 Burn that shit off. SoundCloud has the worst royalty-free music ever. I don't need these. Hello, everybody. If I could get a yay or nay from the audience on the audio, I'd be appreciative. Hello, Linux Noob and Zany's here. Hello, Zany. And we got Ryan. Hello, Ryan. And F, F Society. Hello, and Ryan. Hello, and Joshua. Hello. No, this is not Gentoo. Yay, question mark. I love what you do. That's hilarious. Make sure my phone is turned off. Awesome. So I'm going to be messing around with cute browsers tonight. I have used cute browsers many times in the past, but I've never taken the time to go through and actually customize it like in depth. I've done a little bit, but I've never gone through and like truly tried to customize it. So that's what I'm going to try to do tonight. SoundCloud has better sound quality than you installing Gentoo. One of these days, I'm going to install Gentoo and then just use it like stealthily in the background and nobody's going to know. Just a mess with people. Not that I know how to install Gentoo. I think I want to take a poll in my community tab to ask how many people that are actually subscribed to my channel actually use Gentoo because I'm very curious because it seems like the vast majority of people seem to use Gentoo. I wish I'd find hilarious. Oh, analytic. Mind it, how you doing? Yo, I was legit about to go back, go look up how to configure cute browser today. Well, if you're looking for a tutorial, this is the wrong place because I don't know shit. I'm going to be winging it. It's the most fun stream. All of my streams are winging it. That's just the way it is. Like I've been using Gentoo for years and you guys just didn't even know that's not true. I use Arch by the way. I use an Arch derivative by the way. Much too lazy to maintain an Arch installation. Linux dude, that's great. I'm very close to that 4,000 mark for subscribers. I'd be there if I quit losing subscribers. I keep going up and down. I keep posting videos that piss people off. Which is the way it is. F society. What is plan nine? And I've, that's the second time in two days I've heard plan nine. I don't know what that is. I think it's probably both times from you, but I use Manjaro by the way. Manjaro is good. I like Manjaro. I just always feel behind when I use Manjaro because they delay their updates a little bit to maintain stability. I just always feel, you know, behind. I will make one. How are you doing? Hello, Santiago. Got the crew here tonight. Yeah. I wonder if TFL will show up. He's got, if he has insomnia tonight, you probably will. Plan nine is eight plans better than plan one. Plan, I remember a movie called, there was a movie called plan nine, wasn't there? I don't think I ever watched it. Surprisingly enough, if you duck duck go plan nine, you actually get the Linux issue or wherever it is and not the movie. An alternative to canoe, huh? Plan nine from outer space. Grigory Walcott, Tom Keen and Monica McKinnon. I've never heard of any of those people. It's 1957. Ranted four out of 10. So not a great movie either. There was a more modern movie they called plan nine, wasn't there? Maybe a remake? No, I'm curious. You guys are probably wondering what I'm doing. You can watch here. Nice misspelled movie run. This one here, yeah, 2015. That's the one I was thinking of. Still had people in it that I had no clue who any of those people are. Actually has a higher rating than the other plan nine. Interesting. Okay. Well, that was a plan nine is not Linux. Whatever. Old movie. Okay. So we have cute browser. I've done the only thing I've done to customize this version of cute browser is unable to add blocking. That's literally it. But I know DT has done some videos on cute browser. So that's probably what I'm going to follow. If I can actually type actually has two, I wonder which one's better. Well, this is longer. So it actually has to be better. I should have my headphones on, I suppose. So I have been a Firefox user forever and Firefox is a great web browser. But here in the past few weeks, I've really been wanting to switch to something more minimal as far as a web browser. And by minimal, I'm talking about a web browser that gets out of your way. I'm talking about something that offers no tabs or the option to at least hide tabs, no URL bars, no window decorations of any kind, no status bars, no kind of system trays or anything at the bottom. I just want a plain window frame that loads a web page. And a couple of weeks ago, I made a video discussing four possibilities that I might switch to and try out. And those were surf, cute browser, Vimby, and the men browser. And surf, I've actually used quite a bit in the last couple of months. And surf is just not a good option. It's slow, it's buggy. And it's just frustrating to use. That is true. A lot of you guys surf is terrible pushing me to give cute browser a try like a real hard look. And that's what I've been doing the last couple of days. I really kind of deep dived a little bit into cute browser. And I got to say, I'm impressed. So let me switch over to my desktop. And let's go ahead and just launch cute browser. So this is cute browser out of the box. I really haven't done a ton of configuration with it. By default, it does show tabs here in this top line. And by default, it does have a bottom status line that shows you the web page you're on. Also, the default search engine is duck duck go. But you can change this to anything. Of course, cute browser is very, very extensible. I'm going to show you a little bit of what you can do with the config. Let's discuss some of the very basics with cute browser. Now cute browser aims to be keyboard centric. It aims to be very Vim like in the commands. So to open something in Vim, you typically go into command mode, command mode, of course involves a colon and then you type a command such as open, which you could do here. I could type colon open and then a URL such as distrotube.com. Narcissist goes there for shorthand for that would just be typing O on the