If I were to design such a system I would probably read the binary of the Windows application and replace those calls with calls to posix compliant implementations. But in case of wine from my understanding it also tells the Linux operating system that it implements the syscalls, so when the application issues that syscalls the kernel will forward it to wine for processing. (Since Kernel 5.11: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v5.11-rc2/admin-guide/syscall-user-dispatch.html)
Pinta is a Paint.net clone which uses Gtk. Last official release was 2 years ago, although Github repo seems to be updated somewhat more regulary.
As pooshhMao wrote, GIMP and Krita are good alternatives.
Spotify has a Linux version. It should be in your repository.
Here is the Debian version
https://www.spotify.com/us/download/linux/
For Fedora
https://www.smittix.co.uk/fedora-22-quick-easy-install-of-spotify/
dnf install spotify-client
It's downloadable from here.
I've also just found the solution here in their beta forum.
It needs to be run with dx9 like this:
wine64 ~/.wine/drive_c/Program\ Files/Stud.io/Stud.io.exe -force-d3d9
(When I posted my question here, I already have tried to find their forum, but I found one that had no content at all, I'd swear.)
I can't stand either Vim or Emacs, TBH, but I have looked a little. I don't know of anything like this in the FOSS arena with a single partial exception. It's an Atom add-in called "foldingtext":
https://atom.io/packages/foldingtext-for-atom
It's not bad, but it is not FOSS and the author explicitly forbids resharing, modification etc.
It has the core functionality but none of the styles, TOCs, etc.
The difference between code-folding and an outliner is comparable to the difference between a text editor and a word processor. The core is similar -- put words on screen, allow them to be changed, save and reload them. But a WP has a ton of functions text editors don't: text/paragraph/page formatting, styles, image handling, text flow, spell- and grammar-checking, and so on.
People who are only used to text editors sometimes don't get why others would need a word-processor, but it's a big like comparing a hang-glider to a personal jet, or a kayak to an ocean liner.
So, yes, outliners are an amazing tool, that sadly is almost entirely unknown and forgotten now, even though one leading product has one. The remaining few features like Google Docs' headline view are to me worse than useless -- they are not even a reminder of what I used to use. Take away my car and give me a skateboard in its place, and don't be surprised if I'm not happy or don't use the skateboard. :-)
define what you mean on lightweight as there are several distros that require very little resource as you could go with arch as you can create it how light you want(even easier to setup now that the arch installer exist), if you want to go with a distro that is lightweight on resource but has support for Ubuntu software(i think i have never used said distro) would be Linux lite as it only uses 1-2 GB of ram to run smoothly https://www.linuxliteos.com/
Which Linux and Desktop Environment? How are you installing Java?
Install Oracle Java 9 In Ubuntu, Linux Mint Or Debian Via PPA Repository [JDK9]
http://www.webupd8.org/2015/02/install-oracle-java-9-in-ubuntu-linux.html
I would advice to uninstall/purge any old Java. Before installing the current Java.
Any more Linux distro's make it easy to install stuff like this. So you don't have to download the source and compile it yourself. And sometimes it runs better getting the software from the Linux distro then from the developer. This use to not be true, but any more this wholes true. If it does fails then I go to the developers source. There might be some tweaking to do. Don't know the package comes with extra java-plugins if not you might have to provide them yourself. And might even have to direct the PATH$ to JAVA for HUD to work correctly.
I would like to know this aswell. If you need to install fmod files, I think you can boot up fomm on another pc and extract the mod files, then drag the files to your linux installation of nv. I use the old version of mod organizer to adjust my load order, but you could try to use the newer version that supports the installation of fmod files if it works on your machine. (this version doesn't work on my mac with wine 2.12, but your luck may vary)