I have always been discovering new things about Linux distros while distro hopping. And when I get something I really like, I just copy the package name and make sure I install it in every distro I use in the future.
Let me start:
- Clipboard manager (Gpaste)
- KDE connect
Thanks! I ended up messing with Nixos a bunch in the past few weeks. My impression is generally positive, though while many of the things it does are very elegant (like the gnome example you mentioned), a lot of it also seems a bit hacky. Ultimately, figuring out how to declaratively configure specific things seems to take so much more time than my current approach of a written document detailing the steps of setting up my system.
I’m going to keep tinkering in a VM though, and maybe I’ll have a breakthrough. Keeping configs working across two computers especially is tempting (read: an excuse to get a second computer).
One last question - one of the things I worked on was Firefox with home manager. How did you get it set up so bookmarks were included in the config?
When you set a FF profile there is a key called
bookmarks
. You can set them there:programs.firefox = { enable = true; extensions = [ pkgs.nur.repos.rycee.firefox-addons.vimium ... ]; profiles = { my-profile = { name = "yourname"; settings = {}; bookmarks = [ { name = "This is a folder"; toolbar = true; bookmarks = [ { name = "You can nest folders"; bookmarks = [ { name = "This is a lemmy bookmark"; keyword = "lemmy"; url = "https://lemmy.ml/"; } ... ]; ]; }; }; };
You can always look at the home manager reference, I usually look here.