keyboard. And you say if I just type O, it actually gives me the full command colon open. And then I don't have to bother typing the full word. By the way, you don't have to type a URL if it's already in your history here. My recent history, you know, I could have found distrotube here. If I wanted to, I could go to my YouTube page. There are other pages to go to the page, but YouTube kind of takes a while to load in most browsers, but in surf, my YouTube page would take like 30 seconds to load. Sometimes it was just hideously slow in surf. Cute browser seems to have a little bit more pep in its step. Now since we've gone forward a page, what if you want to go back? Well, you go back using the keyboard. Remember the VIM navigation keys. H, J, K, L. Well, H and L for left and right are back and forward. So shift H brings me back a page. Shift L goes forward a page. It takes me back to the YouTube page. Shift H takes me back. Now let me show you a little bit about the configuration of Cute Browser. So the default config for Cute Browser is going to be in .config slash Cute Browser slash autoconfig.yml. So it's a YML document here. And by default, it really doesn't have anything. It's pretty much an empty document. You can edit it by hand, but they really tell you don't edit this file by hand. I've been editing it by hand, but typically you actually edit this thing in the browser itself. For example, you do things like set and then whatever command you're setting with whatever key bind you're setting, or you can do colon bind to add a key bind or unbind something. And all of that stuff does work, you know, in the browser. It actually auto writes everything to this file automatically for you. For example, the URL search engines here, I set other than DuckDuckGo, which is the default search engine. I wanted to set a few other things to be searchable. I wanted to set the ArchWiki to be searchable. Reddit, the Urban Dictionary, and YouTube. So there was a command I needed to do. I'm not sure if I can go back in the history and find that command. All right, I found the command here. And it's too long to really show you guys on camera, but basically it's colon, set, and then URL.search engines. You see URL.search engines in this document here. Let me zoom in. And then in single quotes, and then in the squiggly brackets, I set default to be DuckDuckGo AW, the AW key binding to be the ArchWiki, RE to be Reddit, UB to be Urban Dictionary, YTE to be YouTube. And what these do is now when I either do colon open or just O on the keyboard, and I do AW for ArchWiki, and then do space, and then a search term. So maybe I want to search for, I don't know, LightDM. Maybe I'm doing a install of LightDM, and I'm unsure about something. It opens the ArchWiki page at the LightDM page. How cool is that? And to show you the Urban Dictionary in action, I'll do UB and then salty. That's a good term to look up in the Urban Dictionary. Being salty is when you are upset over something little. So the Ubuntu user was salty over snaps, even though he's not forced to use it. And that's salty in a sentence. And let me move my configuration file out of the way here. And one thing you probably noticed actually in my config file, well, let me go back to it just briefly, is these bindings here. Let me highlight them. XB cycles the status bar to hide. XT cycles the tabs to show. XX cycles both the status bar and the tabs. So basically what these bindings do is XB, XT, XX, they are able to give me that more minimal look I'm after. So if XT toggles the tabs, XT toggles the tabs back. This video isn't really what I was looking for. XB is the same thing for the status bar. XB brings it back. If I want to toggle both the tabs and the status bar at the same time, XX removes both, XX brings both back. So it's very easy to really get this thing to be just a window frame displaying some HTML. And I really like that. Now if you want to see some of the settings for Qt browser, you don't have to open up config files or anything. You can do it all right here in the browser. So if I type O for open, and I just start typing Qt, you see some of the recent documents that I opened were Qt colon slash slash settings Qt colon slash slash bookmarks Qt colon slash slash bindings. The most interesting one here, especially when your first getting started is the Qt settings. And this is where you can go through here. And if I use the mouse, I could scroll or if I wanted to, I could page up and page down. We haven't talked about navigating up and down J and K work for just scrolling a little bit. Or if you wanted to, you can control F and control B to really move forward in the document quite a bit or back in the document. All right, let's look at the other one. Because I wanted to see where he talks about creating a Python configuration file. I think it's probably this one. So I've made a couple of really introductory videos about the Qt browser in the past, just introducing you guys to what the Qt browser is. I haven't really gone deep into configuring the Qt browser before. And I've gotten a ton of questions and people wanting to know how to do this and how to do that. So today, all right, hold on a second. Linux noob, that was a low blow man. One of the smaller Linux YouTubers used it and liked it very much. That's funny. You guys thought I wasn't paying attention. And like minded, I did try install V for a little while. But after like an update or whatever it broke, like it went update for what firm I said, I don't know why DT is echoing for you. I could probably just find a text tutorial how to configure Qt browser. I mean, wouldn't doubt actually look at the configuration file, I guess. All right. It's definitely scroll slower than Firefox does. I wonder if that's something you can change. Configuring Qt browser via the user interface, the easy and less but less flexible way to configure Qt browser is using the user interface. So that's why we're going to do the other way. For more powerful configuration possibilities, you