not for me, I prefer Firefox.
Hehe, fair.
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