Painting 3D printed Spiderman bust - Dub'ya Makes
The title of the video basically says it - turns out I like this kind of model painting every bit as much as I hoped I would... maybe someday I'll even get good at it 😛
Download the 3D file here: printables.com/model/238618-sp…


curbstickle
in reply to BandanaBug • • •... Debian.
Mordikan
in reply to BandanaBug • • •If I'm being completely honest, it sounds like you hit a problem and then just kinda gave up (I'm not trying to sound mean or anything - please don't take it that way).
If I were in that situation I would probably drop to a terminal (ex. CTRL+ALT+3) and try to find what failed (
journalctl). Especially if the screen just stayed black I would probably wonder what packages I just updated. I'm not going to remember, but it's probably something graphical. Maybe I installed nvidia dkms packages and I have a mismatch or I decided to try out a different login manager and it happens to not support Wayland or something. Snapshots would be my last resort, not my first.As far as NixOS, I love it. Its incredibly stable and the declarative language is really handy to write in. I'm not aware of any graphical store though (outside of maybe some github project). Its declarative meaning you write the configuration.nix file and import any secondary files into the config. And packages are installed declaratively:
I would say if you are wanting GUI that NixOS is probably not a great choice. I mean just to get installed package version, you're going to have to do a one-liner (mine for example):
BandanaBug
in reply to Mordikan • • •Not having a display output made me feel like I'd need a live USB and fix it with root which is often to always quite involved. Thank you for your detailed guide. That's part of why I love the Linux community. There's often to always someone knowledgeable that has a solution. I will try this later!
Eggymatrix
in reply to BandanaBug • • •Under linux you have the option to not reboot after an update, use that power wisely.
You did not, so you took a risk and lost.
BandanaBug
in reply to Eggymatrix • • •Eggymatrix
in reply to BandanaBug • • •We don't babysit users here, I want to never be forced to do anything, nor is sleep a problem on all machines after update.
There already are OSs that remove control from the user and they are not called linux. We do things differently here and that is why it is not for anyone. It might sound elitistic, but it actually is not. There are good reasons to allow choice to the user, because some users need that power. Others don't and prefer ignorance.
zarkanian
in reply to Eggymatrix • • •Eggymatrix
in reply to zarkanian • • •BandanaBug
Unknown parent • • •Of course windows has it's (huge) flaws and not everything works perfectly. There's a reason I switched. But Linux in my experience breaks in a bigger way in my personal experience.
BandanaBug
Unknown parent • • •True. That's already a speedbump in the road. But that's to be expected when switching to a different OS.
Troubleshooting is no issue. But not having a picture does not help lol. Perhaps using a live USB might fix it. But then again, that probably involves messing with kernel settings or whatever. Seems quite involved for a simple update..
Depends. I had issues with Bluetooth chips. That's the fault of the manufacturer, not Linux but still. My Xbox controller was difficult to connect at times. I've had installs with audio issues or difficulties playing games because Lutris or Bottles wouldn't work..
BandanaBug
Unknown parent • • •And in my experience it's less of a OS breaking experience.
Sunsofold
in reply to BandanaBug • • •zarkanian
in reply to Sunsofold • • •curbstickle
in reply to Sunsofold • • •Specter
in reply to Sunsofold • • •I was gonna say the same thing.
For most beginners who just want their PC to work, the obvious choice should be Mint for older hardware, and Universal Blue’s Fedora-based images (Bluefin or Aurora depending on the preferred desktop).
Of course, since OP mentioned NixOS that is an option as well. But it should be the stable version, and it is not beginner friendly like the other two.
Evil_Shrubbery
in reply to BandanaBug • • •Pardon me for asking so ... but if you yearn for the "stability" ("simplicity"?) of Windows why not use a Linux distro with an approach more similar to that?
So something not Arch based, ... and even tho NixOS almost kinda is the correct direction (for an arch-ish thing), I got the feeling you don't really want to configure your system & potentially upkeep that config?
Also to note that the actual issue wasn't fully diagnosed. Reinstalling the full os to fix an update is fairly extreme for your mainstream Linux these days.
But to be at least a bit on topic - bcs I need "simplicity" & "stability" at times when I can't even (for months on end) I use Tumbleweed (rolling distro).
ibot
in reply to Evil_Shrubbery • • •Fully agree!
As a Linux user for more than 10 years now, I can not really understand why so many people switch from Windows to CachyOS.
Yes, CachyOS is great. In general I see the advantage of Arch based distros, but only if one knows what they are doing. It's great on fresh installs, but over time users need to fix issues and make decisions and this only works if they know what they are doing.
Similar wis NixOS. Great distro, but not for low maintanance and beginners. If you just want something that runs super stable and you don't need to fix anything, go for Debian. And there are a lot of options between Debian and CachyOS.
hendrik
in reply to BandanaBug • • •How long have you been using Linux, so on the one hand you still keep thinking about Windows. And on the other hand you already progressed to an Arch derivate, use BTRFS, snapshots, a non-standard bootloader and all that stuff?
I like NixOS. But it's really for people with too much spare time to learn new programming languages, abstract concepts and weird quirks. It's great. But sometimes you'll also do a simple
nixos-rebuild switchand it'll greet you with 4 pages of gibberish. Or you'll spend 3h packaging some weird Python stuff, because you can't just install and run it like on a regular distro 😅klangcola
in reply to BandanaBug • • •MrsDoyle
in reply to BandanaBug • • •I've found the opposite - using Linux on my PC has been a breeze. I expected drama connecting my phone and e-reader, but no. Plain sailing, everything just works. I'm so glad I jumped when I did, hearing some of the recent Windows nonsense.
I'm on Zorin if it helps. The free version.
marcie (she/her)
in reply to BandanaBug • • •