Hi pal,i use Linux Mint on my Day by day Machine,a Asus Notebook,Linux,saves old machines,or Recycle it,and is very safe,no virus,no malware,no spyware..
How did you set up the environment for Krita to use rocm safely? I have an AMD card, and I didn't want to mess it up because I use my computer to play games and write essays, but I wanted to try out image generation in Krita. I only use CPU mode, and it's torture.
Nice video. I am trying to move over to a mostly Linux based system. One of my barriers right now is printing photos. I have a Canon Pixma Pro-200 and have purchased the TurboPrint drivers, but my results have been poor (spent an entire afternoon Sunday trying to work through)… Would be interested if you do any printing as well as how you handle color management…
I'm migrating to Linux from Windows on my laptop Pop/OS, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro, Radeon Graphics. I would like to install Krita and experiment with its AI abilities. Any do's and don'ts suggestions would be appreciated.
I've been away from KDE for a while, so my info may be out of date, but I think there is/are 1 or 2 plasmoids for that. KWeather and “Weather Report” should be available as kdeplasma-addons. I suggest searching something like "kde weather tray" and either "applet" or "plasmoid." Be advised that there may be some issues with one or the other of these due to the recent overhaul of KDE. They may also get data from somewhere that is not as accurate as other places.
@@tommy-xx Having to say, it's even harder to get used to Windows. Had to use it on my last job. 1. Can't grab windows using the win key (It's specifically called a Win key on Windows, even the OS is called Windows and it sucks at controlling windows.) 2. All the software you want to use has to be downloaded from bunch of different websites (easy to make a small mistake and get malware) 3. on Win11, you have to close ALL of your virtual desktops to be able to set a wallpaper for individual monitors, only for it to forget most of the wallpapers and set just one for all of them. This makes vertically set monitors look ugly AF. 4. RAM usage is just awful. 5. CPU usage is just awful 6. Disk usage is just awful. Oh my god, I'm just gonna stop here.
@@marcelplch8725 7. Security is horrible. 8. Privacy is non-existent. 9. Too easy to inadvertently catch malware without even knowing it's happened. 10. Computer is in control, not the user. 11. ...and on, and on, and on...
@@marcelplch8725 (2) has it ever happened to you? Btw chocolatey exists (3) too small and specific to be a point, and nobody sane uses win11, it's too new (4-6) I've installed Win10(LTSC) on a VM, disabled crap I don't need, and after the startup the RAM usage is 0.9Gb, CPU is basically not being used(0-1%) if I'm not doing anything, the disk usage for a fresh install is 16.5Gb (a little high, but totally negligible, a single bluray rip is 4 times the size)
This is just some of the software I use on my daily use of Linux. Let me know what you use below in the comments.
Hi pal,i use Linux Mint on my Day by day Machine,a Asus Notebook,Linux,saves old machines,or Recycle it,and is very safe,no virus,no malware,no spyware..
Sir, thank you. I like that you are taking the time to learn the wonderful open source software that is available and supporting a great community
I never knew Krita did AI generation stuff!
Always good to see more people using Linux for photography / design work :-) Subscribed.
Impressive setup
I didn't even know Krita could do AI stuff! Would love to see how you edit real photos with AI..
I'm always amazed at the lengths Linux users are willing to go through just to get simple things working that should just work by default.
werks on my machine
Thank you for the content. I would like to see some content about Scribus. 😊
How did you set up the environment for Krita to use rocm safely?
I have an AMD card, and I didn't want to mess it up because I use my computer to play games and write essays, but I wanted to try out image generation in Krita. I only use CPU mode, and it's torture.
Endeavour OS is a nice choice👍👏
"This doesn't work" "Problem I keep getting" "Not supported" "Had to write a script to stop this happening"
This looks a real journey
Btw, which distro you use?
Endeavor is not beginner friendly at all
Arch Btw
@@ShaneMiltonProductionsi use arch btw
Nice video. I am trying to move over to a mostly Linux based system. One of my barriers right now is printing photos. I have a Canon Pixma Pro-200 and have purchased the TurboPrint drivers, but my results have been poor (spent an entire afternoon Sunday trying to work through)… Would be interested if you do any printing as well as how you handle color management…
Is there a CUPS driver available for your printer?
Sadly, sometimes the only solution - especially with printers - is a VM.
That's strange, my Ubuntu based custom distro does have support for my canon pixma printer out of the box. BTW I use PopOS.
you purchased drivers?
I'm migrating to Linux from Windows on my laptop Pop/OS, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro, Radeon Graphics. I would like to install Krita and experiment with its AI abilities. Any do's and don'ts suggestions would be appreciated.
Great Content here Shane!
Thanks for the comment and sub.
Amazing ❤💪
This is the sickest rice! How did you get those floating icons on the desktop? Send us the dotfiles!
FF XIII is underrated. Interested to know about your workflow for music in Linux. What are you using? Bitwig?
Not him of course but I've been using Reaper and LOVING it! Even on my main music production machine where I'm NOT running Linux I'm using Reaper now.
How did you make the temperature measurement show up in the system tray?
I've been away from KDE for a while, so my info may be out of date, but I think there is/are 1 or 2 plasmoids for that. KWeather and “Weather Report” should be available as kdeplasma-addons. I suggest searching something like "kde weather tray" and either "applet" or "plasmoid." Be advised that there may be some issues with one or the other of these due to the recent overhaul of KDE. They may also get data from somewhere that is not as accurate as other places.
Good Linux content, I watched this at 1.75x speed so there's room for improvement
"Waiting on an update" "Had to use my Windows install" "Hoping this improves" "It doesn't see those" "Would not..." "Easy to do under Windows"
Don't judge man. It's somewhat hard to get used to Linux.
@@tommy-xx Having to say, it's even harder to get used to Windows. Had to use it on my last job.
1. Can't grab windows using the win key (It's specifically called a Win key on Windows, even the OS is called Windows and it sucks at controlling windows.)
2. All the software you want to use has to be downloaded from bunch of different websites (easy to make a small mistake and get malware)
3. on Win11, you have to close ALL of your virtual desktops to be able to set a wallpaper for individual monitors, only for it to forget most of the wallpapers and set just one for all of them. This makes vertically set monitors look ugly AF.
4. RAM usage is just awful.
5. CPU usage is just awful
6. Disk usage is just awful.
Oh my god, I'm just gonna stop here.
@@marcelplch8725 7. Security is horrible.
8. Privacy is non-existent.
9. Too easy to inadvertently catch malware without even knowing it's happened.
10. Computer is in control, not the user.
11. ...and on, and on, and on...
Well, EndeavorOS is not beginner friendly.
@@marcelplch8725
(2) has it ever happened to you? Btw chocolatey exists
(3) too small and specific to be a point, and nobody sane uses win11, it's too new
(4-6) I've installed Win10(LTSC) on a VM, disabled crap I don't need, and after the startup the RAM usage is 0.9Gb, CPU is basically not being used(0-1%) if I'm not doing anything, the disk usage for a fresh install is 16.5Gb (a little high, but totally negligible, a single bluray rip is 4 times the size)
Didn't use neofetch or fastfetch, -1 point smh
World is frozen in your video... Can't handle this speed of your speech