can create a config.py file. Since it's a Python file, you have much more flexibility for configuration. Note that Qt browser will never touch this file. This means you'll be responsible for updating it when upgrading to a newer Qt browser version. You can run the config dash edit inside Qt browser to open the file and reload the file. Yeah, probably need to do that. So it's config write dash py defaults. So cd.config Qt browser. I'll ask here. I don't actually see a config.py there. This file should be located on Linux. So just got to do config. Jeevim. It's looking for Jeevim. Now Zany gets the thing when he doesn't look at the chat and I'm trying to tell him to do something. I'm ignoring him now. That's funny. I see it. All right. Let's copy link. So I can just go through and create. What do you want to do? I do not know anything about. There we go. That's what I'm looking for. Apparently, control A is not a selectable thing in Qt browser. Okay. That's quite a configuration. So I can just actually just do this, right? errors. That looks like the same Python error I always get with lately with running Python programs. Unhandled exception. So anybody watching know what the hell this means? I'm gonna have to search. Let's see Python. Unhandled exception. See the thing is this isn't unique to Qt browser. I've been having this with pretty much any configuration, any Python program that I run. It's really annoying. The config file probably run fine in Gen 2. I alternate between ZZ and WQ. I do both. I've gotten in the habit of using WQ lately because of doing like some tutorials, and it's easier to show people to quit them with WQ than it is ZZ because it just doesn't, you know, there's no output with ZZ. Oh, that's here. Errors and exceptions. That's not gonna help me like that. How can I handle any unhandled exception? Normally unhandled exceptions go to this. I don't know any. I think this is not going to help at all. Maybe just search for 396 is literally the last line. I wonder if it's this. I bet you. Like a random E error. Well, it's a different, at least a different error. While setting downloads that location directory invalid. That's because you got to change that. Okay. Can't use your username there, Zany. You use Zany for your user names. I know that now. Now I can steal your identity. That's not even the location of my, uh, let's see, change word media. Oh, wait, this. Okay, and we'll search for this again. Nothing. Good. All right. Now. I wonder why there was a random either in the configuration file. That was weird. Yeah. I don't, some would copy and paste. I guess we got to go back here and actually look and see what you got here. Started at the top. Holy moly that your, your ASCII art did not come through very well. I'm assuming that's supposed to say Zany something or the other, but those are just lines to me. Hey, let's see here. So you can VIM classes, things to shut down, I guess it's possible that I just pressed a random E button. Hit like spawn MPV. So is this the one that actually will open up the, the video in, in, um, MPV. So you don't have to watch the ads. Is that what that does? How does that actually work? Like, I don't know how any of this key bindings work. So, or are you kidding me? It's using your crappy font. Get this off my system. What is wrong with you? Get comic sans off my system. That's really cool users probably start off with using Ubuntu. I know I did. I started using desktop Linux about 13, 14 years ago and I started with Ubuntu and it was a great distribution. I still love Ubuntu and these days, of course, I use arch and arch based distributions. Okay. That is really cool. Also, it's very interesting that YouTube without any cookies whatsoever managed to put a, a distro tube thing on the front page. Granted, it would have seen some probably from my searching of dug dug go earlier, but I'm not, I'm not, I'm not zoomed in in. Oh, wait a minute. I am actually zoomed in on, yeah, that came through better. I forgot that I'd zoomed in so people could see. It looks like comments, comic sans. Like, you probably can't see it there at the bottom. It does matter. I was just laughing at it. So things are, I stole somebody else's configuration file and did everything else. What am I supposed to do? I suppose I could go back and let's see here. So cycle status bar shown always never. So is that what, that takes care of that. That's cool. Okay. And let's see XT takes the tabs. So that works. That's cool. Even shows them live. We could go inception live stream within the, within live stream. So XX does both. That's cool. A few weeks ago, I installed Ubuntu fresh on a new PC and watched a couple of YouTube videos without signing in and YouTube immediately recognized me and started recommending the usual videos. Yeah, YouTube is scary like that. Time to rice. All right. So here's what's funny. Actually, I should go here. You guys can actually see me again. That computer behind me is what I've been running Debian on for the last month. And most of my Debian long-term review is done. But what I've decided to do is do the entire thing in B roll. So all you're going to see in video form other than, you know, probably my face, I might show the webcam or whatever while I'm talking over it, but the actual footage from Debian is just going to be me ricing it over and over again, or at least one time. So that's, that should come, if I get my ass around to editing it, it should happen tonight, but, and you guys should get it tomorrow. But if not, it'll be Tuesday. I'll be happy to install something other than Debian on there. I don't know what, I don't know what distro I will go with next. It won't be gen two. I'm just promising you if you do that. That computer would take three weeks to compile a kernel. That's how old it is. Space Mono. Okay. Well, originally it looked like his weird font. Tyler uses a weird font and I make fun of him for it every time. Yeah, it's bullseye. I like it a lot. The install of it was stupid, but yeah, I like Debian quite a