• NateNate60@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I think most of the complaints are that Microsoft Office doesn’t work. Which is true. The web version of Microsoft Office is honestly kinda terrible.

    And no, people don’t want to use a product that does the same thing as Microsoft Office, they want to use a product called “Microsoft Office”. No, it’s not logical, and doesn’t make any sense at all but it’s how people are.

    • SturgiesYrFase@lemmy.ml
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      The only sense it makes is that M$ hasn’t followed the spec, and so things done in office display fine in say libreOffice, but not the other way around. So if your company is willing to transition, but everyone you deal with outside the company is still on Office, there’s a bit of a communication issue. That’s M$'s biggest strength, homogenous work environments.

      • FilthyShrooms@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        That’s why my business only uses pure, crisp .txt files. If I can’t open it in notepad, I don’t want it!

          • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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            6 months ago

            Json is a garbage format for anything that’s meant to ever be touched by a human. At least use yaml or json5.

            • CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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              6 months ago

              In the first paragraph of JSON5’s site:

              It is not intended to be used for machine-to-machine communication.

              YAML is not supported by a lot of enterprise software (example: Azure pipelines supports it but Power Automate does not). JSON, XML, CSV, or failing that Text are the safe bets. We use a few options for reading or building presentation layers quickly. Ultimately the idea is to move data around in a way that is friendly to our current and future applications.

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                6 months ago

                It’s absolutely trivial to convert either format to json if necessary. The real killer for me with json is the lack of comments. Human-maintained files absolutely need comments.

      • haui@lemmy.giftedmc.com
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        6 months ago

        This needs to become illegal and bear a bankruptcy inducing fine if repeatedly done.

        We need to get rid of these monopolists

        • SturgiesYrFase@lemmy.ml
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          6 months ago

          Pretty sure it is “illegal” I mean didn’t they get dragged through court in what the 90s 00s? Specifically for anti-competative monopolistic actions. Illegal was in quotes there because nothing really changed.

        • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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          They’re a feature of the economic system, not a bug. We don’t have a good track record working against it.

      • Mango@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        There shouldn’t even be word processor documents between companies. PDF is the file type for maintaining consistency of page formatting!

      • kbotc@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Microsoft’s biggest strength is the Active Directory. Linux user and computer management is a huge PITA.

        • Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          For Linux user management you can just use an LDAP solution like FreeIPA. You can even tailor sudoer rules based on security groups, so like you can allow someone to reboot the server but not actually make configuration changes to system config files and what-not. It’ll also handle CA and PKI with smart card support and of course DNS. It has a web interface as well.

          • kbotc@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            I’ve done workstation maintenance in a previous job. Every part of the Linux centralized management was worse than Windows. We did it to support our coworker’s wishes, but SSSD constantly shits the bed, and having to code (config management) to write some pretty simple rules like default printers is super annoying compared to the Active Directory built ins.

            • Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              I don’t know, I like using Fleet Commander with FreeIPA (where it stores the profile). You just spin up the template VM for whatever like-clients on the network you want to make default profiles for and make the changes, shut it down, checkbox the changes (the configurations and stuff) that you approve and let it apply the profiles across the network. Easier than depending on Puppet or Ansible playbooks IMO.

              I have had issues with SSSD as well though and it had to do with Kerberos tickets but I can’t remember what I did to fix it. We’d have to manually use kinit on each machine when it’d basically fall off the realm. I want to say it was a DNS issue but it was so long ago, I just don’t remember.

              We used to use Centrify for Linux and Solaris and it was easy using Access Manager to basically handle AD users and computers with Active Directory and had some GPO support (you could push config writes with GPOs for example and organize it all via OUs for example) but it would get a little wonky between trusts in the forest sometimes (in regards to zone management in Centrify) and they kept getting more expensive. Maybe they’ve fixed that stuff now but it was really simple to use and you could basically manage a lot through the AD and create group profiles in the Access Manager. I think the last straw was wanting to force us to license the entire suite regardless of whether we were using it or not. Personally, I never liked it because it wouldn’t use SSSD or kclient/nsswitch and if some service tried to join the realm/domain, it’d join using the same computer accounts and basically break the account since Centrify used its own client, so you’d specifically need to join the computer accounts via Centrify as a different name. It wasn’t detrimental or anything – just annoying that it was a problem at all. Also, sometimes the user cache database saved in specific users’ appdata that use Access Manager would corrupt from time to time and you’d need to manually delete it to use Access Manager. I’d hope they fixed that by now too though.

