Showing posts with label KDE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KDE. Show all posts

Friday, September 25, 2020

Desktop upgrade completed

  I finally upgraded my desktop, added the SSD and kept my old HDD.  While at it, I switched my OS to Manjaro with KDE. And I am really happy with it.  It is pretty snappy and fast compared to GNOME.  Yet there is a weird memory leak after some time, the swap memory starts filling up, and I end up using as much swap as memory, so if I use up 6GB of RAM, after sometime SWAP will be used up to 6GB.

  I do not think I would ever need to switch back to Windows.  There is nothing that I am missing from that OS. Even work everything can be done in the browser. No need for proprietary software or anything that required Windows. My hobby which is photography can be fully done on a linux machine, download the images, process enhance, upload them etc...

  I also changed the OS on my trusty Dell laptop, while the battery is now 100% dead, I installed ZorinOS. I had AntergOS on it, but after sometime since that project was abandoned it started failing during updates, some packages were conflicting, or running into dependency issues. So I decided to try a new OS. So far so good, just tried it for browsing, and getting to know the OS.  Will update after having done more mileage on it.

  Cheers for now.

Friday, April 24, 2020

GNOME as Desktop Environment, Leaking

  So with the WFH days due to Covid-19, I spend more time on my desktop, since it is more comfortable sitting at the desk, than over the laptop.  I was working using GNOME, which was ok for a while, but through out the day I noticed that my memory usage was at 100%, and my system starts to swap like crazy.
  I switched over to KDE Plasman, and it looks like having the same number of browser tabs/windows open I use only up to 5.1GB of RAM vs. 8GB and it doesn't seem to grow over time. I tested it for 3 days now, and KDE Plasma is way more stable and memory friendly than GNOME.  So I actually decided to un-install GNOME all together, I still have XFCE if Plasma decides to mess with me.  I did have one instance when it was not willing to start-up for what ever reason.  Maybe one day GNOME will become stable and memory friendly. I like it's simplicity and being un-cluttered. Plasma is ok, though at times it can be over configurable :)  

  Anyhow, I also ordered an SSD for my desktop, so I'll probably be replacing my Ubuntu system to Manjaro.  I prefer the rolling release, and over the year or so I've been using it have not experienced any issues.
  I will be an interesting switch, since I have a LVM HDD setup, the new SSD will have a fresh Manjaro install, and I'll try to mount the LVM, once up and running. Enough of this rant.... peace

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Upgrade to the little laptop

  I was thinking of purchasing a new laptop since I felt like my little trusty Acer is aging. Instead, I decided to upgrade it. It is after all out of warranty, so I got it an 8GB RAM Upgrade, and a 240GB SSD, well I have to say, it's a new experience. I put a fresh install of Manjaro Linux which I highly recommend.  I used GNOME as my Desktop Environment but recently switched to KDE.  I originally had Xfce, but it has a limitation that I couldn't find a workaround for, so I went with GNOME and I am now experimenting with KDE. I have to say, Plasma KDE is nice, and its memory footprint won't be a problem with 8GB of RAM.  The real bottleneck I some times hit is the CPU

About info below:
Operating System: Manjaro Linux
KDE Plasma Version: 5.17.4
KDE Frameworks Version: 5.64.0
Qt Version: 5.13.2
Kernel Version: 5.4.2-1-MANJARO
OS Type: 64-bit
Processors: 2 × Intel® Celeron® CPU N3050 @ 1.60GHz
Memory: 7,6 GiB of RAM







  I can't say I hit it often, but I noticed a few times :) I know it's not that hard, but for my home usage, I think I can live with it. My neighbor has an HP Laptop, with an Intel i3, 8GB, and SSD laptop. One day he asked me if he should upgrade, I just can't see why would a home user who uses the laptop for browsing Facebook, maybe watching Youtube would need a stronger machine?  I mean really, for those tasks you don't need a laptop a tablet would do the job just fine. I do know that he's using Windows 10, which explains why the machine feels slow and flimsy. I still don't understand or know why Windows machines manage to slow down over time. Every few years you should do a fresh install to keep it lean and fast.
  For example, I have my Desktop, which now uses Ubuntu 19.10 which was upgraded over the years from 15.04, that's 4 years of upgrades keep in mind that its full upgrades. I won't say that I don't see some problems, most likely from some manual tinkering that I did. I do prefer the Manjaro rolling release method, always fresh, and up to date. So far I have not run into issues with it. I did manage to mess up an Archlinux install, simply because the upgraded Kernel did not support my laptop screens brightness settings a few years back so I had a black screen :) a few hours later, I got it fixed thanks to the community, but I ditched it back then, switched to Antergos on one laptop, and Manjaro on another. Antergos is no more, so that laptop became an Archlinux, Manjaro though still runs on my main laptop. I am considering buying a 120GB or maybe even a small 64GB SSD for my desktop, and start fresh with Manjaro on it.
  Anyhow, I just wanted to share some thoughts, there you have it. I hope 2020 I will be more active "as I say every year" :)

Monday, April 28, 2014

Upgraded Desktop to 14.04

  As soon as Ubuntu 14.04 came out, I wanted to get the upgrade.  And the other weekend I did.  This meant a bit of instability on the first few boots, but it went away.  One thing I didn't check on, which I should have is the status of my Software RAID.  It seems after the upgrade it went out of sync, and I didn't give it time to sync up.  So yesterday, I ran an update, and accidentally thought of checking my Disk status.  And that's why the system was bit hung.
  My desktop is a bit of a mix.  I use GNOME, and KDE, my wife uses GNOME.  This sometimes causes conflicts, on my desktop.  I am hoping to clear those up.  For example, I can't properly run a distro upgrade from KDE, I had to login it GNOME, where I was able to upgrade my system, not sure why, but it worked this way.  Is upgrading worth it, so far I haven't seen the benefits, except that digiKam is the upgraded version, which I am happy for.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Switched from Gnome, to KDE

Been using Gnome for the past 4 years at least, but I decided to switch to KDE after trying it again.  I seem to recall that KDE wasn't stable enough.  I must have tried it when v3 was having stability problems, and then v4 was in between as well.  Lately, I switched to the latest that comes with Ubuntu 13.04 and I like it more.  It get more tweaking, and it's pretty stable.
Gnome has become too minimalistic to my taste, although I like the approach, but too much tweaking was needed to customize it to my taste.
I also like digiKam application, it's way better than shotwell.  It's got a two pane comparison window when editing images, that is an excellent feature.  I do feel that shotwell is faster a bit, but I can live with the slowness for those options.