• Linux Distro With 2D Desktop

    From Jeff Gaines@jgnewsid@outlook.com to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 12:42:07 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux


    I am trying (again) to get myself going with Linux on a spare PC (Xeon
    CPU) and have made good progress so far with Ubuntu-MATE.

    I discovered yesterday that no matter how hard you try a Blu Ray disc
    won't play in a standard DVD player, that's an hour I won't get back. Once
    I had realised what I was doing wrong I got it working fine even using the terminal to install some libraries.

    I tried to install HandBrake but the web site was pretty sniffy and it
    seems I need first to install flatpak (?) to install HandBrake, new to me
    but I will give it a try.

    What has me stumped at the moment is I want to use the Linux machine from
    a Windows laptop using RDP on the laptop and xrdp on the Linux box. I made quite good progress to the extent I could connect (once I had realised I
    had to log off the Linux box first) but there was no access to the menu.
    It seems xrdp doesn't like 3D desktops. I have been going in circles this morning installing xfce4 (which I think is 2D) but RDP just keeps dropping out.

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a
    distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier
    to start from fresh?

    Good learning process, haven't used a terminal since DOS 6.2 :-)

    Many thanks.
    --
    Jeff Gaines Dorset UK
    Remember, the Flat Earth Society has members all around the globe.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Joerg Walther@joerg.walther@magenta.de to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 15:17:08 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    Jeff Gaines wrote:

    I tried to install HandBrake but the web site was pretty sniffy and it
    seems I need first to install flatpak (?) to install HandBrake, new to me >but I will give it a try.

    Handbrake is in the normal Ubuntu repository:

    joerg@jazz:~$ apt search handbrake
    Sortierung… Fertig
    Volltextsuche… Fertig
    handbrake/jammy,now 1.5.1+ds1-1build1 amd64 [installiert]
    versatile DVD ripper and video transcoder (GTK+ GUI)

    handbrake-cli/jammy 1.5.1+ds1-1build1 amd64
    versatile DVD ripper and video transcoder (command line)

    So just do
    sudo apt install handbrake

    -jw-
    --
    And now for something completely different...
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From MarioCCCP@NoliMihiFrangereMentulam@libero.it to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 16:04:14 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    On 02/04/24 14:42, Jeff Gaines wrote:

    I am trying (again) to get myself going with Linux on a
    spare PC (Xeon CPU) and have made good progress so far with
    Ubuntu-MATE.

    I discovered yesterday that no matter how hard you try a Blu
    Ray disc won't play in a standard DVD player,

    surprising !!
    I mean : the wavelength is likely wrong, the spatial
    resolution too, and maybe the rotation speed wrong also.

    My DVD masterizer uses red laser, maybe also green on double
    capacity (I am no longer sure of this, it's ages I have
    given up in DVD backups), but for sure does not have a blue
    laser (whose shorter wavelength allows it to read tinier
    pits or spots).

    Downgradin is not granted to work, but upgrading is granted
    to fail in this case, due to physical limitations.

    that's an hour
    I won't get back. Once I had realised what I was doing wrong
    I got it working fine even using the terminal to install
    some libraries.

    I tried to install HandBrake but the web site was pretty
    sniffy and it seems I need first to install flatpak (?) to
    install HandBrake, new to me but I will give it a try.

    What has me stumped at the moment is I want to use the Linux
    machine from a Windows laptop using RDP on the laptop and
    xrdp on the Linux box. I made quite good progress to the
    extent I could connect (once I had realised I had to log off
    the Linux box first) but there was no access to the menu. It
    seems xrdp doesn't like 3D desktops. I have been going in
    circles this morning installing xfce4 (which I think is 2D)
    but RDP just keeps dropping out.

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if
    there is a distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard
    since it might be easier to start from fresh?

    Good learning process, haven't used a terminal since DOS 6.2
    :-)

    Many thanks.