              All and all, I’m not saying Active Directory isn’t an excellent product because it is and I’m not saying that there is a 1:1 solution for Linux but I’m saying it that in my experience it isn’t terrible either with FreeIPA and products you can use with it. I definitely hated other 389 solutions prior to FreeIPA though.

    • bean@lemmy.world
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      I installed a Windows 11 update. Office no longer worked. Office refused to re-install despite trying a huge number of things. It literally refuses to install. Tried their help tool which even does removal of old references in the system. Failed 5 times.

      Tried using the web version for a simple thing. First localization struggle which doesn’t carry across sessions. Excel column formatted to number. Then to currency. Then to general. Autosum shows #Div!0 still. Tried seeing if the AI could help. Have to re-login. (Using Mozilla this whole time btw). After re-login, ai tool says stop using private mode. I’m not…

      Literally trying to do the simplest autosum on about 25 lines and it can’t function.

      Installed LibreOffice. No problem with ‘Excel’.

      I’m really not exaggerating. I saw online a similar issue and the guy had to reinstall the entire OS to get office to work again 🤨

    • MonkderDritte@feddit.de
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      6 months ago

      Edit the menu entry?

      My dad initially wanted his old Norton Antivirus, so i made an internet shortcut with the logo and name, to a webpage explaining why antivirus sucks.

    • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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      6 months ago

      I have seriously considered trying to install Microsoft Office 2024 (aka OnlyOffice) for a family member to see if they even notice.

      • bluewing@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        OnlyOffice is pretty nice for homegamers I think. I just don’t need or want a full up heavyweight office suite anymore. And I’ve gotten to the point where I remove LibreOffice and replace it with OnlyOffice every time.

        So do it, just do it. You know you want to…

        • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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          6 months ago

          Oh I run OnlyOffice locally and in NextCloud already ;) So it would only be for someone who lives in another state, simply to see the reaction.

          • bluewing@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            I would do it for the reaction. I doubt they would complain very much at all.

            • lastweakness@lemmy.world
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              You know, i made my dad try OnlyOffice and he loved it except for the fact that not all shortcuts worked. Years of experience with excel shortcuts didn’t translate in exactly the way he wanted. Which makes sense ig but i think that would give it away

    • Somethingcheezie@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Our company has bought into the whole onedrive/teams/ Microsoft family.

      They’ll do what the IT guy says but that first time copilot popped up grrr

    • mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 months ago

      Micro$oft office is being teached in college for my friend and I, having libreoffice, tried doing the exact same thing in it. Not only everything was possible, but also its more convenient in LibreOffice. There are many annoyances in m$ office like auto formatting which cannot be disabled and auto prediction which fills in the details of next cited person from previous (like hell what, how should two people must have same bio?) and now you have to edit all that out by replacing the autofilled ones. LibreOffice on the other hand has much better UX

      (Talking about Excel vs Calc and also Word vs Writer)

      I mean maybe that specific advanced feature is not in libreoffice, but there are much more good things in it that is worth considering using it.

      • nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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        I use libreoffice and onlyoffice daily for academic works, with a few works published out there. I even use more features than the average office user, and I have to listen to people claiming that they can’t use any of those, because they’re inferior. I even have to listen to people saying that libreoffice isn’t suited for doing any SERIOUS WORK, and I’m like “What? My work isn’t serious?”.

        But tne other user got a point. People want to see the name and the ms office logo. They will reject any alternative just because is isn’t ms office, no matter how good and sufficient they are.

