So I've been trying Kubuntu for a while. Went through some paces of coding a little, mostly in Bash but also some Java (not much) on this laptop I had. I found it hard to be productive in other areas, mostly word processing is something that doesn't work for me with Calligra being not up to par with anything. I have difficulties using bullets and numbering whereever I go and Whatever application I use, unless I write in HTML.
I was doing HTML before in a Mozilla app called BlueGriffon. It was mostly an annoying tool because it would always write auto-close tags that I then had to manually remove to keep the flow intact. But at least it worked and it could output whatever in Firefox which would be good for writing. And, of course, something written in HTML is still very portable. I have not used MS Office for a long time. The only tool I used was MS Wordpad. I'm almost thinking there are no good word processors left anymore because the corporate interest is all on the web, so there is office 365 and Google Docs. I mostly hate web-only tools though, they require you to have an internet access at all times, the benefit of course is safe storage online undaunted by your habits.
Word Processors have always been this weird thing with Tables and Bullets and so on. It never quite worked, definitely not in OpenOffice but also not very well in MS Office I believe, although that was better than anything.
Calligra is an offshoot that I hope to maintain or work towards.
But my comfort in Linux is still very low. I'm okay while I'm not doing anything else and I can focus on Linux and on writing software, (perhaps, mostly) but all the same I hardly get to the real life work of making documents and sharing them, making images and sharing them, and making other stuff capable of being published. I seriously want to do more in presentation-wise web-publishing, that is to say, to make stuff that is beautiful and worthwhile and to get it out. I don't really get that far in Linux because I'm worried about the system constantly, fighting with the system, not getting any work done.
For instance, making screenshots of windows in Kubuntu 14.10 doesn't quite work. I get these windows with the blue glow around it and KSnapShot doesn't work well. So if you can't even make screenshots, you are pretty much hindered in whatever else you want to do.
I am using Kubuntu now to rip audio cds. And also, to play them. Clementine is really outstanding. Could be better still, but not by much. It looks fantastic and works fantastic too. So I am using SoundKonverter to rip audio cds and I can rip two at a time (I have two drives) and this really works very well. I'm hoping there will be a tool to convert all my FLAC albums to MP3 later on. There used to be a tool on Windows that I used. It just needs to maintain the filenames and tags.
In Dolphin I am really much lost. I have to give a lot of attention to doing my things. I am a habit of going into a shell, a console, and do my stuff there. I really don't like it to have to use dolphin. But sometimes it is just easier. However, in Windows the file spaces are better organized with the drive letters. In Kubuntu I keep searching and it requires a lot of effort to find my stuff. I have mounted a CIFS/SAMBA drive on /store/media and in the shell I don't have so much a trouble with it, but from Dolphin it is hard to reach. I have managed to add it to Places now.
The devices list at the bottom is just a bit... it is all chaotic. Order! We need order! :P. The filesystem in Linux is hard to create order in because there are so many root folders. I make it a habit personally to never create more than say 10-20 subfolders in any folder hierarchy, usually much less (say 12 different music categories). The root folder of Linux is filled with goo. It is not meant for traversal in a graphical way. They never thought on "how will this look in a file manager".
That is really something that needs to change if Linux is to be user friendly. Mac OS changed that long time ago. Not that the Mac OS is very good, you can hardly reach anything there. The simple Windows setup is still the best.
I am currently, like, putting whatever I need under /home as a form of a local "user" or a shortcut (symlink) to wherever else it stands. I don't like the /home structure. But that aside. It is the best I can manage now.
But now the real deal.
I cannot play games in Linux.
Diablo II doesn't work, Diablo III doesn't work. It is all either too slow or the window/graphics handling is real bad. These applications cause resolution changes in the KDE desktop. There is weird window panning with Diablo II. I can't play these games. I do not like virtual boxing yet. So I'm either at dual boot or....
There is no or. I feel more at ease presently in Kubuntu because it feels a bit more solid and more well installed. But at the same time, I can't do anything here. I just sit here and use my computer but not for any purpose.
I use Kubuntu to write about Kubuntu, like now, but the system is meant for more than that. A computer is meant to do fun stuff or creative stuff. And I don't get to that. The only thing I get to is Bash writing, which is also: writing for the system, writing for Kubuntu.
So, It seems to me I can only use Kubuntu if my interest is Kubuntu, but not if it is more than that. Most people who use Kubuntu a lot get an interest in Kubuntu of course. But that is not the same with Windows: Windows users don't have an interest in Windows, they have an interest in getting work done, doing fun stuff. Windows just sits in the background (hopefully) not wanting anything from you.
It is content with itself.
Like if I had a good word processor right now, I would instantly start writing. But it takes too much work to get it going. I feel like I am worse off than I was in 1999.
The game I am playing already existed by that time, almost. Diablo II. I had a word processor (illegal copy of MS Word). I had a nice browser (Opera). I almost had fixed internet. I was doing a lot of coding. Everything worked.
