[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 8 points 8 months ago

Assuming you have a Firefox derived browser installed, you could just add an EPUB extension to the browser.

[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 23 points 8 months ago

I set up Mint on my parent's PC a couple of years ago, and the amount of support I have had to provide has dropped to basically zero.

[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 7 points 8 months ago

Assuming your laptop has hardware that has Linux support—wifi cards manufactured by certain companies are what typically make things difficult—a just works distribution like Ubuntu, Mint, and Pop!_OS will have a gentle learning curve for doing things that you want.

Mint is almost purpose made for people new to Linux or for people who just want to use their computer. It also has a large and friendly community around it, so there is community support, if you get stuck or confused on something. My parents, who are no tech people, have been happily using Mint for a couple of years now, with far less headache compared to Windows.

As others have said, the installation of whatever distribution you chose will probably be the most intimidating aspect of switching to Linux. It doesn't require being technically savy, just a willingness to learn and follow the procedures. It will be helpful to have your phone handy when you are doing the installation, so you can look things up incase there is something you don't understand.

If there is anything on the laptop that is important to you, back it up. The simplest way to install Linux will make whatever on the drive inaccessible. Additionally, find and record your Windows product key, just incase you want tk go back to Windows.

[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 18 points 8 months ago

Mint is an Ubuntu derivative like Pop, so the package manager is apt. Synaptic is a gui for apt.

If you want to learn and use ansible, go for it, but it might be a bit more than you need. If you are just wanting to install the apps you want, you can just write a quick bash script that installs all the apps you want.

The file structure should be the same in Mint as Pop, so restoring your dot files should be straight forward.

[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 18 points 8 months ago

It is a real, and useful feature, while also being a joke.

[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 6 points 8 months ago

OpenSuse Leap might be closer to what you are looking for.

[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 7 points 8 months ago

Messing around with a Raspberry Pi was what got me over the threshold of learning enough to utilize Linux primarily, and then eventually exclusively.

Obsessed? No. Persistently interested though.

I communicate Linux as an option when the circumstance are appropriate. It is often not worth getting involved in other people's tech decisions. My mother is now a satisfied Mint user, after she asked me if there was more pleasant and private way to use her computer. It has been great for me, because my providing tech support has gone to basically zero.

[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 8 points 10 months ago

How is the existence of Spiral Linux out of character or step with the existing Linux space. As far as I can tell, there have been a great many Linux hammers and nails to choose from to fit the various needs and fancies of people. Additionally, there may be a bunch of solutions to my need, but Spiral is the one I know about.

[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 24 points 10 months ago

Yes, it is just Debian, by design, but takes a lot of the hassle out have having a functional desktop. I know the next time I do a Debian install it will be done with Spiral, because it will save me time an trouble. Additionally, for peolple new to Linux, they don’t even know that a Debian install is not a finished state or what they need to do after installing. Spiral makes Debian proper accessible and safer for new users.

[-] ardent_abysm@lemm.ee 10 points 10 months ago

SwayOS might be worth looking at. It is basically just an installation script for a pre-configured Sway setup.

Some things are pulled from GitHub, so it is probably a good idea to look into the packages it is downloading.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by ardent_abysm@lemm.ee to c/buddhism@lemmy.ml

There is a tendency within Buddhist studies – especially its philosophical wing – to represent the rarified abstractions of Buddhist philosophers as far removed from the political machinations of court and kingdom. From this perspective, there could be nothing more apolitical than the Buddhist doctrine of emptiness coming out of the Perfection of Wisdom corpus. Through a close look at the early development of the Perfection of Wisdom, Prof. Walser shows that its authors were concerned to establish what Charlene Makley has called a “politics of the apolitical” in securing a place for Buddhist Brahmins within the new sacrificial order of the Srauta coronation sacrifices.

Joseph Walser is Associate Professor of Religion at Tufts University, Medford MA. He works on Mahayana Buddhism and has published two books: Nagarjuna in Context: Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture (Columbia University Press, 2005) and more recently Genealogies of Mahayana Buddhism: Emptiness, Power and the Question of Origin (Routledge, 2018).

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ardent_abysm

joined 1 year ago