Trans Megathread for the Week of November 11th, 2024 to November 17th, 2024
Xenia, the fox girl mascot of Linux, was first designed in 1996 by Alan Mackey. She was meant to be an alternative to Tux, the official mascot.
She had fallen into obscurity, but was noticed by a Twitter user in 2019 and was redrawn as a fox girl. But as it turned out, Xenia was originally meant to be male! The original creator, Alan, was cool with this, saying "It matches the transition of a lot of the smartest, nerdiest Linux users I know" and "And sure, you made her trans!".
So now we have a trans Linux mascot. And I think that's neat.
As a reminder, be sure to properly give content warnings and put sensitive subjects behind proper spoiler tags. It's for the mental health of not just your comrades, but yourself as well.
Here is a screenshot of where to find the spoiler button.
I tried switching to Linux Mint like... 5 or 6 years ago but I had some problems getting work-critical software to play nice so I ended up doing the walk of shame back to Win10.
Someone gave me their old computer so it seems like a good opportunity to experiment with Linux again since it won't be interfering with my primary PC. I don't know much about distros, is Linux Mint still the best choice for Windows refugees or do I have other options?
i haven't used Mint but have heard a lot of good things about it. i switched to Fedora on my main machine (specifically Nobara cause i wanted gaming stuff out of the box for convenience). i think both are generally meant to be good and stable so a good choice coming from windows. choice of DE is probably gonna affect your day to day experience more, personally I'm loving KDE Plasma and think it's the perfect choice for ex windows users.
i was using the i3-compatible Wayland thingy for a while and like my laptop would use like 3.5 watts of power lol. It was so good. I rebound a bunch of keys in Plasma to match that and while it doesnt have tiling a more keyboard focused window management flow is super much better on my wrists. It turns out having just "left half" and "right half" tiling was enough for me, plus 4 virtual desktops which I use in a role-based fashion. Of course, when i hook up and external monitor everything gets weird but I still appreciate everything I learned from tiling.
tiling is so nice. for me it's like, I prefer a mouse oriented workflow on my PC, I'm often just leaned back in my chair with one hand on the mouse and I'm pretty snappy at flinging windows around at 1500dpi. on a laptop I'm the complete opposite, like to avoid using the mouse as much as possible so i3 is perfect.