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- Mar 30, 2023
Well now I want to know what the question was.I remember thinking at one time I wanted to get a CCNA cert and the first study question made me put off such a venture indefinitely
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Well now I want to know what the question was.I remember thinking at one time I wanted to get a CCNA cert and the first study question made me put off such a venture indefinitely
Sure but what's that got to do with Linux? I mean IOS XR is linux now but...I remember thinking at one time I wanted to get a CCNA cert and the first study question made me put off such a venture indefinitely
Well now I want to know what the question was.
Sure but what's that got to do with Linux? I mean IOS XR is linux now but...
Also yes, state the question.
I'm not going to defend mac, because I'm really not a fan of anything apple does. But those are two things I couldn't give less of a fuck about. And I'm probably not alone in that. In this thread I probably am. But in general.They never recovered from that and while MacOS has a lot of advantages today you end up with a problem that gaming on a Mac is a joke and backwards software compatibility cannot be reliably expected beyond maybe 1 yearly OS release, after that each year that goes by it's more likely whatever software you have just stops working all of a sudden.
If you need a healthy way to remind yourself of how bad Windows really is deep down, remember that up until the 32-bit versions finally got scrapped parts of the source for it had code comments so old they referred to fixing HPFS issues for “NT-OS2”. That kind of nonexistent housekeeping is how you get software that’s like digging out the sunken down ground level of Rome and it’s fucking bizarre.The legacy-horror as far as Windows is concerned is in its kernel at the moment. It has redundant as well as dependent legacy code that functions as a Frankenstein's monster to keep it running, and no programmer on the planet has either the time, skills, or incentive to maintain the kernel cleanly. Microsoft is very aware of this. There was a DOS-era vulnerability patched only months ago.
It's a good thing the OS isn't open source, it would be like staring into Cthulhu's eyes and going insane.
This is also the selling point of Linux desktop distros (particularly Mint).
Almost every ransomware attack in history has been on a Windows device for a reasonIf you need a healthy way to remind yourself of how bad Windows really is deep down, remember that up until the 32-bit versions finally got scrapped parts of the source for it had code comments so old they referred to fixing HPFS issues for “NT-OS2”. That kind of nonexistent housekeeping is how you get software that’s like digging out the sunken down ground level of Rome and it’s fucking bizarre.
Backwards compatibility can seem not worth the effort until you really want to get some old program working and then you're left frustrated to hell. Can't say if Windows is going about implementing it in the best way. I've seen people have more trouble getting old games to work on Windows 10/11 than I do getting them working in Wine/Proton. Perhaps it would be best if people made sure tools or instructions for getting old shit working are easy to find if you need them, while keeping the depreciated elements needed out of core libraries.Really, on backwards compatibility. To me it seems like a source of headaches rather than actually being something most people need. People bring it up for windows, and oh this other OS doesn't support this 14 year old binary! I wish linux would be more willing to wipe out cruft. Like the legacy stuff surrounding terminal emulators, that no one has used for years now. And people just have to work around now.
I could throw away literally everything else in an OS as long as I can a) do file management competently and fast and b) run any rando application I have saved on my hard drive in perpetuity. I have a directory of exes which I expect to just work forever, and as far as I'm concerned that's the job of an OS to just get out of the way and let me run my thingies.Really, on backwards compatibility. To me it seems like a source of headaches rather than actually being something most people need. People bring it up for windows, and oh this other OS doesn't support this 14 year old binary! I wish linux would be more willing to wipe out cruft. Like the legacy stuff surrounding terminal emulators, that no one has used for years now. And people just have to work around now.
That's the biggest mistake all those braindead "Year of the Linux now" cultists do when they try and force all the Win11 complainers to use Linux. The average person doesn't know how to use pre-installed Windows, let alone how to install a different OS. Hell, when you introduce them to the concept that you can just install or reinstall Windows they're shocked and think you're a computer god. And you're expecting them to install a completely different operating system and adjust to it?Even then, I direct people to VMs, distrosea, live USB booting, and if really curious, dual booting.
Linux troons forget that the average user doesn't know what booting even is, let their own FSH.
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That's the biggest mistake all those braindead "Year of the Linux now" cultists do when they try and force all the Win11 complainers to use Linux. The average person doesn't know how to use pre-installed Windows, let alone how to install a different OS. Hell, when you introduce them to the concept that you can just install or reinstall Windows they're shocked and think you're a computer god. And you're expecting them to install a completely different operating system and adjust to it?
Leave your NEET basement/sysadmin bubble for once and take a peek at average people using Windows. They are so tech illiterate they don't even know how to right click the taskbar to disable the Weather widget, and all they can do is complain and act like they're forced to be exposed to it and that they're helpless because their computer is a black box that controls them and not the other way around. You'll be way more productive ragebaiting on /g/ or having another X vs Wayland debate or whatever.
