The Linux Thread - The Autist's OS of Choice

Most countries will require it just to do basic functions on the internet. And I find 99% of the internet useless and just go to a handful of sites, the farms included. The rest is just low effort slop.
I can still dig up some good things alongside all the slop. There's a good chance my usual plan, a separate device for official functions and my main PC for everything else, will work as usual. With some elbow grease.
 
No, once it's introduced it's a problem. Yeah, statistically most bills will never become law, but the problem is the US loooooves mega bills, for fuck's sake we have "Big Beautiful" as the official name. Conservatives always hated this shit back during the Obama years, now they want it. If both sides of Congress agree on an issue, but understand the public view is negative, they'll hide it in the bill somewhere and not say anything. This shit happens all the time.

Edit: This is why Rand Paul forces the clerk to read the entirety of bills out every time a mega bill is introduced.
I plan on sending out those letters once I get some free time. The only line I plan to change is the one about Snowden. I agree with that statement don't get me wrong but some of the powers that be view him as a traitor.
 
I plan on sending out those letters once I get some free time. The only line I plan to change is the one about Snowden. I agree with that statement don't get me wrong but some of the powers that be view him as a traitor.
Post up some templates so we can mail them to our representatives

I can still dig up some good things alongside all the slop. There's a good chance my usual plan, a separate device for official functions and my main PC for everything else, will work as usual. With some elbow grease.
That’s my plan as well. My home pc will be for offline use only. Will probably dust off my shield and move my media drive to it.
 
Now with California's Digital Age Assurance Act (because of course something as dogshit as this would come from Cali), I really don't see a future where you can truly protect your data, and by all means, I do wish to be wrong, I'd be more than happy, this is just my doomer perspective on things.
A similar theme has been discussed in other tech threads. The whole push to have users to store data on "the cloud," especially sensitive data, is very concerning. From both a personal and professional standpoint, there is certain data that shouldn't be kept on the cloud because it's too tempting for hackers to pilfer (see also: The Fappening). Sadly, there are more and more markets that no longer offer users the ability to run a program on their own device with the data stored locally. It's not being a doomer to correctly point out the risks associated with current practices that contradict data security and privacy.

I am not so worried about the immediate consequences of this law as I am about what can be built on top of it in the future.
I fear the slippery slope as well. Every well intended law has unintended consequences or scope creep where items never intended to be part of the law become part of it as well.

you'd be blown away by the sheer magnitude and scope of the Chinese surveillance state apparatus. We're talking hardware backdoors in the cheapest fucking routers you can purchase at Best Buy, Micro Center, Target, Amazon, or Walmart, we're talking closed source variations of FOSS projects mandated by the Communist Party despite GPL obligations, we're talking decades of IP theft, forced technology transfers, and asymmetric trade relationships that helped facilitate this arrangement.
It doesn't surprise me. In a nutshell, the Chinese are subtle yet sneaky when it comes to this stuff.

With that in mind, what non-Chinese routers/equipment are decent enough for the average home/SOHO user? To keep the question on topic, I may install Linux on an old laptop if it's salvageable. If I'm able to do it, I may as well get the right networking equipment for it from the start. If not, I'll know what to use when I start updating and replacing networking gear moving forward.

Same shit as the EU Digital ID and message scanning bills, they keep trying to shove them through, they get shot down, slightly reworded, and they're back on their legs in a few months.
Politicians at all levels love to force bills down their constituents' throats but by constantly reintroducing them until they finally get passed. I've seen this strategy be used to get everything from pot shops to Pro-LGBTetc "human rights" laws passed along with everything else in between.

The rest is just low effort slop.
The sad part is the early days of the internet, when people had the ability to self-design their own personal web sites, there were all sorts of sites ranging from personal to professional to the outright bizarre. More importantly, you could find interesting sites worth browsing in each of those categories. Now, everything is cookie cutter, commercialized, and sanitized to the point there's little to no originality or creativity.

My home pc will be for offline use only.
If I do eventually start using a Linux machine, I've half-considered using it with access to my internal network only and disallowing access to the outside world except when absolutely necessary. Legislation such as that being discussed may push more users into that mindset.
 