    --
    1) Resistere, resistere, resistere.
    2) Se tutti pagano le tasse, le tasse le pagano tutti
    MarioCPPP

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 16:25:36 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    On 2024-04-02 14:42, Jeff Gaines wrote:

    I am trying (again) to get myself going with Linux on a spare PC (Xeon
    CPU) and have made good progress so far with Ubuntu-MATE.

    I discovered yesterday that no matter how hard you try a Blu Ray disc
    won't play in a standard DVD player, that's an hour I won't get back.
    Once I had realised what I was doing wrong I got it working fine even
    using the terminal to install some libraries.

    That's an hour gained of knowledge :-)

    It is called learning.


    I tried to install HandBrake but the web site was pretty sniffy and it
    seems I need first to install flatpak (?) to install HandBrake, new to
    me but I will give it a try.

    What has me stumped at the moment is I want to use the Linux machine
    from a Windows laptop using RDP on the laptop and xrdp on the Linux box.
    I made quite good progress to the extent I could connect (once I had realised I had to log off the Linux box first) but there was no access
    to the menu. It seems xrdp doesn't like 3D desktops. I have been going
    in circles this morning installing xfce4 (which I think is 2D) but RDP
    just keeps dropping out.

    Are you using Xayland? That I think interferes. You need classical X.


    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a
    distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier
    to start from fresh?

    Good learning process, haven't used a terminal since DOS 6.2 :-)

    Many thanks.

    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Jeff Gaines@jgnewsid@outlook.com to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 15:06:46 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    On 02/04/2024 in message <xn0ok3h371lwv8a001@news.individual.net> Jeff
    Gaines wrote:

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a
    distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier
    to start from fresh?

    Thanks for all the replies :-)

    I went for Linux Mint xfce, went on easily and installed what I needed
    from the graphical interface. I have used RDP to connect and that works
    fines as well so looking good.
    I will look for a news reader, Thunderbird used to be excellent but its
    main emphasis seems to be email nowadays.
    Installing HandBrake at the moment...
    --
    Jeff Gaines Dorset UK
    Remember, the Flat Earth Society has members all around the globe.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From candycanearter07@candycanearter07@candycanearter07.nomail.afraid to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 15:10:10 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    Jeff Gaines <jgnewsid@outlook.com> wrote at 12:42 this Tuesday (GMT):

    I am trying (again) to get myself going with Linux on a spare PC (Xeon
    CPU) and have made good progress so far with Ubuntu-MATE.

    I discovered yesterday that no matter how hard you try a Blu Ray disc
    won't play in a standard DVD player, that's an hour I won't get back. Once
    I had realised what I was doing wrong I got it working fine even using the terminal to install some libraries.

    I tried to install HandBrake but the web site was pretty sniffy and it
    seems I need first to install flatpak (?) to install HandBrake, new to me but I will give it a try.

    What has me stumped at the moment is I want to use the Linux machine from
    a Windows laptop using RDP on the laptop and xrdp on the Linux box. I made quite good progress to the extent I could connect (once I had realised I
    had to log off the Linux box first) but there was no access to the menu.
    It seems xrdp doesn't like 3D desktops. I have been going in circles this morning installing xfce4 (which I think is 2D) but RDP just keeps dropping out.

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a
    distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier
    to start from fresh?

    Good learning process, haven't used a terminal since DOS 6.2 :-)

    Many thanks.


    Wait, what's a 3D desktop?
    --
    user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Joerg Walther@joerg.walther@magenta.de to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 17:25:53 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    Jeff Gaines wrote:

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a >>distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier >>to start from fresh?

    I will look for a news reader, Thunderbird used to be excellent but its
    main emphasis seems to be email nowadays.

    I still use Agent running in Wine, nothing compares to it, imho. Pan
    looks a bit similar but in the end comes out quite differently, some
    people also use Claws Mail (which also does news).