The only thing I can agree with this on is the multiplayer gaming bit; everything else, Linux has worthwhile alternatives to a lotta of the propriety, "esential software," and what not, and there are plenty of beginner friendly distros out there if someone can get the newbie in question, pointed in the right direction.
I thought this would be a perfect video for this thread.
Linux is fine for new users, providing that you're around to assist for at least 1-4 weeks whenever they have issues.
The only thing I can agree with this on is the multiplayer gaming bit; everything else, Linux has worthwhile alternatives to a lotta of the propriety, "esential software," and what not, and there are plenty of beginner friendly distros out there if someone can get the newbie in question, pointed in the right direction.
DNS resolution just works in my experience, and inexperienced users don't understand folders as it is so you'd be teaching them anyways if you just downgraded them to windows 11. And Linux Mint by default doesn't really have any processes listening for access attempts anyways, unless you're turning on passwordless ssh or some other nonsense.I thought this was the case until last week. I don't think a beginner friendly Linux distro exists at all. Mint comes the closest, but still needs setting up in case DNS resolution isn't hijacked by NetworkManager. The FHS is completely foreign, and the default firewall is ufw.
The first thing I learned back in the day on Linux Mint which was my first distro was blacklisting GPU drivers on my Notebook in GRUB in order to force it to use amdgpu which is apparently an issue on older integrated Radeon GPUs defaulting to an old graphics driver instead of it. So yeah, not really beginner friendly if you run into issues but I have heard anecdotally from some people that Linux Mint tend to minimize a number of issues that happen on other distros, couldn't say if that is true though because I personally distrohopped away pretty quickly.I thought this was the case until last week. I don't think a beginner friendly Linux distro exists at all. Mint comes the closest, but still needs setting up in case DNS resolution isn't hijacked by NetworkManager. The FHS is completely foreign, and the default firewall is ufw.
My first Linux distro was Manjaro. I had only used Windows 7 and 10 before that, and only knew how to use gui programs. I have a cousin who's an experienced Arch user, and directed me to resources on how to install Manjaro. I was able to figure out all the graphical stuff relatively easily, and after a few years of living in Manjaro and evenutally learning how to use the terminal, I eventually installed EndeavourOS, cause I wasn't smart enough to figure out how to install Arch, but I was getting too knowledgeable curious to comfortably live in the preconfigured environment that was Manjaro; so I've been using EndeavourOS ever since. I went the whole nine yards, and setup a standalone WM even, but now I've reverted back to Xfce4, cause it's just such a comfy DE.Even the archinstall script is completely alien to the average user. Disc formatting? Partitioning? UTC by default? Root user? Sudoer? Packages? DE? WM? Network management? LUKS? Drivers?
It's insane to throw anyone a text based pseudo-script that despite its convenience looks nothing like any traditional GUI OS install process without explaining what any of the poor user is actually choosing out of the myriad of options.
The first thing I learned back in the day on Linux Mint which was my first distro was blacklisting GPU drivers on my Notebook in GRUB in order to force it to use amdgpu which is apparently an issue on older integrated Radeon GPUs defaulting to an old graphics driver instead of it. So yeah, not really beginner friendly if you run into issues but I have heard anecdotally from some people that Linux Mint tend to minimize a number of issues that happen on other distros, couldn't say if that is true though because I personally distrohopped away pretty quickly.
DNS resolution just works in my experience, and inexperienced users don't understand folders as it is so you'd be teaching them anyways if you just downgraded them to windows 11. And Linux Mint by default doesn't really have any processes listening for access attempts anyways, unless you're turning on passwordless ssh or some other nonsense.
something that affects the average user not at allyou'll end up with hundreds of dot files, configs for things you've tried once and forgotten
not like Windows with AppData folders full of shit, right?and in the end the ecosystem is hostile.
Ah. So literally both of the arguments before. We're really just one, it's just playing new games, and you want to play old games. Sounds like sticking with windows is the better option for you. Since the only thing you care about is playing whatever games you have.I could throw away literally everything else in an OS as long as I can a) do file management competently and fast and b) run any rando application I have saved on my hard drive in perpetuity. I have a directory of exes which I expect to just work forever, and as far as I'm concerned that's the job of an OS to just get out of the way and let me run my thingies.
As a sample, as seen from my mac:
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"Oh but how often do you really need to run UMDGen.exe" well it's the only real tool that exists for manipulating files inside a PSP game iso, do I really care how often I run that? If I want to do that, I need to use UMDGen or bust so I want it to continue working forever. It's never going to get updated again. I'd expect it to probably maybe work in Wine or Proton or whatever but many of these tools talk to external devices via USB or in at least one case legacy serial COM ports, those generally break really hard in Wine.
Open source tools don't even really fill in this void as often just getting a build to run on any given repo can be a ton of work, especially if they have external dependencies pulled down via pip or cargo or whatever where you're praying APIs haven't changed or been deprecated.