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Arch Linux Experience – Hyprland



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Arch Linux with hyperland, I mean hyprland experience.

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33 Comments

  1. dotfiles are not "have a dot next to them", they start with a dot 😉
    This is something that actually works the same on all filesystems that I can think of.
    A window manager also isn't a desktop environment, they are display servers. I know it get's confusing. It's more like the engine the desktop environment runs on. KDE, gnome etc are desktop environments.

    You have your graphics drivers (amd, nvidea, intel, …) on top of that you have your window manager. (X, i3, Wayland, …) and on top of that you have your desktop environment. (Plasma, Gnome, KDE, Raspbien …)
    It is possible to use window managers without adding a desktop environment for lightweight systems with limited resources.

    Environment variables are variables that apply everywhere. for example in windows you can use %APPDATA% anywhere, and it will always point to your user appdata folder. Or localhost will always point to 127.0.0.1

  2. Seeing a complete beginner try doing things for advanced users is so painful xD Please go learn the very basics first before using window managers/wayland.

  3. This is the contact that you won't find anywhere. No lies, no biases, no sucking to Linux. It's just a true experience of a person trying out Linux.

  4. Imagine u need to visit neighbour just to print one document but then you have realised your laptop has Arch and it requires building from scratch every single printer individually so it takes several hours just to print a single document.

  5. If you’re referring to your “internal IP” that is assigned by your router; not much at all. As long as they are outside your network.

    Home Routers with DHCP enabled usually provide a private (internal) IP, but that doesn’t mean it’s directly exposed to the internet. And those private IP’s would be the same as many thousands of people. The range used internally is usually the same with any user of that make or model.

    For example, anyone with a specific ASUS router would have an IP somewhere on the 192.168.50.x address space. Basically, there’s nothing unique about internal IP’s.

    And if that’s all they had, they couldn’t do anything at all since they’re missing your IP as assigned by your ISP.

  6. I would argue that windows managers are not actually efficient in any way. They are there for people who struggle with the cognitive complexity of more than 2 windows or struggle with ocd. So basicaly for old and cognitevly impaired people. If you comment below, you belong to one of those categories.I want to see your comments now Arch users.🤣

  7. I too am diving into Linux and feel your pain. I couldn't get my Manjaro Sway to recognise my TV monitor over the HDMI port, so I switched to Debian and two of the 5 window managers I use recognise the external monitor.
    May I recommend ComfyUI for your next adventure.

  8. Your local (private) IP is actually not dangerous to show. That is just the IP that your router gives to your device to identify it within your local network. The public IP is more exposing, but it still isn't horrible if you show it.

  9. Regarding your IP Address, Local IP's such as those starting with 192.168.x.x can only be seen by other devices on the same network, and aren't considered a risk if you happen to leak it. It is your public IP address that you should be more concerned about censoring, which you can find by googling "what is my ip address"

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