• 2 Posts
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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: October 7th, 2024

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  • I had tried about a dozen other distros and all of them had something I didn’t really like. I finally landed on OpenSuse just because it feels like it’s made to get work done. No package manager drama or power trips from devs.

    It just comes across as the guy on the project that just does all the work for everyone else because they’re too distracted.

    Still haven’t come across nearly anything that I can’t accomplish through the Yast GUI. I wish I had come across it sooner, honestly.










  • otacon239@lemmy.worldto196@lemmy.blahaj.zonefirefox rule
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    22 days ago

    Yeah, I agree. Browsers all seemed to act like they are the only thing running on the computer at some point, practically resembling their own OS with the amount of containerization and complexity. There should definitely be a way for the OS to request some RAM be released from the browser.


  • otacon239@lemmy.worldto196@lemmy.blahaj.zonefirefox rule
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    22 days ago

    There’s also the idea that free RAM is somehow a good thing. In an ideal system, the RAM would always be “full” of potentially useful data. Having a bunch of empty RAM means that it’s not being useful. That space could be used to hold plenty of regularly used files that would be instantly loaded instead of having to pull from the drive again.

    I don’t know when everyone started getting concerned with RAM usage, but in a perfect system, it would hold onto all of your frequently used programs and files that it could fit from boot and then those would load instantly.

    Some Linux distros even allow loading the entire OS into RAM for wild speeds.

    Idle RAM is just that. It does you no favors. Now, I do understand that you don’t want to be completely out, but we act like having 80% free is a goal for some reason.