

A modern residential build in Luanti (minetest)
100% done the meridian house, interiors next.
Give me a 👏 if you like what you see!!👀👀👀
Built natively for the r/Luanti Community showcase.
A modern residential build in Luanti (minetest)
70% there. windows and framing coming together, interior's next.
if you've got thoughts on what should go in that empty lot next to it, or just want to see more of nexora, drop a comment .....genuinely curious what people want to see built next in this city😉
Built natively for the r/Luanti Community showcase.
A modern residential build in Luanti (minetest)
Built natively for the r/Luanti Community showcase.
Nexora Chronicles, A Luanti (Minetest) City Building Series
Starting a devlog series documenting the build of Nexora City in Luanti (formerly known as Minetest)
Fellow Arch users, how do you explain what the f**** Hyprland is to lifelong Windows and Mac users at work without it turning into a beginner crash course?
I've been working with Mac and windows users mostly and every single day someones gonna sees my screen and goes "wait how do you open anything, there's no taskbar."
so I open an app with a keyboard shortcut. close it the same way. switch workspaces without touching the mouse once.
Then they just stared at me like I'd performed a magic trick .
tried explaining it. five minutes in I realize I'm basically giving him a lecture on window managers, keybinds, and why I willingly gave up clicking things. Leaving them nodding to whatever they're understanding in their heads...
eventually just said "it's like keyboard shortcuts but for everything" and left it there. felt like I was undersellling years of customization into one sentence... Lol
anyone else struggle to explain this without sounding like you're reciting a manual?
Arch Linux taught me more about how computers actually work than any course, book, or tutorial ever did.
and not becuase I wanted to learn.
becuase I had no choice.
every time something broke — and something always broke — I had to actually understand what was happening. no "click next" to fix it. no support ticket. just me, the wiki, and whatever patience I had left.
after a while you stop being scared of your terminal. then you stop being scared of your system. then one day you realize you actually know whats going on under the hood and you cant even pinpoint when that happened.
no course taught me that. Arch did.
anyone else feel like Arch was less of a distro choice and more of a... accidental education?
Veterans of Linux: what's one thing that "just works" today that would've sounded impossible 15–20 years ago?
I was thinking about how much time people used to spend fighting thier hardware instead of actually using their computers.
Graphics drivers, Wi-Fi, suspend/resume, audio... it felt like there was always something that could randomly stop working after an update.
Fast forward to now, and i'm seeing people run GPU passthrough, local AI models, gaming, video editing, containers, VMs... all on the same machine withoutt thinking twice.
It made me wonder:
What's the one moment where you looked at your setup and thought, "Huh... Linux has come a long way."
Doesnt have to be anything huge. Could be a driver that finally stopped being a headache, a laptop that worked perfectly out of the box, or just realizing you haven't had to troubleshoot somthing in months.
I'm curious what everyone else's "we've finally made it" moment was.
Cuz really... We've made far despite everything..
When you decided to post your first rice...
It's DAVINCI time!!!
When microslap says you can't install an app believe me nothing you will do you will do will change their mind..
But when I heard Da Vinci resolve is only officially supported on rocky Linux I decided to distro hop from fedora ....
I was looking over a very long list of linux distros and for the first time I saw things differently.
I saw only one big boy who could handle the bullies and I bolted straight to arch Linux and realized it's not the difficult old Cook as most people describe it.
is is just raw power. So I built my own thing up from the ground up and it actually took a few hours of fixing bugs but is was honesty fun and was worth the time because I strongly believe that nothing good comes so cheap.
I was done for the night and was heading to bed when the last command I entered actually popped up the installation screen......and all the sleepiness disappeared lol...
So it finally worked it never crashed once I was skeptical at first so I rebooted my machine severally and launched and closed it continuously but still won't break that's when I new the challenge was over. ..
arch Linux is just saying on our side of the Linux ecosystem, the only limit is your imagination.. :)
----love to all the arch users. 😍