    -jw-
    --
    And now for something completely different...
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Lew Pitcher@lew.pitcher@digitalfreehold.ca to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 15:34:31 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    On Tue, 02 Apr 2024 15:10:10 +0000, candycanearter07 wrote:

    Jeff Gaines <jgnewsid@outlook.com> wrote at 12:42 this Tuesday (GMT):

    [snip]

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a
    distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier
    to start from fresh?

    [sni]

    Wait, what's a 3D desktop?

    AFAICT, a "3d desktop" is a Window Manager or Desktop Manager that incorporates or requires a compositor to function.

    Standard X11 window managers (like fwm or blackbox, etc) and early desktop managers (like enlightenment) do not need the compositing facilities offered
    by OpenGL add-ons to X11 or the builtin compositor in Wayland. But, more "modern" Desktop Managers (like Gnome and KDE and others that use the GTK+/Qt toolkits) often depend on a compositor to provide their standard visual environment.

    FWIW, if it uses a compositor, then its not likely to work well with RDP, and not at all with networked/remote X11.
    --
    Lew Pitcher
    "In Skills We Trust"
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Jeff Gaines@jgnewsid@outlook.com to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 15:44:12 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    On 02/04/2024 in message <uuh8i7$39gdq$1@dont-email.me> Lew Pitcher wrote:

    On Tue, 02 Apr 2024 15:10:10 +0000, candycanearter07 wrote:

    Jeff Gaines <jgnewsid@outlook.com> wrote at 12:42 this Tuesday (GMT):

    [snip]

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a >>>distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier >>>to start from fresh?

    [sni]

    Wait, what's a 3D desktop?

    AFAICT, a "3d desktop" is a Window Manager or Desktop Manager that >incorporates
    or requires a compositor to function.

    Standard X11 window managers (like fwm or blackbox, etc) and early desktop >managers (like enlightenment) do not need the compositing facilities
    offered
    by OpenGL add-ons to X11 or the builtin compositor in Wayland. But, more >"modern" Desktop Managers (like Gnome and KDE and others that use the >GTK+/Qt
    toolkits) often depend on a compositor to provide their standard visual >environment.

    FWIW, if it uses a compositor, then its not likely to work well with RDP, >and
    not at all with networked/remote X11.

    I will take your word for that :-)

    It's certainly true that a 3d desktop won't play with RDP.
    --
    Jeff Gaines Dorset UK
    We chose to do this not because it is easy but because we thought it would
    be easy.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From dillinger@dillinger@invalid.not to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 19:49:03 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    On 02-04-2024 17:44, Jeff Gaines wrote:
    On 02/04/2024 in message <uuh8i7$39gdq$1@dont-email.me> Lew Pitcher wrote:

    On Tue, 02 Apr 2024 15:10:10 +0000, candycanearter07 wrote:

    Jeff Gaines <jgnewsid@outlook.com> wrote at 12:42 this Tuesday (GMT):

    [snip]

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a
    distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be
    easier
    to start from fresh?

    [sni]

    Wait, what's a 3D desktop?

    AFAICT, a "3d desktop" is a Window Manager or Desktop Manager that
    incorporates
    or requires a compositor to function.

    Standard X11 window managers (like fwm or blackbox, etc) and early
    desktop
    managers (like enlightenment) do not need the compositing facilities
    offered
    by OpenGL add-ons to X11 or the builtin compositor in Wayland. But, more
    "modern" Desktop Managers (like Gnome and KDE and others that use the
    GTK+/Qt
    toolkits) often depend on a compositor to provide their standard
    visual environment.

    FWIW, if it uses a compositor, then its not likely to work well with
    RDP, and
    not at all with networked/remote X11.

    I will take your word for that :-)

    It's certainly true that a 3d desktop won't play with RDP.

