Don't know, I've never used mint on my pc. If you have nvidia you might encounter crashes the first time you install it but after fixing that it should be smooth.
I had played around with configs before but it was mostly a random arrangement of stuff that didn't really work together (and wasn't meant to), but this was the first time I actually spent some time making something coherent. Also the already made catppuccin theme does a lot of the job
My cat has a plate we keep full, she eats what she needs and is in good shape. Don't know if this would be the case with all cats though
lots of people viewing and few posting so posts get more attention but there's less stuff
also less complaining
animations, I also tried like 5 different forks hoping I would get blur working with rounded edges but nothing had good support for it
In the terminal it's FiraCode Nerd Font Med, in the bar and music player it's Ubuntu Nerd Font Medium
Pretty happy with how it turned out, though this is meant to be kind of temporary since I'm looking forwards to switching to hyprland when my graphics card stops going insane with it
- os: Arch Linux
- wm: i3
- compositor: picom (pijulius' fork)
- bar: polybar
- theme: catppuccin macchiato green
- terminal: kitty
Never noticed those, thanks! They do look really small so I'll see if I have a small enough screwdriver for them
A while ago my headphones (HyperX Cloud II) fell and the left ear pad detached from the head band, but the cable is still there and sound works on both sides. Is there an easy way to put it back for free, or if not for cheap? I've tried putting one end in and forcing the other but the support is made of metal and doesn't bend easily.
3d renders of huge cereal bowls
Honestly, if you:
- don't care about data getting collected on an os you paid for
- don't care about getting ads on an os you paid for
- don't care about performance and have a fast computer
- (*) can't bother re-leaning how to do some things
- (*) can't bother facing and debugging some problems that you might encounter
- (*) don't care about being able to do things faster, at the cost of knowing exactly where to find things the moment you start using the system
- don't care about being able to customize any part of the system however you want
then you might want to stay on Windows.
(*) this depends on which distribution you choose. some are very similar to windows and beginner friendly.