paolabonacini

joined 2 years ago
[–] paolabonacini@mastodon.uno 1 points 2 weeks ago

@toketin ciao, a me no. L'ho impostato un po' di tempo fa e poi va da solo che è una meraviglia.

[–] paolabonacini@mastodon.uno 3 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

@skariko @lealternative in questo momento io uso syncthing-fork che funziona magnificamente bene. Spero davvero che venga mantenuto.

[–] paolabonacini@mastodon.uno 5 points 1 year ago

@governorkeagan Xfce first and then Cinnamon. Xfce is more flexible than Cinnamon, which is solid.

Gnome, which looks so nice, requires too many extensions for my taste. So it is not for me.

I tried Plasma many times. It is a mess with all the options (I don't know if they are going to fix this in the next releases) and whenever I tried it there were always some small annoying little bugs. They are changing the release cycle, so maybe in the future these problems will become more rare.

[–] paolabonacini@mastodon.uno 1 points 1 year ago

@ExplodeyWolf
I found this guide on endeavouros forum. Of course you need just the part where you kill xfwm and xfdesktop. It is for i3 but the principle similar for any window manager. And you need a conpositor, usually picom, because xfwm, that you are replacing, has its own compositor.
https://forum.endeavouros.com/t/tutorial-easy-setup-endeavour-xfce-i3-tiling-window-manager/13171

[–] paolabonacini@mastodon.uno 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

@ExplodeyWolf
You can install Xfce and change the window manager. You will need to install a compositor, picom for example, but you will have the xfce panel and a working DE. This works flowlessly with i3 and bspwm for sure. It's a nice setup.

[–] paolabonacini@mastodon.uno 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@BrandoCalrissian9229 I think this solution is the one that could give you less headache, if none at all.

[–] paolabonacini@mastodon.uno 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

@BrandoCalrissian9229 that's definitely true. You could use an external ssd, if you have problems

[–] paolabonacini@mastodon.uno 2 points 1 year ago (7 children)

@BrandoCalrissian9229 @yogurtwrong I never tried dual boot, but as far as I know the best thing is to have two separated drives in order to avoid problems (which can happen).