2021-02-07 ------------------------------------------------------------------ I had been using i3 version of Manjaro for a few years now, being quite happy with it. Everything seemed to work, and if something wasn't working, there was the trusty Arch Linux Wiki. In a recent upgrade, they removed the Nvidia driver for my old MacBook, so it messed things up pretty bad as the open source driver I now have to contend with is far inferior in terms of basic functionality, like suspending and waking up. By the way, the problem here is Nvidia, not Manjaro. Nvidia hates open source, and wants new (and supposedly better) hardware cluttering the world. So, I went through a bunch of OSes trying to find something that just worked. Once again, it seems that Mint won the round. I had used Mint in the past before Arch. It seems much the way it was back then, maybe five years ago. Stuff just works. The Nvidia didn't, but for the same reason it doesn't work on Manjaro, I suppose. I felt a bit strange going back to Mint as the main OS, though, so instead what I did was to install Mint on the better machine and think of it as the machine I use only for the modern things I may sometimes want to look at. Then, I installed Manjaro on the Thinkpad T400 that I bought some time ago for tinkering. And on the T400 I wanted to go deeper into the weirdo space. So as the UI I am now running NsCDE, which is a bunch of customizations to resurrect the Common Desktop Environment of the past millenium but actually perfectly functional. I must say, I am quite impressed with this setup. I can have my cake and eat it too, as I have gone deeper into the la la land of recent history but at the same time given myself the permission to use some of the modern shit on the other machine. These little innovations were inspired by the gopherspace, but unfortunately I forgot who were responsible. There was the idea of having a personal office with several different workstations for different purposes. And someone was talking about CDE, of which I had never heard of. Or not paid attention. Oh, BTW, if you wonder, why would I change to Mint as the driver didn't work on it either. Well, I liked my Manjaro system a lot. I had it set up quite nicely for my use cases. I have no interest in putting that effort on a computer that I am going to use on things I find uninspiring, like going to one of these surveillance platforms once in a while to see if there is some message I may have to reply to. On the other hand, I am more interested in investing some time and effort on the NsCDE / Manjaro system which is more like a piece of art than a functional tool. So, with Mint, I will actually do no customisation at all. The minimum effort system. If I put Manjaro on the machine I would feel tempted, and that would go against the bigger picture of keeping these two things separated. ------------------------------------------------------------------