Last edited:
The sad part is the early days of the internet, when people had the ability to self-design their own personal web sites, there were all sorts of sites ranging from personal to professional to the outright bizarre. More importantly, you could find interesting sites worth browsing in each of those categories. Now, everything is cookie cutter, commercialized, and sanitized to the point there's little to no originality or creativity
Sadly, that’s what happens when something gets corporatized. Internet was great in the 90s to pre-9/11. Wiby and Wayback Machine gives you a glimpse of what it was in the past. The low res and frames look has more personality than most of 2026 internet.


If I do eventually start using a Linux machine, I've half-considered using it with access to my internal network only and disallowing access to the outside world except when absolutely necessary. Legislation such as that being discussed may push more users into that mindset.
I’ve setup Windows 10 IoT in a virtual machine. My dad has been looking for a solution to his Windows problem. Don’t feel like playing family IT in my 40s or I would help him out with Windows.

Anywhoot, I actually like it. Feels exactly what Windows 10 should be. Gets out of your way for the most part. Will probably just set that up on my PC as a media machine with no access outside of my network.

Use to have plex installed. But since it needs to phone home and will go down when AWS was down, no thank you. Jellyfin suits my needs there.
 
With that in mind, what non-Chinese routers/equipment are decent enough for the average home/SOHO user? To keep the question on topic, I may install Linux on an old laptop if it's salvageable. If I'm able to do it, I may as well get the right networking equipment for it from the start. If not, I'll know what to use when I start updating and replacing networking gear moving forward.

So... the "convenient for normies and/or the tech-literate user who's unafraid of flashing custom firmware," the answer is "any reasonably modern ASUS router." My rationale goes like this:

1. ASUS is a Taiwanese company, and therefore is not directly subjected to any of the Communist Party's whims. I'd prefer to buy American, but beggars and mildly concerned netizens with minimal wherewithal to fiddle with shit can't be choosers.

2. The standard firmware that ASUS routers ship with is a hybrid Linux affair. The Linux kernel and the bulk of the userland tooling is under the GPLv2, plus there's other FOSS licensing for shit like Busybox, dnsmasq, and OpenVPN. Of course... all the juicy stuff like drivers, hardware acceleration, that Trend Micro AiProtect bullshit they do, all that shit is hard proprietary.

3. There's a robust aftermarket firmware scene for ASUS routers since the upstream source is mostly FOSS and the blobs themselves freely distributable. Asuswrt-Merlin is the most popular aftermarket firmware for ASUS routers. Per their "features" page, most of their work amounts to patches, bugfixes, updating components to the latest upstream, support for cron jobs, and other stuff along those lines. ASUS themselves have mainlined changes that the Asuswrt-Merlin team made, so there's a certain amount of trust you could put into them. There are rebuilds of Asuswrt-Merlin that support more obscure models that the Merlin team proper either can't or won't support, but that's a different story for a different day.

4. They're available in almost every physical retailer throughout America. Best Buy, Micro Center, Target, Walmart, Staples, OfficeMax, Costco, BJs, basically any major retailer that either focuses on consumer electronics or has a tech department somewhere. You could buy the bullshit nondescript sub-$100 router... or you could just buy any given ASUS router that retails for $150-$200. Sometimes, last year's top-end model gets dropped down to this year's midrange, with a handsome sale discount. If you're open to buying secondhand, you could even scour Facebook Marketplace, OfferUp, or eBay for used ASUS routers. The supported device page is modest enough, and you can easily do a bit of Googling to see which model tickles your fancy and is within your price point.

It's not perfect, there's tons of nuances to be had with everything I brought up, and more to the point: it betrays the dogma of free software by allowing coexistence with proprietary components, especially blobs that are intimately tied to the proper function of the hardware itself. BUT... for the nearly-braindead meat puppets who finally wanna take some action without too much effort, the ASUS router path is probably the one that'll give you the most return for the least possible effort. Plus, the ceiling to fiddle with it is sufficiently high enough to be tempting without being intimidating. This is arguably the most sensible option for 99.99% of people, even if they're never gonna flash Asuswrt-Merlin.

***

Of course... if you have the wherewithal, you can go wholly self-hosted, starting with a pfSense router paired with an ethernet switch and distinct access points. Self-hosted guide here.
 
I fear the slippery slope as well. Every well intended law has unintended consequences or scope creep where items never intended to be part of the law become part of it as well.
Epstein & his backers thought they could use the Internet to control everybody. It backfired significantly enough that they now want to lock it down. Their first step of taking back complete control is to regulate computers the same way they want to regulate firearms.
Because of this, I have been basically hoarding every piece of E-waste I can get my hands on.
 
