• Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    22.8 GiB install size !?
    WTF?

    I must admit I don’t recall the size of my own installation, but that seems HUGE!
    Anyways congratulations on getting it trimmed. 😋

    • rustydrd@sh.itjust.works
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      5 hours ago

      Larger than my entire root partition (currently at 21GB), but that’s because I made the fatal mistake to limit the partition to 25GB when I set it up. So I have to keep it trim, and I envy OP deep down.

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Haha I did that once too, because I had a system that when upgrading I wanted a separate home partition so I could just reassign it to my new install.

    • silenium_dev@feddit.org
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      9 hours ago

      If you’re doing anything with GPU compute (Blender, AI, simulations etc.), just ROCm, CUDA or oneAPI alone will take up half of that

    • cole@lemdro.id
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      6 hours ago

      lol mine is like 76GB. have been running the same install for going on 9 years now

    • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)@lemmy.sdf.org
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      9 hours ago

      I probably got something like that. I am not really into minimal installs, kde-applications-meta and plasma-meta is what I go with. Absolutely everything.

      I just wish I could safely use KDE Discover for updates. That’s probably what would work with “apply updates on reboot”, which sounds like the safest option. But for some reason packagekit-qt6 which would (probably) make this possible is not recommended to use.

      Preferably I’d go with something like KDE Neon or Kubuntu. I just really like KDE. But there’s just no sweet spot for me. Arch gives me new packages with all the bugs. Each update feels scary, what will I discover. Based on my Timeshift notes, last point without major bugs was 31st of October. Something like Linux Mint was stable, but I was missing some newer packages, and even drivers when my laptop was new. And major version upgrades also feel scary. Although, I don’t even know how they work. This is where Arch makes more sense to me. Linux as desktop OS is really just a huge bunch of packages working together, and they slowly get updated. When packaged into an entire OS, how do you even define a version?

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        I also use KDE, and it is far from minimal, but as I recall my system is only half that with a full system upgrade!
        Some say creativity stuff takes much room, but for instance Blender is only ½ a gig.

        But maybe my system is bigger than I remember, because even at 40 gig it’s near irrelevant compared to the size of an SSD today, and with 1 gigabit internet the upgrades are fast anyway.

        IDK if there’s a way to see the size of my actual Linux install not counting 3rd party media or games?