    • graphene@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      If only libreoffice had an app for mobile platforms…

      Being unable to open the documents I wrote on my computer without using some kind of crappy ad filled third-party app is annoying.

      • dustyData@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Libre Office has a mobile app. The one called LibreOffice viewer is only a file viewer but works perfectly if you only look at documents, it is developed by the same foundation that develops LibreOffice. If you want to edit, Collabora is the name of the app, it is based on LibreOffice and is officially approved by The Document Foundation. It is developed by one of their certified collaborators. Both are available on Android and iOS.

    • urska@lemmy.caOP
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      6 months ago

      Office 2016 works, there is office online and LibreOffice. What now?

    • SeekPie@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      At least one good thing that Google has done is that Docs/Slides work on browsers and (where I live) most people use that now.

        • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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          6 months ago

          If the alternative is Microsoft, you’re between a rock and another rock that used to claim not being evil.

          Libreoffice all the way. Most users don’t need more than that.

      • jabjoe@feddit.uk
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        5 months ago

        Google is not really much better than MS. It still leaves you under the yoke of big tech. “Meet the new boss, the same as the old boss”.

    • Alborlin@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Have you tried excel ? Its WAY AHEAD of any excel like thing available as office in wild. Just example vlookup , Power tables , vba are no whwre near in any of the products.

  • Metz@lemmy.world
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    HDR works. On KDE Wayland and in games only with Gamescope, but we are getting there. And there is the Steam Deck of course.

  • 1boiledpotato@sh.itjust.works
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    The funniest thing is, people say Linux is not ready, cause [insert feature] doesn’t work. The problem is said feature doesn’t work on Windows either.

    For example pausing/resuming playback across multiple appliacations using media keys. It’s not perfect on Linux (not every app uses MPRIS), but it’s not great on Winodws either

      • 1boiledpotato@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        Yeah, but that works on VLC only and it has to be focused. With MPRIS you can eg. pause a song playing in mpd, while having VLC focused

        • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Good thing I really only use VLC for videos, and Clementine for audio very rarely, and if I’m done with the music and switching to video I can just exit Clementine! I use the volume keys all the time though, since I sadly lack physical buttons.

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    6 months ago

    Last time I tried HDR on Windows, that sucked too.

    My Android TV and consoles are about the only devices where it works properly.

    • nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      HDR games is fucking baller on the steam deck. I’m legitimately thinking of switching to kde from sway so I can take advantage of it on my new OLED monitor.

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    HDR is awesome if you have the right hardware. I’ve never seen a movie look so good. Someone needs to get HDR working.

    • Robin@lemmy.world
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      It works in KDE + Wayland… mostly… for applications that support it… and there was this update that ruined my color profile for a while but they fixed that now!

    • AllHailTheSheep@sh.itjust.works
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      first game I played in HDR was mass effect legendary. I don’t care that the game itself is close to 15 years old, the 4k remaster + HDR blew my mind and set a new standard for how good games could look.

    • usrtrv@lemmy.ml
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      It does work for most games. MPV player supports it as well. It’s still rough around the edges, but it’s definitely there.

      • lseif@sopuli.xyz
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        6 months ago

        photoshop, illustrator, etc are genuinely good programs though. the ‘linux alternatives’ just arent usually as powerful or easy to use.

        this is coming from a linux and foss fanatic, btw. i dont use adobe, but i probably would if i was in a creative industry

        • Churbleyimyam@lemm.ee
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          I agree that they are effective programs for getting work done. There are some drawbacks in a professional setting though, the biggest being the data scraping that has been introduced. It’s hard to explain to clients that any licensing of their images has been violated before it has even been applied. Either Adobe are going to get away with exactly the kind of IP infringements that they are so against when it comes to their own work, or they’re lining up a buggerload of legal problems for themselves further down the line.

          Then there’s the price-gouging that they’ve gotten into with their online subscription model and instability on some hardware.

          How to trust them?

          For people starting a new business in a creative industry I don’t think Adobe is the obvious choice that it once was.

  • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    I actually do use acrobat for legal document work

    It good for adding signatures and making changes to pdf format schtuff

    • Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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      If that’s your only use case you can also use Xournal++ on Linux which does the job.

      Of course your choice of OS is totally up to you and you don’t have to justify it to anyone, just letting you know the tool exists.

      • Opafi@feddit.de
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        Xournal lets you paint on a document, which I guess isn’t what they need when they talk about legal stuff. Digitally signing a document is still one of the rare cases where I boot up my windows vm. It’s so annoying that there’s practically no way to do that in Linux as my company’s processes rely on it.

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          Ohhhh yeah you’re right, I forgot digitally signing is different from just painting a signature on there >< .

        • mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 months ago

          Wait digital signature is not easy on linux? What kind of digital signing is this? I thought it was possible with GPG and also with gui apps. Maybe I’m thinking about some other digital signing??

          • sik0fewl@lemmy.ca
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            6 months ago

            PDFs have embedded digital signatures, so the signing tool needs to support the proprietary format.

              • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                If it was valid, do you really think people would be talking about it being a problem here? Please use your head a little.

                Also, two entitely different meanings of the word signing being used here. Signing as in signing a bill vs. Cryptographic signing. Adobe has some weird “halfway” thing that’s more than painting the sig on the image, but isn’t gpg.

                Hooray for proprietary shit becoming accepted for legal use! Yuck.

                • JargonWagon@lemmy.world
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                  When I worked with a lot of legal documents, we just used DocuSign mostly. Have you attempted that on Linux? Not sure what it’s like these days, also curious if it’s because it’s a web application if it works the same.

              • sik0fewl@lemmy.ca
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                Well, it uses existing PKI/CAs (ie, same as your browser), which I’m not sure GPG supports? I might be wrong.

                You could certainly use GPG, but it’s not what others will be looking for. Depends on your use case, I guess.

  • devilish666@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    From my experience in Linux:

    1. Many pirated games installer doesn’t work under wine (like from xatab, RG Mechanic, Razor, etc) unless you download pre-installed games like from IGG Games or you just download pirated gog games
    2. Buggy glitching games work under wine (i don’t know why that happened)
    3. Many mod organizer & tools (MO, VORTEX, NMM, etc) doesn’t work unless you download old version or download some sketchy dll files from sketchy website to make those programs works well
    4. Sometimes after running games under wine my system crashes like unable to restart/shutdown or failed to open some programs like dolphin, terminal, etc (maybe bc my system running on wayland)
    5. No Photoshop, After Effects, or Microsoft Office (yes…i know linux has similar programs but those suck & my workplace has standard)
    6. Hard to fine tuning some apps unless you wanna do some dirty work in YAML or XML or CONF files
    • ColdWater@lemmy.ca
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      Mod organizer 2 leastest exe work with wine (I used Lutris) I have yet to find a games installers that didn’t work with wine (I download my games from fit girl repacks)

    • vodka@lemm.ee
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      My solution to #1 is installing it in a VM and copying the installed game over. It works, but quite annoying

    • MonkderDritte@feddit.de
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      Xatab’s work fine. I only had one pirate installer in hundreds of games that i couldn’t get to work. You sometimes need vcrun (newest is vcrun2022) from winetricks to get it working.

      Mod organizers usually have a linux version or at least work in wine. What hurts is wabbajack hasn’t and doesn’t work.

      Edit: nevermind. The one that didn’t work at all was the installer of ‘Network Addon Mod’ for SimCity4k.

    • pHr34kY@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      You’ve just said your 5 biggest problems with Linux are things that Microsoft did.

      • ScreaminOctopus@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        I think it comes down to 2 main reasons, and some members of the libreoffice suite definitely do a better job than others.

        1. Comparability with MS Office, it’s really difficult to use these programs when you can’t reliably collaborate with people using the de-facto standard office software. Impress is exceptionally bad at this.