bit. I had no problems with it at all. I liked sparky lengths I tried yesterday way better though, just because it was easier to install. There was no hiding of isos, and it just felt more like a brand of modern distro to me. Like if you install Debian and then install XFCE, now this isn't this isn't a Debian problem really, but XFCE in its original most native form looks like it came out of the 1990s. I love my weird fonts. I'm very I don't know. I'm very uninteresting when it comes to uninteresting when it comes to fonts. I just use Hack Nerd font or JetBrains Mono. That's those the two that I use. Try OpenBSD or FreeBSD. I might do that for a video. I don't think I'd put it on that computer back there though. I don't think I'd want to use it for a whole month. Oh by the way, Tyler, are you still on OpenBSD? I'm very curious because Peter and I have a bet. He says that you're going to end today, and I said you're going to end tomorrow. Go back to Linux. I'm very curious. We got to know to settle this bet. He's not. What did he go to? I noticed he's probably not listening to me anymore. You installed Arch. Oh man, I gave you an extra day. I had more confidence in you than I should have. That's sad. Good news is there are no stakes because I know he would have told me I had installed Gent 2 if I lost. Have I tried Slackware? No, I've not tried Slackware. I've heard just very little about it. I know it's really old. That's about as much Slackware as I know about other than... Oh goodness. It doesn't surprise me that he went away. I'm just surprised he didn't make it to Monday. I thought he would make it the whole weekend. Although I will say whatever you use to record the podcast on Thursday, Tyler, worked out really well. You should definitely do that again. There has to be an audio recording thing that you can use in the terminal on Linux. I must install Gent 2 now. I insist no. I have a Patreon goal of $350 a month. Then I will install Gent 2 again. I set the arbitrarily high so that I never actually have to do it. Please install Gent 2. No. I'm not even... Even if I wanted to, I'm not prepared to do that tonight. Last time, I just ate up my internet for whatever reason. After I was done with that stream, I went out to the living room and the rest of the family was like, why was the internet so slow? Patreon link? My Patreon link is literally right underneath my face. You can't miss it. I put it on every video. You know, I could try VB again. I don't mind that. It seems how Tyler has done my configuring of Kube browser for me. I wonder if it would be better to build it. I wonder if that's the reason why I had such a hard time, because it would not update through the AUR. Gent2 is the most user-friendly distro, trust me. You're like a used car salesman. This car only has 300 miles on it, trust me. Well, we know Tyler uses Brave Search. And as we can tell, no, I'm actually searching for VB browser. Thank you. There we go. So true. I find it funny. Okay, let's see if we can actually build this. Download, download, install app image, Fedora, Arch, Pac-Man. You can get the binary. I'll probably just install it through Arch then. I've never tried NYXT. Now, I was using that. There's one called like Ghost Browser or Ghostium or something that came out a little while ago. But I never got past like the initial big beta of it. Sentos. Does Sentos have another desktop environment other than Genome? That's the last. I guess I saw somebody running Sentos as their desktop, as their main driver, and they were using Genome. So I'm assuming that's like all they have. But that's just an assumption. You probably, I mean, you could install whatever you want on, I'm sure. Doesn't ship. So it'd be basically just like Debian only, you know, worse probably. Genome is the only one big desktop in the repo is by default. That's what I probably figured. I seem to remember hearing about that. I saw somebody using it. Like, I don't know why you'd use Sentos as a desktop distro. I don't understand why you would, but now somebody was arguing with me the other day. I think it was, maybe it was English Bob. I can't remember. It was somebody on TFL's channel in their comments. They were talking, saying Fedora was the only reason you should use Fedora is if you're a Red Hat developer. Like, I know a lot of people who run Fedora who aren't, you know, work for Red Hat. Lots of people. I mean, it's not the most popular browser or disk driver, but lots of people use it who aren't Red Hat users. I wonder how you, is there a way to zoom in so you can actually see this? My, I probably have to change the font or something. Let's see here. Make Vibr C. This command can be used to write all runtime settings, keyboard mappings, and custom commands back to the RC file located in Vibes data folder. If the config file startup argument is present, only this Vibr C will be used and it will also be a destination of this Vibr, make Vibr the RC command. I can't say that. The color scheme is also written if it is changed or if full is provided. I never use cute browser and buddies with English Bob, by the way. English Bob is great. I don't think he subscribes to my channel though. I've never seen him comment on mine, but I know he argues with TFL all the time. Fedora is pretty damn great, second only Gen 2. Well, I don't know about the whole Gen 2 thing, but Fedora is good. If you want to use Wayland, if you're, have you heart set on using Wayland and pipe wire and all that stuff? Fedora is the best way to go because it's got the best support for it out of the box. Trying to install Wayland and pipe wire on an ARC system is just asking for pain. We all know how much Matt likes his, I don't like him at all. I would subscribe, but I won't subscribe. I'm not sure which I hate more, Genome or I've lost my train of thought. I've got Alzheimer's. I can't remember. There's something also that I hate just as much. Linux Mint, maybe. I could make another video on Linux Mint and lose another half dozen subscribers, which I just