It's a good thing that KDE 6 is coming out soon because holy cow, that's a big secondary version number.
ipacialsection
I remember when gitlab.com was the most accessible alternative to GitHub out there, but it seems they're only interested in internal enterprise usage now. Their main page was already completely unreadable to someone not versed in enterprise tech marketing lingo, and now this.
Thankfully Gitea and Forgejo have gotten better in the meantime, with Codeberg as a flagship instance of the latter.
Debian needs a better installer. It'd be awesome if it had something more akin to Fedora/RHEL's Anaconda, or even just made Calamares the default (so long as it didn't install every single locale available like their live inages currently do).
No, but I do remember using the autism(at)a.gup.pe group. Not sure it still exists but I had some nice interactions there.
Used to, left recently. But the autistic community there was easily one of the best parts.
I really liked the simplicity of GNOME To Do when it was around. The successor seems to be GNOME Endeavor, which I haven't tried extensively.
Another commenter suggested Tiny Core Linux and DSL2024, which are indeed as light as it gets, but you might find yourself limited in what you can do with them, and it's not necessary for those specs.
The next step up would be Q4OS Trinity and antiX. You should be able to get the Spotify app and your preferred web server running on either of those.
Looking online, there are some suggestions to either (re)install xapp:
sudo apt install --reinstall xapp
or a related library:
sudo apt install --reinstall gir1.2-xapp-1.0
However, usually I find that errors like this mean nothing, so I wouldn't be surprised if these steps change nothing.
Definitely flatpak related then. Try running one of your flatpak apps from the terminal, and post the output here; might help pinpoint the issue. You can list the ones you have installed with flatpak list
, then flatpak run <one of the listed apps, e.g. org.videolan.vlc>
.
And because of that, custom configurations are wonderfully easy to make, technical issues are rare, and the few issues you do experience are quite possible to solve. Which is why I settled on Debian.