this post was submitted on 31 Mar 2025
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I recently switched to Linux after a lifetime with Windows. Last night I went to install a backup program on my media server but it couldn't see the destination drive. I downloaded a partition manager and it crashed trying to load the external drive. DDG'd the issue, but I couldn't find a clear cause/effect that applied to me. So I downloaded a different partition manager and backup program, and they worked right out of the box. Turns out the non-working apps were written for Gnome and the working apps were written for KDE, (which is my desktop environment). It was a very frustrating half hour, but it pales in comparison to the time I've spent troubleshooting (storage) driver issues in Windows. The point I'm making is, Linux isn't really that hard to learn, it's just unfamiliar and therefore scary. Getting past your fear unlocks a whole new world of wonder and possibilities! π§
Ummm... Both gnome and kde apps should work on any desktop environment
My guess is that they are using a KDE distro that doesn't properly package gnome stuff
That's just a guess though
Fedora 40 based distro, some apps have rendering issues when desktop DPI to is set to 125% or 150% (but work fine at 100% or 200%). I thought it was a Gnome issue but it's actually a Wayland issue displaying legacy X11 apps with fractional scaling.
So my workaround for now is to just find apps with native Wayland support, which isn't too difficult as it's growing in popularity.