find utterly entertaining. Fedora is the only innovative desktop distro we have these days. I don't know about that, but maybe. They're definitely trying more stuff than other distros, that's for sure. But I really wish that Ubuntu had chosen KDE for their desktop environment because it would just make it seem like they're trying new stuff better. I don't know what made me think of that, but that's true. Genome or Gen2? I don't hate Gen2. I just don't see the purpose in it. Let's try a torrid love affair with Genome. I don't have Genome installed on this computer. I have, let's see, I can show you the things that I have. We did a CD, let's see, user, share, I can't type with a damn word today, share X sessions and do an analysis here. I have awesome BSPWM, DWM, Herp Sluff, i3, Openbox, Qtile, Spectre, XFC and Xmonet. Those are the things I have installed on this computer. I had Plasma, but I didn't install it. If you guys are running ARCH, if you guys want to know why I like ARCHO, let me go to this. ARCHO Linux Desktop Trasher. This thing here, if you've gone through and installed a desktop that you want to get rid of, I believe this will only work on ARCHO, by the way, but it may work on ARCH. You can actually go through and uninstall a desktop from your computer using this program. It's awesome. Now it's not 100% functional. It's definitely something that you use with caution because it rewrites your entire .configuration file, which is annoying, but if you want to get rid of Plasma, this was amazing. It just completely deleted everything. It was very good. So that's why I like ARCHO. Come on, Matt, we all know you want to install GNOME before recording, so there's no proof. I'm trying to think. Oh, I have a Lenovo over here that's running Ubuntu 21.04. That is the closest I have to running GNOME, and it hasn't been started in months. It may not even turn on. So it's mandatory you use, by the way, remodification. Yeah, Eric is great. I installed regular ARCH when I was the last time I hopped. I went to regular ARCH, and it worked fine, and I could do it. It just felt like I was doing way more maintenance than I needed to do or wanted to do. So I just came back to ARCHO, and everything just works. It's so good. Why Pac-Man is an honestly terrible package manager. Pac-Man is the best package manager. So I told you the ones that I have installed on this computer, but on the computer back there, I have XFC and BSPWM. So there's no GNOME on that one either. Pac-Man is a game. We got to get to remember, I don't have very much experience with portage, so I can't actually tell you whether or not it's better than Pac-Man, but I'm going to tell you right now it's not better than Pac-Man. Pac-Man is just the best, and it works so good. What is portage? Portage is the Gen 2 package manager, and the glory of GNOME on Gen 2. If I were to install Gen 2, I would not be installing GNOME. That's for sure. Although, we are going to be doing another challenge on the podcast, Tyler. That could be your challenge. We both have to install GNOME on Gen 2 and use it for a month. That's our challenge. Pac-Person. Compiling GNOME for 10 days. It probably wouldn't take 10 days, but I'd feel like it. Do a stream with Gen 2 and GNOME with GNOME. No. I've already stated my rules for when I will install Gen 2 again. So there's a GNOME binary or something that you can install. All right, in my Sparky Linux first look yesterday, one of the desktops that they let you install is called GNOME Classic. Does anybody know what GNOME Classic actually is? I've never actually heard of it. What is GNOME Classic? GNOME Classic is a feature for users to prefer a more traditional desktop experience. Well, GNOME Classic is based on GNOME 3 technologies. It provides a number of changes to the user interface, such as applications and places menus on the top bar. So basically, it's GNOME 2 and a window list in the bottom of the screen. You can use the applications menu on the top bar to launch application activities. Overview is available by selecting the activities and overview items from the menu. To access activities overview, show me a picture. I'd like to see a picture. GNOME Classic, that's really exactly what it is. That's GNOME 2. I mean, that's literally what that is. Okay. It's even using like the old Ubuntu style icons. If that's actually GNOME Classic, I use Plasma, the best GNOME out there. Plasma is good. It just installs so many packages. The Linux experiment yesterday did a video about his 15 apps that he uses for work or something. I don't even know what the topic was about, but he was talking about Dolphin. Every time I see somebody use Dolphin, it's like, oh man, I wish I could use Dolphin because Dolphin, it has to be the best file manager out there, but just installs so many packages. So you can't just have Dolphin install it. Installs basically the entire KDE stack. Yeah, it does look exactly like Mate, doesn't it? Probably doesn't have nearly as many customizability options as Mate does. And I haven't used Mate in ages. I should use Mate again. For whatever reason, Mate just doesn't like me. The last two times I used it, which had to have been over a year ago, maybe even longer. It just like crashed my computer. Yeah, just a ton of dependencies for Dolphin. But that's the same with every KDE Plasma application. If you install KDE Live, you get a ton of KDE dependencies, just a ton of them that you don't even need. I mean, they don't need to really need to be there. It's really dumb. Unfortunately, KDE Live is like the only video editor that actually works. So at least the least open source video editor. I tried that all about that somebody pointed me towards and it just crashed almost instantaneously. When I edit a video, I can't have it crashing. It just has to be stable. Yeah, that's true. There's a lot of applications out there that use a ton of dependencies that they don't actually need. I don't know what I did wrong, but I found KDE Search to be terrible on any distro. I think you have