- Joined
- Nov 21, 2020
The only secure system is unplugged, disassembled, shredded, encased in concrete and shot into the sun.Call me curious - as a self proclaimed "paranoid type", what would you consider a secure system?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The only secure system is unplugged, disassembled, shredded, encased in concrete and shot into the sun.Call me curious - as a self proclaimed "paranoid type", what would you consider a secure system?
>sheSo I was casually reading some Linux drama on Libre News, and I came across this article that piqued my interest. Supposedly someone named "Asahi Lina" released all of her Asahi Linux code as CC0 after a fight with a developer. But the story doesn't end there: I did a bit of digging and found that the day this meltdown happened was on April 16th, the day after the 4chan hack.
It just so happens that Lina had a similar handle to one of the jannies from the leaks, so while she wasn't a janny, there was probably some collateral damage. Shit gets even weirder when you go to the Asahi thread where there's evidence that Lina and the former lead are the same person. I'm not sure what to take away from this other than that the naming & shaming actually got to him and caused another spergout.
The crazy thing to me. Is how many people think steam did something special. And that's why it works well. No. It's just Linux running on supported hardware, with a desktop. Any reasonably up to date just works distro is going to give you similar results. You can do the bazzite thing like what is suggested. Or just do endeavoros, or fedora, or a fedora spin. Probably opensuse. A ton of options.highly doubt that, because that's an area I don't see valve focus on. if there will be a new steamos, I expect it more to be like turning your PC into a more open console with big picture (and the community adding smaller stuff to it), not necessary full blown desktop which they'd then have to support. for triple monitors the underlying distro (I think they're using arch these days) would be able to provide that. so you wouldn't really have to wait, you could use it right now.
considering this I can see why valve didn't really push a desktop steamos, because at least some there will know people will have completely different expectations that will never be met (like it being a big leap for linux or something), turning it into a shitshow.
He also has a thread here.>she
Don't listen to whatever Brodie says. "Lina" is a man and he is also Hector Martin.
Halfway through the video, paused on the beginning of the Arch part, and this gives a good perspective of the two main reasons why people are so keen on moving to Linux from Windows, even though they're somewhat misinformed and under the assumption that something that's possible on Linux is impossible on Windows.2025 is the Year of the Linux Desktop:
>she
Don't listen to whatever Brodie says. "Lina" is a man and he is also Hector Martin.
As you said, Microsoft makes Windows as much of a black box as possible, since 10 every update your settings get reverted.In short: for some reason people refuse to put a modicum of research into making their Windows experience a bit better, suffer though Microsoft's defaults assuming they cannot do anything about them, but the moment they switch to Linux they find an entire new world of customization, where a good fraction of it that they find personally valuable already existed in some extent on Windows, but they refused to even consider looking for it. I really don't understand this mentality.
"Just run these commands in PowerShell to make Windows usable"This is an interesting conundrum though. People are so unwilling to try and figure out how to make their Windows experience better where it doesn't take much effort to do so
I'd guess that the absolutely most secure system would be Gentoo, because you compile the binaries yourself and can be absolutely certain nothing suspicious has been added in like what happened with xz. But that requires reading all to the code line by line.Call me curious - as a self proclaimed "paranoid type", what would you consider a secure system?
Products Highlighted:
Ryzen 7 5700X3D - https://amzn.to/4gHJiQn Or
Ryzen 7 5800X - https://amzn.to/4iiV2Kv Or
Ryzen 9 5900X - https://amzn.to/42ZAsKy
RX 7600 XT - https://amzn.to/40UWQ58 Or
RX 7600 - https://amzn.to/40UWQ58
MSI Pro B550M VC WiFi - https://amzn.to/4hF8Wq3
Corsair Vengeance DDR4-3200 - https://amzn.to/4gLgk1Q Or
Corsair Vengeance DDR4-3600 - https://amzn.to/3Qi3OML
Crucial P3 Plus 2TB - https://amzn.to/4b0BeJ4
Thermaltake Smart 700W - https://amzn.to/4b3RRUz
Keychron K6 - https://amzn.to/4hDMugZ
ProtoArc EM11 NL Mouse - https://amzn.to/4k39KHa
In short: for some reason people refuse to put a modicum of research into making their Windows experience a bit better, suffer though Microsoft's defaults assuming they cannot do anything about them, but the moment they switch to Linux they find an entire new world of customization, where a good fraction of it that they find personally valuable already existed in some extent on Windows, but they refused to even consider looking for it. I really don't understand this mentality.
