ono
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Whichever one you enjoy using.
Unless you have some special hardware need, all the desktop distros perform about the same. (Even long-term support releases, which offer newer kernels in case you need them.)
Programmer time is more expensive than computer time.
That might excuse inefficiency if all of these things were true:
- The programmers (or their employers) were buying new computers for all their users
- The new computers were fast enough to keep slow software from wasting users’ time
- The electricity to run them was free and without pollution
- The resources consumed and waste produced by that upgrade cycle had no impact on the environment
What’s really happening here is that producers of software are making things cheaper and easier for themselves by shifting and multiplying costs onto the users and the environment.
The amount of waste is staggering. It’s part of why I haven’t enjoyed professional software development in years.
ono@lemmy.cato Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Microsoft - keep your filthy hands off Valve, leak shows MSFT would buy ValveEnglish0·2 年前That leaked email conveniently assumes the owner of Valve would sell it. I can’t think of a reason for Gabe to do that.
I do my gaming on Bookworm with a handful of extras, and it works very well.
There is a certain group of people who insist that only the distros with the latest packages are good for gaming. Those people are wrong in most cases.
Unless you have a very new GPU (released less than a year ago), your games are not likely to get any benefit from the latest kernel.
Unless your games require the very latest Vulkan features and you run them without Steam, Flatpak, or any other platform that provides its own Mesa, you’re not likely to get any benefit from a distro providing the latest version of it.
Practically everything else that games need is comparable across all the major distros, so choose one that makes you happy, not one that some shill claims is best for gaming. Even Debian Stable, contrary to the undeserved bashing it often gets by a certain kind of gamer, is generally excellent for gaming.
A web forum is far better in most cases. If you can’t manage to run your own, there are plenty of lemmy servers that will do it for you. Even an email list (with searchable archives) would be better than Discord.
If you have collaborative documents that outgrow the forum format, use a wiki.
If real-time chat is needed, irc or matrix.
A project hosting its community on Discord is a project that won’t get my contributions.