to run the index command in the terminal to fix that problem. I might be 100% off base on this, but I think that Krunner is based off the locate command in the terminal. It might be wrong, but I think it is. And if it's not, it's something like that. Ranger. I use Ranger. I have it installed. By the way, you type in going on classic. Thank you, Brave Search for giving us pictures of genomes. That's not the right one. That's Gitcrack and I forget. There we go. That's Ranger. Yeah, that's the right one. So I have Ranger installed. I just don't use it nearly as much as I used to. And I don't really know why. I used Shaka. I couldn't get into it. It just was too weird for me. You just blew. Maybe I didn't know that. I don't know. I knew it was something. So Ken Dog, Ken Dog Macawesome, first of all, great name. You can get drag and drop to work in Ranger using Dragon, but it's not great, especially in a tumbling window manager because it opens up a little like window while you're dragging. And it's up here, up in the top left corner. And sometimes it doesn't listen to your floating rules. So it ends up going full screen and just ruining your layout. It's a mess. So I guess we could find out. Let's go back to this here. I'm very curious how we can go about changing the colors. We need to change the colors. Here we go. Here's some colors, because frankly, well, there's a lot of colors there. We're still going out. There's still more colors. All right, here we go. This looks like the beginning. I wonder if there's an easy way to... I'm going to look for a shortcut. Grovbox, cute browser. Usage. To use the cute, basic stint cube browser, you copy one of the confiling files to the themes. It does have a grovbox theme. Oh, it looks pretty. Have you ever tried index FM? I have not. What is index FM? Full text substring index based on Bro's wheeler. I'm assuming this is not the exact thing you're talking about. I'm assuming that's what that is, is a file manager. All right, dear developers, always include a screenshot of your thing here. Oh, here we go. Why don't you put this at the top? That's not the terminal file manager. That's a... Oh, it has split panes. This is a GTK file manager. Wonder why I said it was KDE. It looks like a GTK file manager. It has the top bar of one. What is this written in? Index is a file manager that works on desktops, Android, and Plasma Mobile. Index lets you use... You browse your system files and applications. Is this going to be like the thing that's going to be replacing Dolphin for Plasma Mobile or something? It is Maui kit. That's what it is. Not cute. I always install things when people tell me to install them. Animations are pretty. I just wanted a different view. There we go. That's small. I'm convinced that Gen2 can be for everyone. And then Peter says, you can even be met and still use it. That sounded like an insult, Peter. Yeah, it's Maui. What confused me about the... When I said it was GTK, this thing here looks like a GTK top bar. It's Maui kit. That's also the reason why it doesn't follow any of the deeming that I had done on this computer, because Maui kit doesn't follow themes on anything as far as I know. It doesn't follow the cute stuff, and it doesn't follow the GTK rules. How you actually go about, you know, ricing this? I wouldn't have a clue. Right? I donated $5 to Gen2 today. It was easier than compiling Nome. How's the keyboard controls? I'm assuming you're talking about this. I don't see... See the problem with this is it's not... Oh, here we go. Here's settings right here. Navigation, Configure, Grid Items, Save Session. Oh, that's awesome. That's... I've been looking for that for ages. A GUI file manager that remembers where you were when you left off. There are so few of them that do that. I think Pac-Man or Pac-FM... I think that's one that does it. I'm not sure I could be... It doesn't have anything here about key bindings though. Shortcuts. This is literally it. Here we go. So, Control-T is New Tab, Control-W, Close Tab, Path Edit, Terminal F4, I wonder if the F4 thing actually works? No. Fine Tab, Control-H, Select All, Control-A, Select Control-Shift-Arrows. And it looks like you can change these. Maybe you can't. Can't change them as far as I can see. It does look nice. I would... I'm not interested... I don't think I could use it because it doesn't follow the rest of my theme, so it's stick out like a sore thumb. But it looks nice. I bet you it looks nice like this too. Yeah. That's what it's meant for. Mobile. Maui and MauiKit and Flutter are kind of... I mean, they're obviously different languages and design philosophies and stuff, but they're both kind of focused on being able to create UIs that are, you know, available cross platform. So that's Index. That remembering position is definitely intriguing. All right, now where was I? We were going to do colors. Nautilus is bloated, but for no reason. So, like with... With Dolphin, Dolphin comes with a ton of dependencies, right? But it's functional and it's very customizable. Nautilus is just bloated for no reason other than it's tied to the GNOME desktop. So it runs a lot of the stuff that goes on in the background. Index has a built-in text editor. What was that? There was a distro out there that had a whole bunch of custom software that had like a controversy a few months ago. They were fighting with the distro watch guys. God, that's going to drive me nuts. It was a Debian-based slash Ubuntu-based or something distro. I'm going to remember everything about it, except for the name. I get it no matter. Background color of the completion widget for odd arrows. The problem I have with this is what the hell is the completion widget, right? Nitrox OS. That's exactly what it was. Anyways, they had their own file manager. I believe it was built. Is that index? Is that the same thing? It might... Like, I know they were using a file manager that was written in Maui, I think. I'm pretty sure. Anyways, I'm going to use the basic 10-cube browser. You can copy one of