Here's the list of "customizations" that the average user wants to do on stock Windows:hacky things that break monthly
Windows doesn't lie to you about not being able to disable the weather widget. It tells you that you can, and it will, and it won't come back no matter how many updates it installed because you told it you don't want it and it will respect your decision.Windows lies to you, tells you you can't do it and shouldn't do it. It tries to stop you, makes it intentionally obtuse to proceed through the system and it will try and undo everything you did every update it can.
People probably jump to ricing on Linux because, while you can customize Windows to a great degree, it's locked behind obtuse registry hacks and the control panel/system settings that have varying layouts from XP/7/11. Then you're looking at using a patcher to enable custom themes (instead of just having the option), debloat scripts, and the OS throwing a fit if you do try to tweak it. I set up a Windows LTSC VM for adobe products and found out the only way I could change certain keyboard shortcuts was through running autohotkey scripts on system startup (using the same shortcut to close windows on Linux/Windows). All of these settings are built into any decent Linux DE yet on Windows you're looking at regedits/needing extraneous programs just to enable/disable basic system wants (Windhawk for example).That's the average Windows user, like Felix. For some reason it never occurs to them that Windows lets you customize the taskbar to an extent, but to the one that they want to customize it, to disable the irritating things about it. But the moment they move to Linux, this natural instinct of right clicking around and seeing what can be changed suddenly gets unlocked, then this zeitgeist of "Windows 11 cannot be changed in any way" is upheld. It's illogical and I can't see any other reason than people having an emotional attachment to what's essentially a tool.
To backup what @Harry Kuntz and @NORMAL HUMAN said about Windows having a "black box" vibe.In short: for some reason people refuse to put a modicum of research into making their Windows experience a bit better, suffer though Microsoft's defaults assuming they cannot do anything about them, but the moment they switch to Linux they find an entire new world of customization, where a good fraction of it that they find personally valuable already existed in some extent on Windows, but they refused to even consider looking for it. I really don't understand this mentality.
I can answer this: Windows update. One update can undo all the tweaks you had, only to have the default settings back again and you have to start over. This can happen ever other month or so and you can't do anything about it. Any spirit you had to optimize windows will be gone in less than 3 months, so eventually you just accept it.In short: for some reason people refuse to put a modicum of research into making their Windows experience a bit better, suffer though Microsoft's defaults assuming they cannot do anything about them, but the moment they switch to Linux they find an entire new world of customization, where a good fraction of it that they find personally valuable already existed in some extent on Windows, but they refused to even consider looking for it. I really don't understand this mentality.
It will hopefully refresh and rejuvenate the Linux scene, it's been stale for the past 5 years.2025 is the Year of the Linux Desktop:
>she
Don't listen to whatever Brodie says. "Lina" is a man and he is also Hector Martin.
I doubt it'll do much, people will get excited about the biggest name on YouTube shilling Linux, then in a few weeks people will forget about it. For the Linux scene to actually rejuvenate, you'd need all the Linux devs to pull their heads out of their asses, curb their egos and start writing better code instead of getting fussy whenever someone makes a GitHub issue. One Pewds video won't help with that unfortunately.It will hopefully refresh and rejuvenate the Linux scene, it's been stale for the past 5 years.
Every small step counts. Only an idiot wouldn't dare to dream about escaping the digitalI doubt it'll do much, people will get excited about the biggest name on YouTube shilling Linux, then in a few weeks people will forget about it. For the Linux scene to actually rejuvenate, you'd need all the Linux devs to pull their heads out of their asses, curb their egos and start writing better code instead of getting fussy whenever someone makes a GitHub issue. One Pewds video won't help with that unfortunately.
Even if it's just a few new converts It's good. Like he said, Linux is not for everybody. But for those who it is for it's like an awakening.I doubt it'll do much, people will get excited about the biggest name on YouTube shilling Linux, then in a few weeks people will forget about it. For the Linux scene to actually rejuvenate, you'd need all the Linux devs to pull their heads out of their asses, curb their egos and start writing better code instead of getting fussy whenever someone makes a GitHub issue. One Pewds video won't help with that unfortunately.
it's even worse than that since even simple changes can have wide fucking impact that doesn't make sense. linux tells you when it needs a package because that's how it's build. windows missing something? good luck with that, first figuring out that it does, and then what it is.and the OS throwing a fit if you do try to tweak it.