I know the system well enough to diagnose issues, manually downgrade packages if needed, pull things from sid if I have to, or even build packages by hand when absolutely necessary. I'm fine dealing with the intermittent issues that pop up. Ubuntu strikes an interesting middle ground, giving you up-to-date packages that are vetted and then the whole distro is snapshotted which minimizes the potential for surprise breakage. In addition, they are also adopting the libadwaita library, which is designed to provide a dark style preference to most of the GTK4 apps. The problem is the Debian snapshot distro is stable which, again, has an ancient package set. While Canonical decided to avoid GTK4 apps as much as possible in Ubuntu 22.04 LTS, the elementary devs are doing the opposite, promising that elementary OS 7 will come with GTK4 natively. These sorts of intermittent surprise issues are far less likely to happen with a snapshot distro due to the stability of the package set and the additional testing those snapshots undergo before being released. Similarly, the wifi drivers that ship with the kernel have periodically broken and worked again across major kernel versions. VDOMDHTMLCTYPE html> Cannot open ssh://server-ip in Elementary OS Issue 7433 keepassxreboot/keepassxc GitHub Overview Steps to Reproduce Set entry URL to: ssh:// Click Open URL Expected Behavior Open a terminal window and access the remote server through SSH. No idea why, but I had to go pull the previous package versions from /var/cache/apt/archives (thank goodness I didn't run a purge!), manually install them with dpkg, then pin them in my apt policy until the issue is fixed. Just recently (like, in the past 2-3 weeks) the move from pipewire 0.3.36 to 0.3.37/38 broke bluetooth audio for me, which is a dealbreaker as I use a headset every single day for work. Issues absolutely pop up that, while not that catastrophic, remain problematic. Oh sure, has Debian testing or unstable resulted in a non-booting system for me in the 15-20 years I've been using it? No. Had 2 or 3 non-booting Sid systems over the course of 20 years, none or which weren't solved in 10 minutes after asking for help on IRC. I run Debian Stable on servers and Debian Sid on my desktop and laptop. What really took me a long time to get used to was clicking in the titlebar without activating something, but I’ve slowly learned to use super+click to move windows around.> Exactly, Debian has you covered depending on your needs. And if they dropped the menu and toolbar, then you get back a massive amount of vertical space. All in all though, even if they did a poor job of it, if they dropped the traditional menu they’re still using less vertical space overall. And then some apps just have it forced in to little gain (example: gnome-terminal - there’s maybe one useful action). The rest of the flow is very similar to what we have today with strong random passwords and the. I think apps that use it well make great use of the space and I really don’t mind it (example: tilix - there are several useful actions on the titlebar). Obviously, KeePassXC would be a part of the overall solution as the integration with the browser and the OS is the key. But since widgets are generally bigger than people like their min|max|close buttons it ends up increasing the height of the titlebar. KeePassXC is for people with extremely high demands of secure personal data management. You can run KeePassXC on Windows, macOS, and Linux systems. And in the Gtk world it’s supported with a special widget (GtkHeaderBar) that makes it very very easy to implement without breaking things like user specified min|max|close button order and position. KeePassXC is a modern, secure, and open-source password manager that stores and manages your most sensitive information. The software installer includes 70 files and is usually about 62.65 MB (65,690,955 bytes). The main program executable is keepassxc.exe. The most used version is 2.2.2, with over 98 of all installations currently using this version. Yea this thing where you shove widgets into the titlebar is really popular now. KeePassXC is a program developed by KeePassXC Team.
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