

Tony McCormick: I fly a System76 Galaga iCore7 solid-state laptop that came prebuilt with Ubuntu, dual 22" monitors, and HP LaserJet 1536dnf MF (requires HPLIP driver support). My printer is an HP color LaserJet, which works seamlessly with Linux. When I'm feeling nostalgic, I swap out the ergo keyboard with my replica IBM Model M keyboard by Unicomp the buckling spring keys are really easy to type with. I love my Perixx ergonomic keyboard and my Microsoft Classic Intellimouse. That gives me a dual-display configuration that lets me work in one window on the larger display while having a separate space to run my music player or other apps. Jim Hall: I run Fedora Workstation on a Lenovo X1 Carbon laptop, with an ASUS 24" external display. We want to know what your Linux setup looks like, too. We got in on the action by asking our writer community to share. Our friend Steve Ovadia has a whole blog dedicated to the question "What's your Linux rig?" In the tech world, people want to know what other people's laptop stickers look like, what text editors and distros they love (and hate), and, of course, details about their Linux setups. Welcome to the communityįor reasons related to human psychology, we love to compare.You can find the link to the binary on the forum (a great place btw., you should check it out). Please report useful bugs in our bug tracker. We know it’s still buggy, but as a sign of goodwill and request for help in testing it we would like to ask you to give it a try. To cut a long story short, we are extremely pleased – albeit wary – to announce a very first official pre-alpha development snapshot for 64 bit Windows. Eventually we became confident that the lack of Windows maintainership might be solved. Like some people before he managed to compile darktable on Windows and offered us the patches he had to do, but other than what we had seen before he stuck around, helped fix bugs and was open to suggestions how to solve things in a better way. Not just for the moment until all the patches got merged but for the foreseeable future.

The gist of it was that the real blocker for a Windows release isn’t so much a technical one but the lack of a person (or several) dedicated to maintaining it. Then two years ago there was yet another post regarding Windows. While I still stand by what I wrote six years ago, the times they are a-changin'. A long time ago there was a post about why we don’t have a Windows port.