With that in mind, what non-Chinese routers/equipment are decent enough for the average home/SOHO user?
It might be worth looking into models that are supported by OpenWRT or similar embedded OSes meant for routers.
If I'm able to do it, I may as well get the right networking equipment for it from the start. If not, I'll know what to use when I start updating and replacing networking gear moving forward.
I am still using the crappy ISP provided router (I live in an old property and don't have enough power points). I would just muck about and install Linux in either a VM or an old machine and see what does and doesn't work for you. A lot of people try doing too many things at once and end up giving up.
I fear the slippery slope as well. Every well intended law has unintended consequences or scope creep where items never intended to be part of the law become part of it as well.
I gave up giving politicians the benefit of the doubt quite a while ago. Almost all these bills (even not in the US) are being pushed by some large corporation or another.
 
1776507940098.png


antiX, arguably one of the smallest and least faggoty Debian-based distros has packaged XLibre into their main repos with first-party support from @anticapitalista, their head dev. They seem to build off of Devuan's version which ships with 0 systemd dependencies, including no libelogind0 or libsystemd0, so no systemd for real for real. Love to see it!
 
antiX, arguably one of the smallest and least faggoty Debian-based distros has packaged XLibre into their main repos with first-party support from @anticapitalista, their head dev.
Don't they know it's fascist and made by a nazi?
Jokes aside, antiX is a weird distro, they seem very level-headed about technology, despite being proud and unironic tankies.
 
but the problem is the US loooooves mega bills, for fuck's sake we have "Big Beautiful" as the official name. Conservatives always hated this shit back during the Obama years, now they want it. If both sides of Congress agree on an issue, but understand the public view is negative, they'll hide it in the bill somewhere and not say anything. This shit happens all the time.

Edit: This is why Rand Paul forces the clerk to read the entirety of bills out every time a mega bill is introduced.
Omnibus bills were unconstitutional under the Confederacy (Article I, Section 9, Clause 20)
 
Don't they know it's fascist and made by a nazi?
Jokes aside, antiX is a weird distro, they seem very level-headed about technology, despite being proud and unironic tankies.
The spiritual judaism of systemd and wayland must be defeated by the red/brown/green alliance.

Ever wonder why Lennart's wiki page doesn't have an 'early life' section? Hmm.
 
View attachment 8877630

antiX, arguably one of the smallest and least faggoty Debian-based distros has packaged XLibre into their main repos with first-party support from @anticapitalista, their head dev. They seem to build off of Devuan's version which ships with 0 systemd dependencies, including no libelogind0 or libsystemd0, so no systemd for real for real. Love to see it!
That's good for me, because it means it'll likely feed into MX sooner or later. There are already unofficial spins with it, which I really should try out soon.
 
Good news everyone! Red Hat wants their flavor of OS to be more like Microsoft Windows and SUSE says their Enterprise server software will include AI to do system administration tasks.

Canonical (for now) is now officially the least fucked up of the major Linux companies. Who could have thought that was possible?

Rumble link, because I don't do YouTube: https://rumble.com/v78myy2-red-hat-devs-forced-to-use-ai-or-find-another-job.html
 
Post up some templates so we can mail them to our representatives
here is the message of the guy that already did the template
Alright here's the generic letter I've written out. Feel free to edit and improve on if you want.

I wrote it in a manner that most people can send it, not just tech minded people.
Edit in your information for your Rep/Sen and what not. Email it, physically mail it, call their offices, etc. Have your friends and family do it as well.
 
Thanks fam. I would also point out the Equifax breach about how our SSNs are now out there and that if you have any data that’s held on by a 3rd party, it’s only a matter of time before bad actors get ahold of it.
The goal is to have the least amount of data out there. There will always be info about us but we can limit some of it.
 
View attachment 8877630

antiX, arguably one of the smallest and least faggoty Debian-based distros has packaged XLibre into their main repos with first-party support from @anticapitalista, their head dev. They seem to build off of Devuan's version which ships with 0 systemd dependencies, including no libelogind0 or libsystemd0, so no systemd for real for real. Love to see it!
April 1st or real?
 
Back
Top Bottom