    You can try TeamViewer, it works here with KDE neon & Windows 10, both ways. Wayland support is experimental but it works.
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From David W. Hodgins@dwhodgins@nomail.afraid.org to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 14:31:31 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    On Tue, 02 Apr 2024 11:10:10 -0400, candycanearter07 <candycanearter07@candycanearter07.nomail.afraid> wrote:

    Jeff Gaines <jgnewsid@outlook.com> wrote at 12:42 this Tuesday (GMT):

    I am trying (again) to get myself going with Linux on a spare PC (Xeon
    CPU) and have made good progress so far with Ubuntu-MATE.

    I discovered yesterday that no matter how hard you try a Blu Ray disc
    won't play in a standard DVD player, that's an hour I won't get back. Once >> I had realised what I was doing wrong I got it working fine even using the >> terminal to install some libraries.

    I tried to install HandBrake but the web site was pretty sniffy and it
    seems I need first to install flatpak (?) to install HandBrake, new to me
    but I will give it a try.

    What has me stumped at the moment is I want to use the Linux machine from
    a Windows laptop using RDP on the laptop and xrdp on the Linux box. I made >> quite good progress to the extent I could connect (once I had realised I
    had to log off the Linux box first) but there was no access to the menu.
    It seems xrdp doesn't like 3D desktops. I have been going in circles this
    morning installing xfce4 (which I think is 2D) but RDP just keeps dropping >> out.

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a
    distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier
    to start from fresh?

    Good learning process, haven't used a terminal since DOS 6.2 :-)

    Many thanks.


    Wait, what's a 3D desktop?

    It's a desktop environment that supports 3d effects, usually using something like Compiz Fusion.
    https://compiz-fusion.org/

    I always disable it during my installations, as it's just eye candy that distracts
    from whatever I'm working on, by uninstalling the compiz package. Other then stopping the annoying graphics, uninstalling it has no other impacts on my usage.

    # urpmq -i compiz
    Name : compiz
    Epoch : 1
    Version : 0.8.18
    Release : 4.mga9
    Group : System/X11
    Size : 7376912 Architecture: x86_64
    Source RPM : compiz-0.8.18-4.mga9.src.rpm
    URL : https://github.com/compiz-reloaded/compiz
    Summary : OpenGL composite manager for Xgl and AIGLX
    Description :
    Compiz is an OpenGL compositing manager, which means that it enhances
    the overall user interaction by adding fancy effects to your windows,
    from drop shadows to desktop effects like the Desktop Cube or the Expo view.

    Compiz can also be a window manager, which means that it is the software between you and your desktop apps. It enables you to move or resize windows,
    to switch workspaces, to switch windows easily (using alt-tab or so), and so on.

    Regards, Dave Hodgins
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 14:34:51 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    On 4/2/2024 11:10 AM, candycanearter07 wrote:


    Wait, what's a 3D desktop?


    To some extent, this started with the introduction of Compiz.

    On Knoppix, Compiz started out as a series of garish animations
    for desktop activities.

    But Compiz also became part of the switch to compositing
    and caching window renders, and doing Z-axis priority to
    establish the current desktop view.

    All platforms now have compositing. Apple had it. Windows
    changed from Expose Events to Compositing. And Linux got it
    too.

    It was just easier to do some of these things in OpenGL
    (like the strange Compiz animations that actually involved transforms
    as part of their execution).

    Things like Libreoffice use OpenGL "even when they don't need to".
    LibreOffice uses OpenGL on both Linux and Windows (it does not use
    DirectX or have the software for DirectX). So if a transport
    layer in the graphics stack was not "prepared for 3D", then
    perhaps a Linux LibreOffice window would remain blank in RDP Windows.

    Terminal Server in Windows, has extensive graphics capability.
    WSL/WSLg in Windows, in a matter of a couple weeks, they
    tuned a Linux VM, made the graphics travel through Terminal
    Server (potentially, RDP), and make it responsive and
    glitch free in a short time. The path your graphics take
    in that environment, that's a *huge* stack.

