I believe you can just do youruser:
and chmod automatically uses the correct group. The other user is also technically correct as the usergroup is called the same as the user so both commands are the same.
Use chown
to change ownership or chmod
to change rights. The -R option makes them also change the permissions for all files and directories inside of the directory.
sudo chown -R <username>:<usergroup> /pathto/Files
The book of German humor is incredibly thin.
No it is not, it as an extremely long book with thousands of pages. It just isn’t funny.
That looks interesting. Immediately wishlisted
Discord would be the obvious answer, but I understand why you might want to use it, my recommendation is using a client that disables some of the tracking like Vesktop. Spotify is also a major privacy concern, it can be replaced by Spotube (and to a lesser degree by Audiotube) which removes most tracking and is three and convenient. Also I’m not sure if I would keep using chromium, especially with manifest V3
I think the main reason is that most people who use Linux installed it on their own and at that point no parental control is stopping you.
Nobara doesn’t use Firefox from fedoras repos, that’s why it is outdated. The Firefox flatpak is officially from Mozilla, or you can download the latest .tar.gz from their website, but then you won’t have the regular update system.
Parental controls are one of the under developed parts of Linux, the only major one I know of is timekpr
For Wine: Microsoft 365 and anything Adobe notoriously doesn’t work with wine, any solution will most likely not be permanent.
For Premiere: Kdenlive is the best open source alternative IMO and there also DaVinci Resolve which has a free and a pro version. It is also more professional. Be aware DaVinci has problems with GNOME, which is the default environment of Ubuntu.
For distro: Nowadays Linux Mint is the best for user friendliness. If you will be going for a tilling window manager, the typical easy distros won’t make that much of a difference as you will be replacing a large part of it. You could probably do everything with KDE though with window rules and this, if you are going to use KDE then maybe use Kubuntu, it is a official version of Ubuntu with KDE. Ubuntu flavors
LMDE uses Debian repos which are very well tested, meaning stuff like the XZ back door will most likely not affect you because it is found before you get the update. ClamAV is not designed to recognize malware for Linux only on Linux, so not what you want in your case. My recommendation is to stick to distro packages (well tested) or flathub (sandboxed), which are available in mints app manager. If that isn’t an option try getting the software as an appimage, it isn’t sandboxed but also doesn’t have root access. Otherwise general rules apply: be wary of sketchy websites, use ublock with the malware filter list etc.
You could potentially use distrobox to install a .deb sandboxed, but as it isn’t in the Debian repository or available as a .deb it isn’t something I would do as a beginner, even if there is no substantial difficulty in installing
SteamOS at the end of the day just is an immutable distro with game mode for the steam deck. Bazzite does the same for PCs. I get that there is some level of brand recognition with Steam, but I think most people (including me) would take a while to notice there is something of when they are handed a steam deck with bazzite
How so?
Not sure, but maybe this is a pipewire vs pulseaudio thing. Enable pipewire on Debian
What would an official steamOS desktop do that bazzite can’t? Unless you need commercial support because you are selling steam machines I don’t see how a official release would be of advantage.
Probably still working on the deep fake
That remove all instances feature could save me a lot of trouble
From what I could find this is by the original artist of PBF
The video is also on Odysee, but for me there is no marking.
My tip: Justwatch