        2. User interface clunkines, the ribbon ui Microsoft uses in modern office versions is really nice, and makes finding the actions you need really easy. This is coming from someone who used office 03 and 07, it’s not just a learning thing, it’s a better design.

        These issues are definitely a bigger deal on some parts of the suite than others. I’ve found Calc to be a solid replacement for Excel, but when I’m making spreadsheets I’m not fiddling with complex formatting at all. Impress is on the opposite end of the spectrum. It has horrible comparability with PowerPoint, and I need to get things looking just right when I make a presentation. It’s difficult to find even basic formatting options. I could probably solve the usability issues by reading a few tutorials, but the comparability issues hold me back from putting the time in, since I have no idea how a presentation will look when someone loads it in PowerPoint anyway.

        • mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 months ago

          you mean this

          look better than this??

          I dont know but i like libreoffice better in terms of ui.

          But now I think I understood the formatting issue in calc tho. i dont know how excel handles this

          playing around with Impress i can get pretty good slides without any issues(yet). I think your problem is only with portability. I guess that will remain unsolved for a long time.

          edit :

          So yeah now I dont see the formatting problem, can you elaborate on that?(what other formatting issue you faced?)

          • ScreaminOctopus@sh.itjust.works
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            6 months ago

            Yes the PowerPoint ui is much better. It takes more space but it’s much easier to find features you might not use as frequently.

            I haven’t done much switching between calc and excel. Formatting issues come up when making or editing a document in libreoffice and opening it in MS office. Especially with impress, the position and sizes of objects will be very different between the two programs. This makes opening a presentation from impress with PowerPoint on a different computer impractical.

            • mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              6 months ago

              I like Libreoffice ui better. There are different ui modes too if you want to experiment. I selected tabbed compact since I like compact UI, there are other modes which takes more space and have more features visible probably. Anyway UI might be about preferences but at least there are different UI modes. If you hate all of them, its okay.

              Almost all your problems sounds like problems when mixing MS office. Do you face other problems that is not a compatibility issue with MS?

              • ScreaminOctopus@sh.itjust.works
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                6 months ago

                Nothing that isn’t subjective, but the comparability issues are a complete dealbreaker, because interoperability is so necessary. This is definitely something that can be fixed since Google Slides is no where near as bad about this.

    • ZeroHora@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      Vortex works quite well for me, the only game that is not working correctly is BG3 because of the third party tool to mod the game requires .NET 8 and even if I install it with ProtonTricks/WineTricks the tool doesn’t recognize it. With the game receiving official mod support I think the issue will be fixed.

    • urska@lemmy.caOP
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      6 months ago

      Mate you can’t tune apps on windows at all. Most of those things actually work on Linux. You just exposing yourself

    • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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      The first one I’ve never encountered, but I also never heard about those (only razor). Fit girl always works (the one with Amelie). I’ve tried others and also worked.

      It could be those installers have dependencies that are not in your base bottle?

  • voxel@sopuli.xyz
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    hdr support is coming tho

    • steamos already has it iirc (well, specifically gamescope)

    • kde 6 has experimental hdr support with wayland session

    • cosmic de devs promised hdr support in the first public stable release

    what i really miss is passkeys (specifically, using tpm2 to store them like windows hello does)

    • efstajas@lemmy.world
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      SteamOS has HDR support indeed, and it works really well with pretty much all HDR-enabled Windows games in Proton I’ve tried.

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        6 months ago

        Could you elaborate please? What aspects are you referring to? Biometrics for pam? Facial recognition support? Genuinely curious, since I saw the bounty to streamline keepass and pam auth for instance, or howdy for biometrics. Looking forward to both but do you have more information?

      • voxel@sopuli.xyz
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        i was asking about the passkeys specifically tho, not the biometric auth part of it
        linux only supports hardware security keys like yubikey, not on-device passkeys atm

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      Right? I wish that had more focus than HDR.

