GonzoKnows@monero.town to Linux@lemmy.mlEnglish · 1 year agoVanilla OS 22.10 Kinetic Showcase Videowww.youtube.comexternal-linkmessage-square18fedilinkarrow-up146arrow-down14
arrow-up142arrow-down1external-linkVanilla OS 22.10 Kinetic Showcase Videowww.youtube.comGonzoKnows@monero.town to Linux@lemmy.mlEnglish · 1 year agomessage-square18fedilink
minus-squarejoneskind@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up7·1 year agoLooks like the built-in web browser is WebKit based (recognisable by its web inspector) I never managed to make Netflix work properly on Linux’ webkit browsers. Widevine only seems to work with Chromium and Gecko based browsers. According to omglinux, VanillaOS is a Ubuntu based Linux with an immutable file system (first time I ever hear of this). To be honest, the only thing I care of this days is a good OS for my RaspberryPis.
minus-squareBob@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkarrow-up10·edit-21 year agoImmutable OS’ are really cool and are probably going to be the future of Linux desktop computing as they are much more stable and reliable as well as removing a big maintenance burden on the distro devs by shipping most of the software via Flatpaks. If you’re interested, there is NixOS, Fedora Silverblue, SUSE MicroOS, VanillaOS are the big names at the moment I also suggest this read for some general info about how they work https://tesk.page/2023/08/29/misconceptions-about-immutable-distributions.html
minus-squareAlex@feddit.rolinkfedilinkarrow-up1·1 year ago+1 for NixOS. I use it daily and it’s really stable and fast
Looks like the built-in web browser is WebKit based (recognisable by its web inspector)
I never managed to make Netflix work properly on Linux’ webkit browsers. Widevine only seems to work with Chromium and Gecko based browsers.
According to omglinux, VanillaOS is a Ubuntu based Linux with an immutable file system (first time I ever hear of this).
To be honest, the only thing I care of this days is a good OS for my RaspberryPis.
Immutable OS’ are really cool and are probably going to be the future of Linux desktop computing as they are much more stable and reliable as well as removing a big maintenance burden on the distro devs by shipping most of the software via Flatpaks.
If you’re interested, there is NixOS, Fedora Silverblue, SUSE MicroOS, VanillaOS are the big names at the moment I also suggest this read for some general info about how they work https://tesk.page/2023/08/29/misconceptions-about-immutable-distributions.html
Thanks for the tips !
+1 for NixOS. I use it daily and it’s really stable and fast
Going to be my next distro I think
Based