It's like now I have bet on two horses and I am split between them. I can either rip audio cds or play D2, but not both. Of course my audio ripping is available to me in Windows because I store it on a network drive. I have written a little script to do the renaming and the copying. That is the fun stuff about Linux, that I can write scripts to automate stuff.
I was doing HTML before in a Mozilla app called BlueGriffon. It was mostly an annoying tool because it would always write auto-close tags that I then had to manually remove to keep the flow intact. But at least it worked and it could output whatever in Firefox which would be good for writing. And, of course, something written in HTML is still very portable. I have not used MS Office for a long time. The only tool I used was MS Wordpad. I'm almost thinking there are no good word processors left anymore because the corporate interest is all on the web, so there is office 365 and Google Docs. I mostly hate web-only tools though, they require you to have an internet access at all times, the benefit of course is safe storage online undaunted by your habits.
Word Processors have always been this weird thing with Tables and Bullets and so on. It never quite worked, definitely not in OpenOffice but also not very well in MS Office I believe, although that was better than anything.
Calligra is an offshoot that I hope to maintain or work towards.
But my comfort in Linux is still very low. I'm okay while I'm not doing anything else and I can focus on Linux and on writing software, (perhaps, mostly) but all the same I hardly get to the real life work of making documents and sharing them, making images and sharing them, and making other stuff capable of being published. I seriously want to do more in presentation-wise web-publishing, that is to say, to make stuff that is beautiful and worthwhile and to get it out. I don't really get that far in Linux because I'm worried about the system constantly, fighting with the system, not getting any work done.
For instance, making screenshots of windows in Kubuntu 14.10 doesn't quite work. I get these windows with the blue glow around it and KSnapShot doesn't work well. So if you can't even make screenshots, you are pretty much hindered in whatever else you want to do.
I am using Kubuntu now to rip audio cds. And also, to play them. Clementine is really outstanding. Could be better still, but not by much. It looks fantastic and works fantastic too. So I am using SoundKonverter to rip audio cds and I can rip two at a time (I have two drives) and this really works very well. I'm hoping there will be a tool to convert all my FLAC albums to MP3 later on. There used to be a tool on Windows that I used. It just needs to maintain the filenames and tags.
In Dolphin I am really much lost. I have to give a lot of attention to doing my things. I am a habit of going into a shell, a console, and do my stuff there. I really don't like it to have to use dolphin. But sometimes it is just easier. However, in Windows the file spaces are better organized with the drive letters. In Kubuntu I keep searching and it requires a lot of effort to find my stuff. I have mounted a CIFS/SAMBA drive on /store/media and in the shell I don't have so much a trouble with it, but from Dolphin it is hard to reach. I have managed to add it to Places now.
The devices list at the bottom is just a bit... it is all chaotic. Order! We need order! :P. The filesystem in Linux is hard to create order in because there are so many root folders. I make it a habit personally to never create more than say 10-20 subfolders in any folder hierarchy, usually much less (say 12 different music categories). The root folder of Linux is filled with goo. It is not meant for traversal in a graphical way. They never thought on "how will this look in a file manager".
That is really something that needs to change if Linux is to be user friendly. Mac OS changed that long time ago. Not that the Mac OS is very good, you can hardly reach anything there. The simple Windows setup is still the best.
I am currently, like, putting whatever I need under /home as a form of a local "user" or a shortcut (symlink) to wherever else it stands. I don't like the /home structure. But that aside. It is the best I can manage now.
But now the real deal.
I cannot play games in Linux.
Diablo II doesn't work, Diablo III doesn't work. It is all either too slow or the window/graphics handling is real bad. These applications cause resolution changes in the KDE desktop. There is weird window panning with Diablo II. I can't play these games. I do not like virtual boxing yet. So I'm either at dual boot or....
There is no or. I feel more at ease presently in Kubuntu because it feels a bit more solid and more well installed. But at the same time, I can't do anything here. I just sit here and use my computer but not for any purpose.
I use Kubuntu to write about Kubuntu, like now, but the system is meant for more than that. A computer is meant to do fun stuff or creative stuff. And I don't get to that. The only thing I get to is Bash writing, which is also: writing for the system, writing for Kubuntu.
So, It seems to me I can only use Kubuntu if my interest is Kubuntu, but not if it is more than that. Most people who use Kubuntu a lot get an interest in Kubuntu of course. But that is not the same with Windows: Windows users don't have an interest in Windows, they have an interest in getting work done, doing fun stuff. Windows just sits in the background (hopefully) not wanting anything from you.
It is content with itself.
Like if I had a good word processor right now, I would instantly start writing. But it takes too much work to get it going. I feel like I am worse off than I was in 1999.
The game I am playing already existed by that time, almost. Diablo II. I had a word processor (illegal copy of MS Word). I had a nice browser (Opera). I almost had fixed internet. I was doing a lot of coding. Everything worked.
It's like now I have bet on two horses and I am split between them. I can either rip audio cds or play D2, but not both. Of course my audio ripping is available to me in Windows because I store it on a network drive. I have written a little script to do the renaming and the copying. That is the fun stuff about Linux, that I can write scripts to automate stuff.
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