Thanks for the follow-up & for sharing your experience. I suppose this kinda thing highlights one of the quiet strengths of the X11 approach… Simple tools like xwinwrap
paired with mpv
tend to be more lightweight and predictable, especially when you just want a looping video without the overhead. There’s something to be said for minimal scripts doing exactly what you need with no surprises…
Raccoonn
Sometimes…
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- 146 Comments
I hadn’t come across
mpvpaper
before, so I decided to look it up. While it seems interesting, my initial impression is that it might be a bit more resource-intensive compared to what’s achievable on X11. On X11, you can set up a video wallpaper usingmpv
with surprisingly little effort and minimal code…if pgrep mpv; then pkill mpv; else xwinwrap -ni -fs -s -st -sp -b -nf -- mpv --profile=wallpaper -wid %WID /home/furycd001/wallpapers/wallpaper.mp4 fi
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto linuxmemes@lemmy.world•What's your favourite OS that does not use systemd?16·1 month agoSystem service managers like systemd, OpenRC, runit, or SysVinit often come down to user preference. While these systems are crucial for initializing and managing services on servers, where uptime, resource allocation, and specific daemon behaviors are important, their impact on a typical desktop or laptop is generally minimal.
For most personal devices, the primary functions of a service manager occur largely out of sight. As long as the system boots reliably and applications run smoothly, the underlying service manager rarely registers as a significant factor in the daily user experience.
For many, including myself, systemd simply works without much fuss. My choice to stick with it isn’t due to strong conviction or deep technical analysis, but rather the simple fact that I’ve rarely, if ever, had to interact with it directly. For my personal desktop and laptop, it reliably handles booting, service management, and shutdown in the background. If it’s not broken and isn’t hindering my daily computing, there’s no compelling reason to explore alternatives.
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto unixporn@lemmy.world•TIL Kitty terminal can show a dock panel on Linux desktops!2·1 month agoI remember many years ago, someone did this with xterm, and someone else later got it working with urxvt…
M$ loves locking users into their totally bulls*it ecosystem with deliberately broken “standards.” LibreOffice, on the other hand, actually respects open formats like ODF and doesn’t treat interoperability as a threat. Word still can’t properly open documents it didn’t create, unless you pay the vendor tax and pray the formatting survives…
If a program insists on Windows, it is instantly deemed incompatible with my operating parameters and fails my system requirements…
I have added “Piss on carpet” to my email signature…
We need to make this a thing !!
Ah yes the golden days of “Linux drama”…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•What do you pirate that is lesser known beyond basic media (movies, tv, games)?English2·7 months agoCould you share a bit more about how you use telegram for that purpose? I’d like to learn more. Thanks. I’ve never used telegram before btw…
Personally never tried to do that myself, but I’m pretty sure its doable…
There was a theme just like this released many years ago on deviantart. Used it for a while back whenever I used window decorations…
Ah, yes, the mythical “Year of the Linux Desktop”—that elusive utopia Linux enthusiasts have been chasing since it’s creation. Newsflash: nobody cares. The year of the Linux desktop isn’t some grand global awakening; it’s just whenever you decide to stop whining about it and install the thing. For me, it was 2002, and guess what? My computer didn’t care either. It just worked. So stop waiting for some cosmic alignment of market share and app support. The year of the Linux desktop is when you make it. Now go forth and sudo (or doas) your destiny…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Tell one thing that you miss after switching from another OS to Linux.121·8 months agoWhen I switched from Windows to Linux back in 2002, I never looked back. I missed absolutely nothing. Linux offered everything I needed and more, with unmatched freedom and flexibility. In late 2008, I bought a unibody MacBook, and while macOS wasn’t bad per se, it just didn’t feel like home. I missed Linux too much, so I wiped the MacBook and installed Debian. From that moment on, I’ve never switched again—Linux has always been home. I’m currently rocking Arch (btw) on my main desktop & Debian on my laptop…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•There are sane people with this many VMs on a personal machine, right? RIGHT?2·10 months agoMy motherboard is a stock dell from around 2012 so I doubt performance would be at all good. Thats even if it worked in the first place…
Raccoonn@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•There are sane people with this many VMs on a personal machine, right? RIGHT?1·10 months agoGPU passthrough has always been one of those exciting ideas I’d love to dive into one day. My current GPU being a little older, has only 4GB of RAM. Oh the joy’s of being a budget PC user. Thankfully it’s more of a “would be nice rather” than an “actually need”…
While I appreciate the utility of snaps and flatpaks for providing sandboxed, cross-platform apps, I’ve often found them slower than traditional packages. Their tendency to take up more disk space also feels inefficient, especially when system resources are sometimes precious. For these reasons, I generally prefer using apps installed directly through the system’s default package manager, which tend to offer better performance and use space more efficiently…
Personally for me Arch on my system has been more stable & faster than both Debian & Fedora…