• MrScottyTay
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      1123 days ago

      All of my devices except my work one are now Linux.

      I have an old surface go 2 that good a massive new lease on life from using arch plasma. Double the battery life and everything. It could no longer get updates from MS because there was no longer enough space on the main drive to download and install the next update.

      Then I have an old retro gaming pc that used to be for XP gaming but I ended up sticking bazzite on it for a test and it’s stayed that way and because of that when I built my girlfriend’s latest PC we decided to go bazzite desktop for her. And after getting past a few growing pains at the beginning that made it look like we made the wrong decision (due to an old 10xx gtx gpu - now on 3050) she’s been enjoying it and now it’s just standard.

      Then I have my proper gaming PC that I use like a console so I put bazzite-deck on it as soon as I got an AMD card. And I’ve never felt better. HTPC console like gaming on windows was a fucking arse-on, even with steam big picture mode, because it doesn’t get all of the cool bells and whistles that let you control basic system settings right from steam like you can on steam os and bazzite deck.

      For work I’ve started moving away from visual studio to VS Code (i know it’s still MS but I do C# .NET work and rider is too expensive, I don’t want a subscription for an IDE) to allow me to easily transition to fully working on Linux if the opportunity ever arises. Whether it be with my current employer and me convincing them to let me to install Linux on my laptop or with a future company. We’ll see which comes first ;)

      Now it’s time to get and decouple from Google. Currently figuring out with android auto maps app I want (waze won’t run for some reason, my current winner at the moment is tom tom amigo). Then it’s on to getting a password manager, then a new browser (preferably way more lightweight than chrome) and potentially a Google pay replacement(?).

      Any suggestions and opinions from anyone here - even though this is tangentially off topic - would be greatly appreciated.

      • Domi
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        623 days ago

        VS Code (i know it’s still MS but I do C# .NET work and rider is too expensive, I don’t want a subscription for an IDE)

        VSCodium is a thing too if you want to un-Microsoft even further.

        https://vscodium.com/

        I use it for C# development on Linux and it works well.

        getting a password manager

        Bitwarden and Keepass are usually the go tos, depending on your use case.

        then a new browser

        Firefox or if you want to decouple from Mozilla as well, Librewolf works pretty well.

        potentially a Google pay replacement

        I’m not aware of any open Google Pay replacements other than taking a card with you.

        As soon as you get rid of Google on your phone, you get rid of Google Pay.

        • MrScottyTay
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          323 days ago

          I used vscodium for a bit but their latest C# Dev kit is locked to VS Code proper :(

          I even made a cool bash script that would download and install ms vs store extensions and all of their dependencies before hitting this roadblock (to get the ones not available on open vsx).

          Thanks for the password manager suggestions, I’ll look into them when I get a chance.

          I’ve been looking into firefox forks too.

          I would like to keep contactless via my phone as I don’t ever really carry my wallet with me anymore these days so maybe Google pay will have to stay. Bit annoying that it won’t be able to be used on whatever browser I end up going with though :(

          • Domi
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            122 days ago

            Is there something missing in OmniSharp that prevents you from using VSCodium?

            I do most of my C# development with the OmniSharp plugin in VSCodium on Linux.

            • MrScottyTay
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              122 days ago

              Does it have proper .sln support with a solution explorer?

              • Domi
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                121 days ago

                I don’t use the Solution explorer but I also don’t think it has one.

                I usually kickstart a fresh application with a SLN and a few projects in the dotnet CLI and VSCodium picks up the launch project automatically when I tell it to create a launch.json. For existing applications, if the .vscode folder already exists it will just pick it up or I can also just ask it to create a launch.json.

                That workflow has been ingrained into me since there were no real C# utilities for VS Code when it first launched, so not much changed for me when going to VSCodium.

          • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            123 days ago

            Yeah, there really aren’t any good contactless alternatives to Google, Apple, and Samsung.

            My current setup is reasonably good, I have a Google Watch (WiFi only) that only connects at home, and I only use the Google Watch app on a separate Android profile. The Wallet app refreshes payment tokens, and I don’t need any Google spyware running for regular purchases.

            I’m hoping some cryptocurrency or something will get widespread enough so I can have FOSS contactless payments. I don’t think the traditional finance industry will ever support FOSS payments.

            • MrScottyTay
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              223 days ago

              Then I’m reliant on my current workplace rather than figuring out a consistent way to code at work, outside of work and at any other future workplace.

              Don’t want to have to get used to one kind of workflow to then not being able to use it in another setting.

              • @floofloof@lemmy.caOP
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                223 days ago

                Use the free Rider for home and ask any new employer for a commercial license. It’s a pretty mainstream piece of software. There’s really no reason an employer should force you to use Visual Studio.

                For those times I need Microsoft tools, I keep a Windows VM handy on my Linux PC. I feel much better keeping Windows contained and mostly turned off.

                • MrScottyTay
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                  123 days ago

                  I’m not being forced to use visual studio. But because of dev ops licenses we get visual studio licenses alongside it so because of that the company isn’t willing (and rightly so in my opinion) to foot the expensive (for a small company) bill for rider.

                  Which is why I’ve landed on vs code.

    • @jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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      523 days ago

      I ran linux mint for a couple months. It was nice. Very few problems.

      Unfortunately, when I tried to install it on this newer desktop it was a shit-show. No wifi or ethernet, no hdmi, it crashed when I tried to play elden ring. I should try another distribution, but I was so distressed after two days I just rolled back. The people in the mint discord were helpful, though, and got some of the problems fixed.

      Windows sucks though.

      • @orange@communick.news
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        22 days ago

        Since Mint is based on a stable distro, it’ll be running older software that won’t support your newer hardware well, and you’re experiencing that firsthand.

        Try Fedora, Bazzite, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed, or anything else that’s more bleeding edge – they’re still very usable and reliable, it’s just that stable distros like Mint and Debian are “stable and reliable” overkill.

        Edit: and if you’re wondering why this wasn’t mentioned to you from the start, the answer is likely that these distros tend to be:

        1. Less popular and get fewer mentions and votes, and
        2. Are considered riskier in an enterprise context, so stable distros are deemed a safe recommendation since the odds of things going wrong on supported hardware is extremely low.
      • @yessikg@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        222 days ago

        With newer hardware you need to run a bleeding edge distro, at least until Debian 13 releases (a lot of distros use Debian as a base)

      • HexesofVexes
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        222 days ago

        I’ve got this move coming up - my plan is to dual boot and slowly wean over.

        Game crashes in Linux, try for a fix and if I get frustrated, boot into windows and enjoy the game.

        Might be a rocky year, but the dual boot will likely take the stress off!

        I’ve seen a lot of fedora-based distros pushed for gaming (mint is Debian based), apparently these can work better. Still looking into it, but no definitive answers there yet!

    • @CrowyTech@feddit.uk
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      223 days ago

      With the efforts I’m doing to try and de-google / de-big US tech this needs to be my next move.

      Trying to convince my better half to do it on his laptop is a pain. I’m under if you degoogle my chromebook now or once it loses support.

    • @mrnarwall@lemmy.world
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      123 days ago

      I’m going to grad school soon for cs and they require windows 11. This is gonna be a fun test in locking down my machine and only doing updates with intention