• 61 Posts
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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: July 7th, 2023

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  • Offline first for online content? Whoa buddy, where’s this Moon you’re asking for?

    Seriously though, you need to be realistic when you’re asserting your wants for a service or tool. Everyone builds tools to sync bookmarks and save lists now, because that’s a feature that users want. It’s going to be difficult to find something that is “offline”.

    Try using a memo app maybe? Lots of password managers have the ability to save links, and would technically be “outside” the browser if you want them to be.



  • TLDR: use a prefix manager instead of plain Wine

    You can install them anywhere, but if you’re using plain Wine, I’d suggest you instead go with something that will manage these locations for you.

    Each Wine setup has what is called a “prefix”, which in the simplest sense is just a folder that is setup like a Windows C:\ drive, and includes all the shared libraries and bits needed to run the game. When a program run is launched, it is locked into this prefix, so when it goes looking for files as it would on Windows, it’s going to find a familiar folder structure, including installed dependencies like MS VC libraries and DirectX stuff.

    Now…when you as a user are just using Wine directly, you’d generally be using the SAME prefix to install multiple games, which is hard to manage, and just clunky.

    Prefix managers like Proton, Lutris, Bottles and even Heroic will make a new prefix for EACH program, making things like troubleshooting, switching runtimes, or invoking custom configs per program a LOT easier.







  • These types of apps became fairly irrelevant with the advent of Web Fonts and sites that already do all of this.

    There’s Fontbase, Gnome’s Font Manager, KDE’s Font Viewer and FontForge that are still maintained.

    The fact that you’re asking for whatever tool to not use something like QT or GTK is asking for the moon here. These types of applications you describe are generally packaged with a DE for this very use. I don’t think there’s a real use-case for someone to develop this independent of any DE, honestly. That’s what they’re most useful for.



  • It’s not for long term anything at all, it’s just running a live distro to poke around.

    This is why I asked my second question: what kind of things are you looking to check out or compare? That’s helpful in pointing you in the right direction.

    If you’re unfamiliar, there is literally almost zero difference between distros aside from very tiny customizations and the underlying package management system.

    You won’t find some distro with massive performance gains for any average task. You also won’t find a distro with some optimization that is special that can’t also be applied to any other distro.

    So if you find something you like about one distro, you just put that on whatever you’re running (unless you’re talking about package mgmt). Easy Peasy.