shalokshalom About the AC1200: This name mean the wlan stick and the vendors of such devices use sometimes a different chip in the same stick. You can detect the name of the chip with lsusb.
AC1200 is actually a dual band spec with multiple manufacturers supporting it. There are even faster specs now. Currently they use the standard wifi band plus a 5 meg/giga hertz band (forget which.)
Few of the Linux distros are including support for these faster wireless chip sets which is why I sent the link to the article posted on how to do it for Linux-Lite. Rumor has it there will be tri-band specs before long. I didn't take the time to look at how they are achieving the AC 1900 spec, tri-band may already be here.
Editors: As the homepage and demm already explain, is KaOS a qt and KDE focused distribution.
Micro is an imho very nice text editor for the Konsole, its preinstalled and support color sensitive syntax highlighting, same as Kate and Atom.
Not really a matter of "very nice" or not. It's a matter of multiple decades of use on multiple platforms with various scripts already created for it. I make heavy use of its read-only mode and most Git clients automatically select it to use for check-in comments.
Atom had its day but recently has become so bug ridden as to become unusable. Kate has always been a fine GUI editor and one I use quite a bit of when not inside of QtCreator and on a KDE desktop. Leafpad has always been on every Linux system I used because it was the lightest to store snippets in. If I need something heavy I will just install UltraEdit. Leafpad is used as a very light scratch pad/paste buffer when gathering links for blog posts on the various blogs I write for.
KWrite is a bit too heavy for that work. I used to use KWrite for much of my off-line blog post writing, but even then I kept leafpad around. FocusWriter has since replaced KWrite for off-line blog creation, mainly because it is everywhere and works. Yes, Notepadqq is a fine editor but also a touch heavy for the task. I have been forced to use Notepadqq on more than one occasion where clients had Unity or Gnome desktops and wouldn't allow commercial software installs. While we are on the subject, Vim is from a time when programmers lived in caves and ate their young. If Emacs only had an editor it would be a nice operating system. Juffed was almost usable when it first came out then it simply stopped working on every platform I tried it on.
Sorry, not trying to start a religion war over editors. It's just once one finds a set of tools which allows them to work well they don't wish to invest in the wonderful new tools which never ever measure up. I invested quite a bit of time getting good with Atom at a few places only to have later updates make it an unusable editor so I uninstalled it.
Free advice for young developers and aspiring technical writers. Yes, it might be worth just what it cost.
You need at least 3, preferably 5 editors when working on large scale projects. The most important thing to remember is that they must physically look different and preferably function different. Assign each editor a function and use it only for that function. One will be your goto general editor and all of the rest need to have specific functions so your mental muscle automatically recognizes what you can and should not do. When I see this I'm browsing code which cannot be edited or saved. When I see that it is snippets and links to be consumed by other things, etc.
1) an extremely light thing, at least as light as Leafpad for parking snippets, links, etc. Don't try to go down the multi-buffer path. Been there. Under RSTS/E we had only EDT but you could have as many buffers as the 6 character file name limit would allow. Under DOS there were products like VEDIT which loaded blindingly fast and allowed for something like 99 unique paste buffers even though FILES=20 was the config.sys limit. Keeping track of it all simply becomes unmanageable.
2) A terminal editor automatically recognized by every source code management system command line interface for check-in comments, viewing, etc. This editor needs a command line switch/option for read only mode so you can use it in a browse script. Instead of typing something like "jed R blah.txt" you then can simply type "browse blah.txt." This has your editor set up in read only mode and mentally shifts you. I saw jed is in AUR but it must be packaged a bit differently since there wasn't a separate jed-extras.
3) Your primary goto editor.
When working on large projects which intersect multiple existing systems say order entry, inventory management and customer profile, it is advisable to keep a view and edit pair for each system and make sure they look nothing like the other ones. All it takes is one unintended finger check, especially if your code repository has a reference directory, and bad things happen all over.
If you've ever worked on large systems like dealer order processing or inventory management for companies the size of Navistar or GM then you understand because every system spans multiple architectures. If the bulk of one's experience has been embedded devices, phone apps or other small Qt based things then it's probably tough to understand since every project file really has to be opened in QtCreator unless one installs MonkeyStudio or the Eclipse plug-in or something like that.
t1-cyrillic seems to be a renamed version of xorg-fonts-cyrillic
Which font exactly do you use?
I know I used both Free Times and Free Helvetan in multiple books and might have used a few others as well. I installed LibreOffice and the xorg-fonts-cyrillic package you mentioned. I do not see anything which looks like "Free Times" in the font list by name or by font.
For now I will leave KaOS on that laptop to try out. On the desktop I would also need BOINC because I let it help cure cancer and such things when I'm not using it. I saw there were some BOINC things in AUR but only a terminal manager. Need to mull on that a bit.
Have to solve the font issue before anything else though. I may just be stuck with YABU distros on my primary desktop or have to reach farther back into Debian. OpenSUSE used to be able to import font packages successfully with "alien" or something like that. Was hoping there was such a thing for this distro.