

My GF has an iphone, and on KDE I can just connect it via USB and it’s visible in the file manager.
There’s also this.
My GF has an iphone, and on KDE I can just connect it via USB and it’s visible in the file manager.
There’s also this.
There’s avante.nvim for LLM integration, it supports most if not all LLM vendors at the moment.
I tried it, however, and got to the same conclusion as you. Not worth it.
Because Linux is a monolithic kernel. What that means, essentially, is that it contains all the drivers and everything else, unlike windows which uses a microkernel. The advantages of a monolithic kernel are, for instance, that you don’t need to install drivers manually, and you don’t have to depend on potentially malicious websites to host those drivers. Additionally, if any kernel ABI changes for one reason or the other, say there is a refactor to fix a vulnerability, whoever does the refactor would also refactor the driver code because that is in the kernel, and the kernel won’t compile if there’s an error in the drivers. This way, the driver is always updated, and you don’t have a situation where you have really old drivers that no longer work.
The disadvantage of a monolithic kernel is that there’s a lot more code that you have to take care of, and the kernel has a lot more responsibilities as opposed to a microkernel.
Yeah but GTK
Virt-manager is a GUI for libvirt, which can use several hypervisors, including KVM/QEMU, and it works great.
There’s several other clients for libvirt, including GNOME Boxes, Cockpit (web based), and virsh (CLI).
You just go into Settings > System > Developer options > Linux development environment, and enable it.
I updated to LineageOS 22.2 yesterday. It has the option, I enabled it and it works. I’m on a Pixel 8, tho. Might have something to do with it.
My GF has an iphone, and on KDE I can just connect it via USB and it’s visible in the file manager.
There’s also this.