    On a daily basis, on Windows 11, I run a Linux version of
    Firefox on the same desktop. In the Task Bar, is a Firefox
    icon... with a tiny Penguin drawn in the lower right corner
    of the icon. That's my Linux Firefox. It means I can run a
    crusty older Firefox in Windows (to annoy advertisers), and
    a "compatible supported" Firefox, using WSL/WSLg. And the
    graphics burble up through a Terminal Services stack of some
    sort.

    [Picture] Some penguins on the Task Bar, catching the sun

    https://i.postimg.cc/8PHDnt2b/XEyes-on-Windows11.gif

    *******

    Any time the term "RDP" comes up, you just know there
    will be misery and hair loss :-) Part of the problem with the
    general topic area, is different SKUs of Windows may have
    different capabilities.

    On the Linux side, you start with a review of an Arch article,
    to get the general gist of the thing.

    https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/xrdp

    "3.3 Graphical acceleration

    For Xorg sessions, you can enable OpenGL and Vulkan graphical acceleration
    by installing xorgxrdp-glamor for Intel and AMD GPUs and xorgxrdp-nvidia
    for Nvidia GPUs."

    And maybe in that suggestion, you would have used Driver Manager to
    switch from Nouveau to NVidia driver, if that had not been done already.
    When they "name" GPUs that way, you probably want to start with the
    right graphics base, so the other shit bolts on top. When it comes time
    to Upgrade your Mint to the next version, you might switch the driver
    back to Nouveau temporarily (if that's how it arrived when installed)
    -- and when you're doing the Upgrade, you'll be doing
    that while seated in front of that PC. No doing that over RDP :-(

    You can't have fun, unless it's complicated. Or so I've heard.

    Paul
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From candycanearter07@candycanearter07@candycanearter07.nomail.afraid to alt.os.linux on Tue Apr 2 18:40:08 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    Lew Pitcher <lew.pitcher@digitalfreehold.ca> wrote at 15:34 this Tuesday (GMT):
    On Tue, 02 Apr 2024 15:10:10 +0000, candycanearter07 wrote:

    Jeff Gaines <jgnewsid@outlook.com> wrote at 12:42 this Tuesday (GMT):

    [snip]

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a
    distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier >>> to start from fresh?

    [sni]

    Wait, what's a 3D desktop?

    AFAICT, a "3d desktop" is a Window Manager or Desktop Manager that incorporates
    or requires a compositor to function.

    Standard X11 window managers (like fwm or blackbox, etc) and early desktop managers (like enlightenment) do not need the compositing facilities offered by OpenGL add-ons to X11 or the builtin compositor in Wayland. But, more "modern" Desktop Managers (like Gnome and KDE and others that use the GTK+/Qt toolkits) often depend on a compositor to provide their standard visual environment.

    FWIW, if it uses a compositor, then its not likely to work well with RDP, and not at all with networked/remote X11.


    Oh.. I was hoping it would be some futuristic design.
    --
    user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom
    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
  • From Bud Frede@frede@mouse-potato.com to alt.os.linux on Wed Apr 3 07:16:39 2024
    From Newsgroup: alt.os.linux

    candycanearter07 <candycanearter07@candycanearter07.nomail.afraid>
    writes:

    Jeff Gaines <jgnewsid@outlook.com> wrote at 12:42 this Tuesday (GMT):

    What has me stumped at the moment is I want to use the Linux machine from >> a Windows laptop using RDP on the laptop and xrdp on the Linux box. I made >> quite good progress to the extent I could connect (once I had realised I
    had to log off the Linux box first) but there was no access to the menu.
    It seems xrdp doesn't like 3D desktops. I have been going in circles this >> morning installing xfce4 (which I think is 2D) but RDP just keeps dropping >> out.

    I am taking a breather at the moment and wanted to ask if there is a
    distro that comes with a 2D desktop as standard since it might be easier
    to start from fresh?

    Good learning process, haven't used a terminal since DOS 6.2 :-)

    Many thanks.


    Wait, what's a 3D desktop?

    I immediately thought of Sun's Project Looking Glass. :-)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Looking_Glass

    --- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114