Very Interesting and pretty setup, although I never understood why people like to waste precious vertical space by having bars on the bottom and top of the screen 🤔
Also I didn’t know KDE has global menu applet, makes me wonder if I can setup it to look like Ubuntu looked back in the old days (does it still have global menus anyway, or just use GNOME control thingies?)
I got a Framework, and the 16:10 aspect ratio allows for the two bars without messing up most applications as they’re mostly geared toward 16:9. Full screen games go over both bars.
App panel automatically hide itself when a window on top of it, I think kde global menu only work with qt apps (atleast on Wayland for now I think it also work with GTK on X11)
Vertical bars are great but they are terrible for displaying text, either the bar has to be huge or the bar’s width readjusts or text and icons get easily misaligned when displaying dynamic stuff. Personally my horizontal bar is now 70% occupied and I have a keybind that toggles its hidden state.
Side bar is the way.
Yeah, I also prefer having a single side bar on the screen, but I recently found out that on small screens (like on a laptop) the side bar doesn’t allow a lot of applications to be visible, so in this scenario I’d rather have it on the bottom.
What is kwin_wayland_wr? Also do you really have 6 GiB RAM installed? If not you may be able to reclaim some of it via UEFI if the RAM is assigned to iGPU.
I have 8gb and I assigned 2gb to igpu because I already have 8gb of zram, I’m not sure what difference it would make tho
As I found out recently myself, you should almost always set the minimum amount of reserved memory for the iGPU on modern hardware. The reserved memory is just that— reserved. The kernel still dynamically allocates memory for GPU usage as needed on iGPUs.
Really?, so I should set vram to 256mb and everything should still work fine?
Yes, iGPU can use system RAM
An apt post title, lovely use of color!
Thanks you :D
You’re very welcome! ☺️
less
,git
, etc should default to color mode on.I’m new to Linux and I don’t know any of these, can you explain a bit more?
Sure.
git
is a command used for programming, much more likely in the future you will useless
, which allows you to view/scroll through/paginate text files.To be honest, the intro of manual pages are really good at explaining commands:
man less
Neat. What’s your bar setup?
Menu bar? It’s just normal KDE applications menu bar
The top bar I mean. That’s KDE’s built-in bar? Just styled?
Yes it’s just KDE’s built-in bar, no style or mod I think it’s called “Application menu panel”
Wow, okay. Looks pretty sleek out of the box in that case. Thanks!
Linux is pretty green at least
Well I can argue with that because Linux systems usually consume more energy than identical systems with other operating systems though they are probably less green due to having a lot of cloud and ad related tech built in.
Extremely dependent on a number of factors, mostly hardware and configuration. I had a Thinkpad T480 and on a stock fedora install it definitely died faster than W10, but after setting up TLP and Powertop I squeezed ~2 more hours of use out of it than Windows could manage. Ditto for my framework 13, I get all day battery life on NixOS but when I’ve tested windows on it I lose a few hours immediately
That’s not ture atleast on my system, I played modded Minecraft for 4 hours on performance mode and I still have 15% to spare, I also watch BCS for an season and it’s only drain 60% on power saving mode
Did you check the consumption on other operating systems?
I used win10 1 years and I don’t remember exactly what the power consumption is like but I think it probably worse because of win10 use more on CPU and RAM for anti-malware and telemetry
Linux systems usually consume more energy than identical systems with other operating systems
Is this true?
Yes, at least on battery powered PCs. Other kinds of machines may be more efficient on Linux but I guess these are mostly cases when there are no big and well developed proprietary solutions for them.
I imagine it varies wildly by distro, hardware, use-case, etc.
I don’t have any information that proves it. I think in this list only hardware matters.
Surely use-case is important? Someone running a server that’s on 24/7 vs. someone running it on a laptop or desktop that they shut down every day.
I was talking about comparing the efficiency between operating systems. That requires the use case to be the same. Comparing different use cases is unfair.
Nice hostname
Haha thanks, took me awhile to come up with that name