      I think a big problem is TPM enforcing initramfs. Hoping ukis get wrapped up and as a result more focus is on trusted compute in general

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    6 months ago

    I’m still waiting for gimp to actually be a viable alternative program to photoshop before installing dual boot linux

    Gimp lacks photoshop features and still isn’t catered towards creatives which is the main demographic of people using the software

    I’m aware of krita but it’s suited as a drawing program and also lacks many of the photo editing features I would use in photoshop

    • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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      Sadly, I don’t see Gimp ever competing with Photoshop. It’s not necessarily a feature parity thing, nor is it a mind share thing. It’s as you’ve said - it’s not built by creatives to be the best possible tool for many types of design.

      It’s truly a shame, because for years Adobe slept on different aspects of digital design, and there was a true opportunity to build a Linux-first tool that made things like Web Design so much simpler. It’s an unpopular opinion, but Linux window managers have always lacked creative input. There has always either been a design-by-commitee, or a design-by-engineer feel - and this is reflected in how poor Gimp and design tools are in the Linux space.

      In reality, Linux could have the best photo editing and design-specific tooling, but sadly the tooling either lacks a creative touch, or lacks features that are truly needed to be competitive.

      • chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world
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        I think my biggest issue with the Gimp is that it simply exists. If it didn’t exist there’d be a huge hole in the free software space and people would get together to build software to fill it. But of course there’s no guarantee that would actually produce something better.

        Maybe the real problem with the Gimp is that it’s built to scratch an itch for its own developers who are used to its bizarre UIs and workflows. For all the people I’ve seen complaining about the Gimp over the years, none have stepped up to create an alternative. I think this is likely due to the intersection between visual arts people and software engineers being extremely small (and likely most working for Adobe already).

        • jaspersgroove@lemm.ee
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          I mean…that’s the reason Gimp exists?

          That’s like saying “The biggest problem with the French Revolution is that it happened. If it hadn’t then the conditions would have been perfect for a popular uprising against the ruling class.”

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            I mean the Gimp in particular. My point is that if we could suddenly wish the Gimp into non-existence (a counterfactual) then we could get a do-over. But because the Gimp actually exists it occupies a niche that could go to something better. Instead of banding together to create a better tool, people just grumble a bit and then use the Gimp (or hand over their wallet to Adobe).

        • nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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          You can learn any workflow. Adobe Photoshop was pretty alien to me the first time I used it in school. The thing that made it easier was how good the documentation was on adobes website. I recommend anyone try krita to see if it works better for them.

          I’ve heard it’s not as feature rich as gimp but more people coming from Photoshop seem to like it.

      • LilaOrchidee@slrpnk.net
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        6 months ago

        but, since it’s open source - in principle those creatives and ux designers could actually pitch in and offer their expertise to help improve further versions?

        • skulbuny@sh.itjust.works
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          Engineers don’t know how to manage or include designers in their process. At least all of the “full stack” and “front end” devs I’ve encountered — almost always they never know how to do a single thing about design unless they have some background or appreciation for it.

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        Most open source tool have the same thing that it feels like it’s made by engineers. I think that’s because it’s true, most FOSS tools are made by engineers for engineers. Because most project start with someone needing something and then creating it and sharing it.

        Chances of a programmer needing something and then making it is a lot higher, than an artist needing it and then making it as then there’d be a need to have the necessary skills to make the software. As someone not from CS field I’ve seen how much of redundant programs are present for CS related tasks while barely some exists for other fields because the overlap of programmer and that field is low specifically FOSS programmers. And a few programmers that field would have don’t have the high level software development skills, so most open source tools made by them are “works on my machine, or works for this specific task” even though with less than 1% more effort they could have made a generalized tool.

      • uis@lemm.ee
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        but Linux window managers have always lacked creative input.

        What do you mean? Window managers’ job is to show windows where they are desired and not show windows where they are not desired. With optional bells and whistles like snapping to edges and autoresizing to screen quadrants.

        • uis@lemm.ee
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          So, can anyone elaborate on question instead of downvoting? Is it dragging windows that lacks creative input? Is it resizing windows that lacks creative input? Or it is showing window itself what lacks creative input?