the config files in themes to the config.py or use the curl. But I don't want to overwrite the whole config.py. I just want the colors. So we can just go up here and see if we can do the default. And then we're looking for rubbox dark. This one here. And then if we can... Before I do this, I'm going to cp config.py and to config.py.old, just in case. And then we go through here and do to here and see if this worked. Error occurred while reading config.py. While setting colors.messages.error.border.nooption. Okay. Did the rest of it come up? Yes, look at that. Oh, it's so good. That's so much better. Is the part of the input where you have your matches and every second line is different. So it's this thing. Yeah, yeah, just your watch is kind of rigged. Nitrix, yeah. Or how are you pronounce it? Dead Daddy Time Mono. That is a good, good font name, isn't it? All right. Anyways, back here. I think I'm going to do actually before we just change that. I don't know if I need to change it to everywhere, but we can. And then which was... Well, where was the error again? It was called colors.messages.error. Okay. Color.messages. I wish I'd give you a line number. Colors.messages. Error. Which one is it? That border. Boter. Boter. I'm pretty sure that's probably supposed to be border. We'll change that to border and see if that actually works. I'm glad to know I'm not the only person that does... Yeah, there we go. Oh, and look at that. It's just... Dropbox. So good. And Daddy. Tyler, was Daddy Time one of the ones that you... Is that what you picked or is that default? Because you kind of want to know. I'm not going to say anything against District 2. He's a good guy. And you can't complain that he steals topics because he does steal topics, but we all steal topics. That racing one he did today originally came from Brody. So that's just the way the Linux YouTuber space works. Alias, CD, pseudo, reboot. Oh, that'd be so cool. That's your pseudo shutdown now is probably better. Might not use a thing called BreezeDark. Use Grovebox. It's so good. Seriously, every day that I use Grovebox, I like it a little bit more. It's so good. And the thing is, this is not even my favorite color. I'm not a big brown guy. I'm usually much more bright, you know, like the bright guys, the bright colors. The best YouTube theft of topic lately was Mental Outlaw and Luke Smith. One day, Mental Outlaw said, I switched to BSD and then the very next day, Luke Smith, I switched to BSD. It was the greatest thing ever. Yeah, Grovebox is great. It's so good. Matter of fact, I went through and did Grovebox on that one. It's going to be the B-roll for my Debian review. But it does a lot of good work too, yeah. But I think they all do. Like I said, stealing topics from each other is not going to be the biggest flaw of any FlossTuber ever. Mental Outlaw is Luke Smith defixed. See, people keep saying that and is it true? I don't even know it's true at this point. It's been since so many times. Everybody thinks that they're the same person, but I actually don't know if that's true or not. It can't be proven right. So you hear what? I think they stole the BSD stuff from Zany. Although I'm pretty sure Zany did after them, so I'm pretty sure they also chose free BSD. Maybe I was wrong. Maybe they did open BSD too. It probably does a good job of doing his homework. I don't do homework at all. That's my shtick. You watch my channel, you'll know I have no clue what I'm talking about. That's the thing. So yeah, you watch me, I have no clue what I'm talking about. And if you listen to me, that's your problem. The mastermind behind this. See, Tyler is a, he's the kind of guy who hops a lot. So he has all the ideas. He, I think Tyler, you hop, you distro hop more than I ever did, which is quite impressive. Mental outlaw is just Luke Smith's cooking channel. It is funny that they're both into cooking. There is a lot of evidence that they are the same person. Yeah, he doesn't do Linux stuff anymore. His, all right, so I'm not going to disparage him, but he does a lot of ranty videos now. And the last one, when he did where he was talking about how he knew a guy who installed Manjar, who then couldn't figure it out or something, and then he blamed it on Linux was just weirdly weird. Just because the people you know aren't smart enough to handle Linux doesn't make Linux bad. It was, it was a really weird video for him, for him. So I should hop a bit, make an uninformed video about everything and then blame others for stealing my content. That's exactly what you should do. All this hopping y'all still avoiding Gentoo. Now, see here, Tyler did install Gentoo and he was on it for a day and a half is what he said, I think. So that's proven wrong. At least one of the crew here has gone through and installed Gentoo. And TFL tried that when I did my Gentoo stream, he tried to go along with it at the same time, but he ran into just as many problems as I did. I suppose I could do this so you guys can actually see. It's like easier than straining my neck again. Is the AUR that hard to integrate into other distros? I know that they're doing it for Debian, but it's not going to be the same thing. It's just going to be the same concept. Because for the Debian one, they're going to be using that Debian package builder. So it's going to be a little bit different. The problem with taking a concept for the AUR into other distros, for Debian based ones and whatever, is going to be getting community adoption of it. Getting people to use it and actually package packages for it. Because the AUR is only good. The only reason why we proclaim the AUR to be the best thing ever is because it has all the packages. If it wasn't, if the AUR had nothing in it, nobody would give a shit. I mean, it's just the honest truth. So for those other projects that are trying to make AURs for other distros or basically Debian based distros, the only way that it's going to ever be successful is to get packages in it. And it has to work well, obviously. Yep, DT is