

Can confirm that yt-dlp works perfectly for TikTok videos
Can confirm that yt-dlp works perfectly for TikTok videos
Thank you for telling me about Podlet. I’ve been using podman-compose
for all my containers but I’ve thought about converting them to systemd units. The only thing I’m unsure about is whether it’ll still be easy to access the container files. Currently I have a containers
folder with a folder for each service inside it. Inside that, there’s the compose.yml
and the folders with the container data. I map all container folders, with data that needs to be kept, to a folder that sits right next to the compose file. If it’s just temporary data (like caches), I oftentimes map it to a volume because it doesn’t matter if I lose it. Do you know if I can still do it like this (or in a similar way) if I use systemd units?
I use podman too and I set up hardware acceleration for Jellyfin. I’ll update this with how I did it once I’m home.
Edit: Here’s my compose.yml (I use podman-compose
):
services:
jellyfin:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/jellyfin:latest
container_name: jellyfin
dns:
- 9.9.9.9
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
- TZ=Europe/Berlin
volumes:
- ./config:/config:Z
- ~/drive/media:/media:z
devices:
- /dev/dri:/dev/dri
ports:
- 8096:8096
- 7359:7359/udp
- 1900:1900/udp
restart: unless-stopped
On GNOME you set the GTK theme using Tweaks or Refine (Tweaks is preinstalled most of the time but Refine is a newer replacement that’s a lot nicer to use). Using one of these two will probably work on any other desktop or WM too.
I’ve used it when I started out and it’s good, I can recommend it if you just want something where you can hit install and it works. I just use docker containers now though because I have more experience and it allows to set everything up exactly how I want.
I know that OP already found the solution but I just wanted to chime in because every person who commented completely misunderstood the question. It’s normal that some extenions don’t support the new version after updating GNOME but in that case, the switch will be disabled and it will show you a warning that the extensions doesn’t support the new GNOME version. OP clearly stated that they could still switch the extensions on and off. Besides that, most extensions will already have been updated to support the new version by the time the Fedora update comes out, so it wouldn’t make sense that all the extensions wouldn’t work anymore.
As a tip, you can install “Extension Manager” instead of the default “Extenions” app and besides being able to install extensions right through the app, it also has an “Upgrade Assistant” function, which lets you check which of your extensions support the GNOME version you specify. That way you can check if your extensions will work in the new GNOME version before updating.
You can also easily configure LibreOffice to have tabs like MS Office and OnlyOffice have btw
Pretty sure Vencord is what’s used now. It’s what I use at least because it’s preinstalled with Vesktop.
What’s that?
I thought Roblox didn’t work on Linux anymore
I use ZSH with plugins but back when I switched away from bash, I also looked at fish. I didn’t use it back then because people say it doesn’t follow the POSIX standard but is that really an issue? It probably only extends it instead of taking things away, right?
Valve Index
I just play VR on Linux, don’t really have many problems with it. Only small ones like sometimes SteamVR doesn’t recognize my headset the first time I start it so I need to restart it once.
VR on linux actually works just fine from my experience. I’ve never had a game not work. The big issue is just headset support. The HTC Vive and Valve Index are the only headsets with official drivers, since they were made by Valve. Standalone headsets, like the Quest for example, also work using ALVR. Anything else doesn’t really work. There are open source drivers but they’re not complete enough to be useable unless something majorly changed there since I last checked.