- Joined
- May 29, 2023
if rust must be in the kernel then HolyC must be also.Wrong.
for only a gift from god can destroy the devil's whispers.
memory safety? god is my memory manager.
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if rust must be in the kernel then HolyC must be also.Wrong.
The moderator team in the biggest (and only) NixOS server doesn't like (((them))) that much either. Furries get bullied in the offtopic channel, and they almost tried to cancel them. Kek.Neither did NixOS, which is a bit of a surprise because it's genuinely a very autistic distro.
translation: awful documentationThe steep learning curve
Yeah, but it has a pretty snowflake made out of lambdas for the logo, which is perfect for me.translation: awful documentation
>Manjaro isn't beginner friendlyI was poking around piracy resources and found some interesting Linux links.
Source: Linux / MacOS • freemediaheckyeah
Beginner Distros
DistroChooser
DistroWatch
Babbies First Linux
distro.moe - Find Random Distros
Linux Live Kit - Live Distro Creator
DotShare - Distro Config Index
View attachment 5739763
I was poking around piracy resources and found some interesting Linux links.
Source: Linux / MacOS • freemediaheckyeah
Beginner Distros
DistroChooser
DistroWatch
Babbies First Linux
distro.moe - Find Random Distros
Linux Live Kit - Live Distro Creator
DotShare - Distro Config Index
View attachment 5739763
This looks like one of those Linus Tech Tips video slides, which would explain the retarded distro choice with the lack of the only distro that matters, which is Debian. And of course pushing "beginner friendly" distros like Ubuntu Pop!_OS, elementary OS and Mint, which all suffer from the safe issue, which is as soon as you leave the pretty GUI sandbox that was crafted by the distro maintainers, you have to learn Linux to push forward and it doesn't do any hand-holding or safeguards like Windows.>Manjaro isn't beginner friendly
>Arch is in "hard mode"
>no debian
>no RHEL/Rocky
I agree, my own experiences with Ubuntu have been problematic. Snap is AIDS and I got rid of it as soon as it showed up and I've never missed it. I'd recommend a derivative like Xubuntu over it instead. That being said it is still beginner level compared to other distros, just with shoddy QA.Ubuntu as a beginner distro - UGH!
And of course pushing "beginner friendly" distros like Ubuntu Pop!_OS, elementary OS and Mint, which all suffer from the safe issue, which is as soon as you leave the pretty GUI sandbox that was crafted by the distro maintainers, you have to learn Linux to push forward and it doesn't do any hand-holding or safeguards like Windows.
Just install headless Debian, anything else is just useless fluff, because you will have to learn Linux, period.
Distros like Mint are good for your grandma that only needs to watch funny cat videos on YouTube.
This is precisely the retarded Linux turboautism I despise. On one hand we have Windows retards fantasizing that Linux is more complicated and difficult than it is, and on the other we have faggots demanding that people make Linux more complicated and difficult than necessary. This dumb shit is neither necessary nor true, and painting Linux in this way only discourages people who would otherwise do just fine from trying it.Debian is best for beginners because it's stable and relatively easy, and again, there is no beginner friendly distro, those are senior friendly distros at best.
What I meant by that is that Linux is still more difficult than necessary and all the "beginner friendly" distros are only as friendly as DE devs make them to be. As soon as the end user wants to use some software or do something that wasn't accounted for, it's straight into the terminal, AKA the real Linux.on the other we have faggots demanding that people make Linux more complicated and difficult than necessary.
Oh, Linux is not a simple OS that "just works" and no one can expect it to "just work" and get help when they run into issues? Weird, about every single Linux shill I've seen always suggested this to make me abandon Windows in the name of the FOSS glory, which tells me the exact opposite with all the friendly and inviting flavor texts.The problem starts when you treat editing a config file (without the OS blaring scary red letters and alert sounds into your face) and installing a program in the cli like some infeasible rocket science you cannot expect a reasonably intelligent person to do without a degree in computer science, by *gasp* having to read instructions. I know loudly proclaiming ignorance of how things work and being proud of it is cool nowadays, but if you cannot do these things nor can reasonably wrap your head around these things, there's a good chance linux simply isn't for you and you will not get the results you expect. That's perfectly fine. It doesn't have to be. Use MacOS/Windows. There's a reason these have market share and are used by professionals worldwide. Just please, don't expect us all to come down to your level. You either are owner of your own system and make all the decisions that come with it, or you just press button and everything works and the fine people at Redmond/Cupertino make these decisions for you and probably also some decisions you won't like. That's how that deal goes. That's the way the cooke crumbles. No such things as a free meal. Expecting a free operating system people usually do not earn money with also to be retard proof and not having to make you think is some serious boomer-level Exceptionalism. Nobody has to do your homework, especially not for free.
I think the crux of our disagreement is what kind of user we're talking about. I'm talking about the average PC user whereas you seem to be talking about power users. Of course power users are going to be irritated with the limitations of entry level distros, but telling the average PC user to "just install headless Debian" is lunacy and that's what irritated me.What I meant by that is that Linux is still more difficult than necessary and all the "beginner friendly" distros are only as friendly as DE devs make them to be. As soon as the end user wants to use some software or do something that wasn't accounted for, it's straight into the terminal, AKA the real Linux.
It's better to be upfront with newbies that yes, you will run into issues and you will have to properly learn Linux at some point rather than to upsell it as the perfect alternative to Windows that's just like it, because it's not.
And why is it more complicated than necessary still? I don't know, maybe because Linux devs have the autistic mindset of not understanding the end user's needs, or maybe it's because at it's core Linux is a CLI OS that has all the GUI elements added on top of it, when Windows NT was desinged from the ground up to be this super easy GUI OS.
Again, you're better off warning newbies that they'll need to show some initiative, even on something like Mint, than to lie to them that it's super easy. And if they're already a Windows power user, they should jump straight into pure Debian and learn from there, they'll be better off in the long run. Or get them to set up a headless Debian server on some SBC, that's a better learning exercise before they decide to dive into the desktop Linux 'tism.
Not really. I use Ubuntu and do practically everything via the terminal.Of course power users are going to be irritated with the limitations of entry level distros,
Yeah, you're right too. The official documentation can't talk about Flakes from policy as they are ""experimental"".translation: awful documentation
No, god intended a 640x480 resolution and not a pixel moreGUIs were a mistake. We should all be using the command line for everything, like god intended.
So by the time Wayland is old enough to vote, it might finally be usable. Got it.It's out, mintbros.
View attachment 5740896
And Wayland keeps gaining more and more traction.
View attachment 5740899
I’m beyond frustrated with this.Yeah, you're right too. The official documentation can't talk about Flakes from policy as they are ""experimental"".