So, after EndeavourOS’s GRUB comitted suicide, me being too stupid to understand chroot despite wiki “tutorials” and the community rather trolling & gaslighting me instead of helping I decided to give Nobara a go. Usually I am a Plasma KDE guy, but thought since it’s been a long time I try it out, especially since you can have it in a more classic configuration those days again, even though I’d miss out of Wallpaper Engine.

Unfortunately my experience has been nothing but awful. A bunch of random bullet points of my experience:

  • I had real trouble connecting my BT headphones. At first it was “connected”, but not really. Tried a fresh pairing mode, but then it showed two headphones. Then it connected, but as soon as I tried to adjust the audio input / output settings it lost audio again and I had to repeat it yet again. Now it works, and I decided to never touch the audio settings ever again.
  • “Files” is constantly crashing. Using the search? Crash. Going backwards? Crash. Try to do “something”? Crash. Do nothing? Probably also crash (hyperbolic).
  • “Files” data transfer for copying & deleting files is slow as hell for whatever reason (on decent Samsung SSDs mind you).
  • “Files” cannot multitask. If you’re copying, scanning, deleting or whatever, it won’t do anything else until that process is done.
  • “Files” and other Gnome applications frequently bug out if you try too many things at once, freezing or crashing them.
  • “Files”, or even Gnome as a whole, is so incredibly scrapped for features to achieve its simplistic look, that it lacks actual functionality.
  • Gnome’s settings are also missing for everything, or hidden in a gazillion different config menus, some of which I already forgot how to access again.
  • Scaling scales not just the UI, but also 3D applications like games, reducing their actual resolution and making them blurry. The UI seemed to be blurry as well.
  • Mullvad VPN’s tray icon somehow turned into some three dots with a weird background.
  • In the tray menu there’s also a VPN toggle, which shows Mullvad, but being turned off. Turning it on disables my connection and I have to reconnect through Mullvad, which turns the toggle off again. No way to remove the redundant toggle as far as I can tell, but maybe it’s in some hidden settings menu that I have yet to find.
  • OpenRGB in this does not work with my NZXT Hue 2 Ambient. Keeps asking for resize zones, which according to a search should not be necessary, and wasn’t necessary with the one I used in EOS either. Selecting any color just turns the LEDs off.
  • Launching the Battle.net launcher through Lutris it also opens some ghost “OpenGL Renderer” application with it, taking up space on the task bar.
  • Battle.net launcher can’t be maximized without constantly resetting or displaying information beneath the task bar.
  • Can’t launch .sh files unless I explicitly right click & Run as program.
  • Unfortunately it then launches with an additional empty terminal window, yet again taking up space on the task bar.
  • Had to create a new FF profile because using my old one somehow was unusable in regards to its performance.
  • The weather location for the little clock thingy apparently can’t find anything, city or country, except some locations that aren’t near me.
  • Can’t remove my own review in the Software center for one of the apps that I did prematurely.
  • Tray area also has this little tiling menu. I tried tiling, hated it. Couldn’t find a way to remove that icon to save space on the task bar.
  • After a lot of apps started to hang I tried restarting, just to be left in a blackscreen and the PC not shutting down. Had to hard reset to restart.
  • No EurKey keyboard layout. There’s a ‘German (US)’ one that’s close but it’s missing symbols.
  • Maybe probably more things that I can’t recall right now.

And that’s just after a few hours of usage. I was making fun of the tiny issues in KDE before, but if I have to choose between that and this disaster then I’m probably going to switch to the KDE edition, if I cannot find solutions to all this. I really don’t understand how people can deal with it? Or am I somehow the only one?

  • DarkThoughts@kbin.socialOP
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    In what way exactly? My issues aren’t caused by my system being a 20 year old potato, if that’s what you’re thinking.

    System:
    Host: ***** Kernel: 6.3.10-203.fsync.fc38.x86_64 arch: x86_64 bits: 64
    Desktop: GNOME v: 44.2 Distro: Nobara release 38 (Thirty Eight)
    Machine:
    Type: Desktop Mobo: Micro-Star model: Z490-A PRO (MS-7C75) v: 1.0
    serial: <superuser required> UEFI: American Megatrends v: 2.80
    date: 01/30/2021
    CPU:
    Info: 6-core Intel Core i5-10400F [MT MCP] speed (MHz): avg: 4000
    min/max: 800/4300
    Graphics:
    Device-1: AMD Navi 23 [Radeon RX 6650 XT / 6700S 6800S] driver: amdgpu
    v: kernel
    Display: wayland server: X.Org v: 23.1.2 with: Xwayland v: 23.1.2
    compositor: gnome-shell driver: dri: radeonsi gpu: amdgpu
    resolution: 1920x1080~144Hz
    API: OpenGL v: 4.6 Mesa 23.1.3 renderer: AMD Radeon RX 6650 XT (navi23
    LLVM 15.0.7 DRM 3.52 6.3.10-203.fsync.fc38.x86_64)
    Network:
    Device-1: Realtek RTL8125 2.5GbE driver: r8169
    Drives:
    Local Storage: total: 9.1 TiB used: 1.65 TiB (18.1%)
    Info:
    Processes: 483 Uptime: 6h 44m Memory: available: 31.25 GiB
    used: 14.95 GiB (47.8%) Shell: Bash inxi: 3.3.27

    • style99@kbin.social
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      When people complain about crashes, that is usually the first thing that springs to mind. Of course, your hardware is fairly new, so I think you should be good in that respect. The problem might just be a Xwayland/Gnome thing, now that I think about it.