          It’s like saying clipboard always lacked creative input. There is only so much it does. Copying, pasting and optionally working with history. That’s it.

          Well, I guess you might want to rotate the window by 45 degrees, then ok, this is not what most window managers just allow to do. And other major OSes doesn’t allow at all AFAIK.

    • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Wait why? Isn’t the whole point of dual booting that you still have your windows install, and you could use photoshop there?

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    6 months ago

    I’m really glad DaVinci Resolve exists to fill the void of a proper video editor too, Kdenlive just ain’t it for me.

    • OR3X@lemm.ee
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      Unfortunately the free version on Linux doesn’t support H.264/H.265 and even the paid version doesn’t support AAC so using Resolve requires you to transcode if you’re using any normal consumer camera.

        • nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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          The point was probably that if your equipment or sources use aac, you will need to transcode it, losing quality in the process. We don’t always control our media sources and the formats they use.

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            That’s it exactly. Most consumer camera gear uses H.264/H.265 for video and AAC for audio in an MP4 container and the free version of Davinci Resolve just doesn’t support that on Linux. (But does on Windows)

            • uis@lemm.ee
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              6 months ago

              If it even doesn’t support import and export in those formats, you can try externally decode audio and video and store in lossless format. FLAC for audio and something like FFV1 for video.

          • uis@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            Since you are cutting video in pieces, applying filters and all the fun stuff, you are transcoding it anyway.

            • nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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              Yes, but then you would be transcoding an already transcoded video, potentially making the losses apparent. It would be better to just transcode once at the exporting process.

              • uis@lemm.ee
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                It would be better to just transcode once at the exporting process.

                Lossy encoding only happens once in both cases.

                How direct import-export works: input file -> lossy format decompressor of editor -> filters -> lossy format compressor of editor -> output

                How external codecs work: input -> external lossy format decompressor -> intermediate representation(lossless codec, can be just storing raw frames) -> IR decoder of editor -> filters -> IR encoder of editor -> external lossy format compressor -> output

                Both options have only one lossy step - lossy encoder. Or technically two - also filters, but this is editor’s intention.

                • nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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                  Oh, I get it now, you mean using a lossless format as intermediate. Well, it would work but still it would be better if they didn’t require this extra work on linux.

      • Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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        Both work well, but DaVinci is better with color grading, audio post-production, visual effects, collaboration, and format support, just to name a few. It’s a professional product made for professionals.

  • graphene@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    The biggest problem with Linux (other than the whole “most people give up the second they see a terminal” thing) is software availability, which will hopefully improve as Linux gains market share.

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    6 months ago

    Is fractional scaling still ass in Linux? I tried manjaro, elementary os, and Linux Mint a couple of years ago and that bugged me the most.

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      I am on Manjaro plasma 6 with AMD gpu and it works without a hitch. Single 32 inch 4k monitor over displayport

    • AVincentInSpace@pawb.social
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      I’m currently using Plasma Wayland on Arch with the 1080p monitor built into my laptop and an external 4K monitor right next to it at 175%, and it works flawlessly. When a window is half on one monitor and half on the other it actually looks how it’s supposed to. I can drag a window back and forth between the monitors and watch it rescale itself to run at that monitor’s native resolution. Some apps, you don’t even see the transition. The current scale is passed through to the applications, so text looks nice and sharp.

        • bc93@lemmy.world
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          was on Plasma 5, on Opensuse Tumbleweed. haven’t tried with plasma 6 yet

            • bc93@lemmy.world
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              oops - got confused, sorry! I meant plasma 5 rather than 6. it’s been around 6 months or something since I tried it. might be that plasma 6 fixes all the problems I had but I sincerely doubt it!

              • lastweakness@lemmy.world
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                Plasma 6.1 will release soon with some further improvements. But Plasma 6 with Wayland basically solved all my issues already. My setup is fractional scaling with “Apply scaling themselves” for Legacy Applications (X11) and Adaptive sync set to Automatic. Works better than my Windows setup so far