- Joined
- Mar 30, 2023
Well well well how the turntables.
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Well well well how the turntables.
What does the board even do? I swear, I don't hear about Slackware having problems with a dictator for life.Well well well how the turntables.
Fuck if I know. All these groups playing stupid games with their OSs is why nobody uses them.What does the board even do? I swear, I don't hear about Slackware having problems with a dictator for life.
Apparently it's not a rewrite of the kernel but modification to support better interoperability with C++. Here's an over-a-decade-old GitHub repo:Saars and white women, have you considered switching to BOSS Linux, the Indian Linux distro? (Bharat Operating System Solutions)
This is pure goldMy favorite part is the supposed rewrite of the Linux kernel into C++. Unfortunately there doesn't seem to be public source code for any of this bitch lasagna.
Hmm. Their downloads page doesn't mention Java directly anywhere (I assume when they refer to 'developing' it's just implied). I like this quote from their 'BOSS Server' product:Saars and white women, have you considered switching to BOSS Linux, the Indian Linux distro? (Bharat Operating System Solutions)
This is pure goldMy favorite part is the supposed rewrite of the Linux kernel into C++. Unfortunately there doesn't seem to be public source code for any of this bitch lasagna.
When I think Hindutva OS, I do indeed think 'every shitty insecure PHP web admin tool installed at the same time'.It also has support administrative tool such as webmin, Gadmin, PHP myadmin, PHP LDAP admin, PG admin, etc.
Does XFCE still force desktop icons on a grid that never quite lines up the icons right. Because that really rustled my jimmies.Sorry, breaks too often. Xfce 4 lyfe.
I wish most linux users were just this upfront about this being the attitude of linux.There's a Unix-style operating system for those people, it's called macOS.
Or Linux Mint. Cinnamon by default is set up like Windows is, and pretty much everything is navigateable by anyone who can read and hasn't just blinky memorized the exact clicks needed to do a task (which rules out some old people and tech illiterates)I wish most linux users were just this upfront about this being the attitude of linux.
So many headaches and heartaches happen because windows users don't get this. They keep making suggestions and changes, hoping to fix linux into something that the majority can use, when the linux userbase sees linux experience as something perfect, and would only be corrupted by making it more friendly to casual users. And that if you want an alternative for something that your 50 year old dad who doesn't have the time or leftover grey matter to learn linux you are better off trying to make that alternative from scratch.
Linux isn’t perfect and I’m sure nobody actually thinks so.I wish most linux users were just this upfront about this being the attitude of linux.
So many headaches and heartaches happen because windows users don't get this. They keep making suggestions and changes, hoping to fix linux into something that the majority can use, when the linux userbase sees linux experience as something perfect, and would only be corrupted by making it more friendly to casual users. And that if you want an alternative for something that your 50 year old dad who doesn't have the time or leftover grey matter to learn linux you are better off trying to make that alternative from scratch.
The Linux "evangelism" some people insist on practicing has been to everyone's detriment. A Windows user may piss and moan about Microsoft's changes in the upcoming version and loudly claim "I'm switching to Linux", but it's all bullshit: he does not want Linux, and reaching out a helping hand will just result in him trying to drag you down with him to drown in pessimistic misery. Leave the dregs to wallow in their own filth. Those who really want to move to Linux will find their own way, and they are the only ones that can be helped.I wish most linux users were just this upfront about this being the attitude of linux.
So many headaches and heartaches happen because windows users don't get this. They keep making suggestions and changes, hoping to fix linux into something that the majority can use, when the linux userbase sees linux experience as something perfect, and would only be corrupted by making it more friendly to casual users. And that if you want an alternative for something that your 50 year old dad who doesn't have the time or leftover grey matter to learn linux you are better off trying to make that alternative from scratch.
At least Windows has finally evolved pastOut of the box, KDE should suit the normal user fine, and there are distros that are less complicated to install and keep updated, like Fedora. The power user may prefer a tiling WM, or may heavily customise his KDE, and might prefer setting specific use flags to make sure his Gentoo installs a media player using one particular codec over another. Both approaches are valid, and what makes Linux great is that it won’t hold the power user back or mess with his habits every other year, like Windows does.
cmd.exe
with PowerShell, whatever you think of the latter. (In fact I now remember using the asterisk wildcard as a very ghetto substitute for <Tab>
completion in cmd.exe
way back in the day.) Anyway, there are over 3 billion active Android devices in the world ... I think it's safe to say that Linux has made its mark with regular users.Well i switched 2 years ago? maybe 2 and a half, to guess who... Kali, why? Because i was still in my edgy ass L33T 1337 h@ckerm4n phase and tought i was the next terry davis... I umm... regretted that decision, when the wifi drivers didn't work, i had to reinstall it twice, and then proceed to use chatgpt for like two days to help me fix said wifi issues ... Yeah, turns out, i was not, infact, a 1337 420 h@ck3rm@n, nor the next terry davis so i backpedaled to linux mint... Then i got bored of that and when i got my new 1TB ssd decided to run debian, with xfce4, which, honestly, has been working great.... except for the times it wasn't. But hey, never looked back at windows 10, never will.Anyone using Linux here remember their first time using it? Why did you switch and what was it like?
It was the year of our lord 1992. I was in college. It was an experimental time. But I had a hard drive with 40MB and DOS made me split it into 32+8. So I spent a long time in the computer lab to make a bunch of floppies. It was different. My video card was only supported in X at 320x200, so I played with Xeyes a bit but mostly used the terminal. And could still reboot to DOS/Win3.1.Anyone using Linux here remember their first time using it? Why did you switch and what was it like?
First time: A technical course. Thrown into a Fedora and Ubuntu terminals. Lots of stuff in virtual machines. Later we used CentOS setups to use a few GUI programs but other than that it was all terminal and I was being a retard contrarian in the course.Anyone using Linux here remember their first time using it? Why did you switch and what was it like?
It was 2008 and I needed to be able to compile and run C for a university course, so my then-boyfriend installed Arch on the computer I'd put together a few months prior (that was my first desktop computer, my first laptop was a MacBook I got a few years earlier, I wasn't really into computers at the time). I ended up keeping Arch once I figured out how you could customise the desktop to behave more like a Mac, since the alternative was Windows, which I didn't like.Anyone using Linux here remember their first time using it? Why did you switch and what was it like?
All the big boys use Linux and praise it as some holy shit, so I tried it for the first time a long time ago, which was an OpenSUSE back then. I tried to get used to it, which was very hard. Majorly used it for browsing, tbh. At some point, opening any kind of window started to take around 10 minutes. It was fine after a re-install, but then the issue started again. Went back to Windows right after that.Anyone using Linux here remember their first time using it? Why did you switch and what was it like?
running windows 10 ltsc right now (I'll swap to linux in the future when my drive's warranty runs out or when windows shits itself)Anyone using Linux here remember their first time using it? Why did you switch and what was it like?