great. I'm never going to say too many words against DT. I'll probably disagree with them from time to time, but this channel would not be where it's at without DT's call out. So you're not going to see me become his mortal enemy or anything. Why Microsoft edges the devil? Somebody else can make that video. I'm not going to be making that video. I'm not using edge anymore, people. It's okay. I'm using Firefox again. I've come back to the to the light. I went Darth Vader for a little bit. And then just like at the end of the movie, I reversed positions. The Gentoo wiki is better than the Arch wiki. I'm going to have to disagree with you there. The Arch wiki is way better. I'm not saying the Gentoo wiki is bad. I'm just saying the Arch wiki is better. Yeah. PPAs are terrible. I've been using Debian now for a month. I have not installed a single PPA on there. I've been completely, yeah. Hey, you want to, I'm actually, I do have browser open. It's like right here, but I'm not signed in on anything yet. So that's the reason why you're seeing Firefox right now. Good for you for acknowledging what DT did for you. Yeah, I'm very thankful for that. I definitely wouldn't be near 4,000 subscribers. I would probably be around probably approaching 2,000 subscribers at that point, because I was at 400 and I'd only been doing it for a few months when he did a shout out. But I wouldn't have grown nearly as fast for sure. Don't use PPAs on Debian. I think I saw one of DT's rap videos. Yeah. He did like a recap for his thousands video or something like that. So here's something interesting. DT has been doing YouTube for three or four years or something like that. And he just went over a thousand videos like a month or so ago. I've been doing it since September and have already done over 250 videos, I think. I wonder how many, I wonder if Social Blade will tell you how many videos you've done, because I might have made that number up. Number of uploads, 263 videos since September. So in a year. So I'm probably about the same, because it'd take about four years then to get to the 2,000. I think we can all agree that no matter whether you like the Gen 2 wiki or the Arch wiki, that the Ubuntu wiki is terrible. Ubuntu does have a wiki, by the way. I don't think anybody even knows that Ubuntu has a wiki, because nobody goes to it. This is the Ubuntu wiki. Good luck navigating this, by the way. Like, there's stuff here, but... I mean, you think, when you go to the Arch wiki, I'm just going to go to a random page here, when you go to the Arch wiki here, I mean, you have a ton of links and stuff to where you need to go and all that kind of stuff. But the Ubuntu wiki, there's like, what, five or six links here? That's it. And then two of them are weekly newsletters. Two of them are weekly newsletters. Getting involved teams. Where's the rest of the stuff here? I mean, you can go through and I'm assuming that these will take you to more stuff. But yeah, that's the Ubuntu wiki. That's like, takes you to the Ubuntu discourse. That's not even part of the wiki. So why does it even exist? It's really weird. Yeah, I know they move most of their stuff to ask Ubuntu, so it's not fair to make fun of them for it, but it still exists. I know they're talking on the Ubuntu podcast about how they could revamp it or whatever. Well, Tyler, I had to divert the chat away from saying that the Arch wiki was bad, and that the Gentoo wiki was good. Yeah, it's still there. The Ubuntu wiki is still there. I think it's great, but it's never going to be... I like that it's just kind of frozen in time. You know, there's that one shill in the basement of Canonical that says whose job it is to make sure that the wiki page stays there or something. It's really weird. Yeah, that's a good point. A lot of people do their how-to tutorials for Ubuntu. Anyway, so that's because there's nothing on the Ubuntu wiki. Not really. That's the way I read it though, Jacob, is that you said the Arch wiki was bad. That's the way I read it. Doesn't matter if you said it or not. You implied it. It's definitely the way it's true. The Gentoo install guide is better than Arch's. You say so. All right, guys. I've been going now for an hour and a half. This is a longer stream than normal. I don't think I actually did a damn thing other than copied Tyler's cute browser thing. I did install Veeb. Veeb is here somewhere. I might give that another try. But I'm thinking about making... So actually, I'm going to do that right now. So I'm going to cd.dwmsxhkd, hkdrc, and change this cute browser. That way, I have done switched the cute browser as my official browser and it has a growbox theme. And if we wanted to open up... Because Tyler has all the key bindings that I actually wanted to implement, we can actually go through and play a video just like that. Look at those handsome fellas. Hi Tyler, how are you doing Tyler? Doing good, doing good. Definitely watch that podcast. It was a good podcast. That podcast, we didn't get to the main topic. We didn't even get to the main topic. The main topic was supposed to be native Linux gaming. We spent the entire time bitching about elementary OS. It was so good. Who needs a main topic? Void doesn't need an install guide. Okay. I'm very, very protective of the ArchWiki because I think it's the best. Yes, it is a successful stream. I riced something. How do you know it's a Linuxcast stream? There's a riced going on during it. Tyler, I like any configuration that I didn't have to compile or complete. Yeah, it was a good podcast. I think it was my favorite one that we've done so far. I think it's just because it was us talking about and bullshitting and ranting and stuff. Anyways guys, I am done. I'm ready for this podcast or this stream to end. So before I go, I'd like to take a moment to thank my current patrons. Devon, Chris, East Coast Web, Gentoo's Fun 2, Marcus, Megalyn, Sven, Jackson, Knife and Tool, Mitchell, Mr. Fox, Art Center, American Camp. Thanks everybody for watching. I'll see you next week. Thanks guys.