- Joined
- Mar 30, 2023
Just as an exit survey which distros did you try?I went back to Windows 10. Fuck Windows 11 and fuck Linux.
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Just as an exit survey which distros did you try?I went back to Windows 10. Fuck Windows 11 and fuck Linux.
Mint and Ubuntu. Tried a few others in the (distant) past. Everything is just a pain in the ass on Linux. I know everyone says it has gotten a lot better and obviously it depends on the distro but I just don’t see it.Just as an exit survey which distros did you try?
Since when was Hyderabad in Washington?if the retarded tranny devs over in Washington
I just ran into an issue with a mission-critical app that is flat out fucking broken in RHEL 10, and no I'm not recompiling from sources. The absolute nonchalance Linux has toward binary compatibility makes this OS forever feel like some basement autist vanity project.Mint and Ubuntu. Tried a few others in the (distant) past. Everything is just a pain in the ass on Linux. I know everyone says it has gotten a lot better and obviously it depends on the distro but I just don’t see it.
I have been using Linux on servers for 20 years. Having a "few programs that don't work" after an update means a million dollars worth of equipment sits useless until we can figure out what the fuck to do. Now I am in the situation of possibly losing a very important client because RHEL 10 broke a productivity stack due to one application in it not having been rebuilt against whatever API in Linux changed this time.IDK. I am a lifelong computer nerd sure but I only run into a few programs now and again that I just can't make work on Linux. It's either an old ass game (so I go play something else) or software that has an alternative of some kind.
Oh yeah Linux in enterprise environments is a different ballgame then using Linux on a home computer.I have been using Linux on servers for 20 years. Having a "few programs that don't work" after an update means a million dollars worth of equipment sits useless until we can figure out what the fuck to do. Now I am in the situation of possibly losing a very important client because RHEL 10 broke a productivity stack due to one application in it not having been rebuilt against whatever API in Linux changed this time.
bUt mUh gAmEz
my nigger nobody cares about games
I won't get into details. The container didn't work for [reasons]. There was a squirrelly little binary that escaped notice. The workaround is unacceptable because it won't pass audit standards. Basically the little stick in this picture broke:Oh yeah Linux in enterprise environments is a different ballgame then using Linux on a home computer.
It's easy enough to just go "lol just use Linux" where distro hopping or going back of something breaks is trivial and just a weekend project. Enterprise you're making a. Million dollar decision and you have to be absolutely sure that everything you need you can support itself or trust to be supported. Were there any warning signs that the setup would be sketchy?
Have you tried running that application in a container with an older OS that doesn't have the broken ABIs, or running it on a slower moving distro like Debian?
Nigger I thought we were talking about home shit.I have been using Linux on servers for 20 years. Having a "few programs that don't work" after an update means a million dollars worth of equipment sits useless until we can figure out what the fuck to do. Now I am in the situation of possibly losing a very important client because RHEL 10 broke a productivity stack due to one application in it not having been rebuilt against whatever API in Linux changed this time.
bUt mUh gAmEz
my nigger nobody cares about games
You have to go back. This is not a Linux or gaming thread and any non-Windows systems are unwelcome here.Nigger I thought we were talking about home shit.
You too, you have to go back. Nobody is shitting up the Linux thread with work stories about Windows Server or Windows IoT.Linux at home is hell because you have to be your own sys admin, you’re constantly tweaking things and then updating and then tweaking again because the update changed everything.
Linux at work is hell because you to deal with the troons at Red Hell to get anything fixed and they just don’t so you have to come up with some ridiculous workarounds or just constantly bring up new VMs.
Ironically the best Linux experience is on embedded systems.
There was the person trying to run KDE on Windows quite recentlyYou too, you have to go back. Nobody is shitting up the Linux thread with work stories about Windows Server or Windows IoT
I’m a Windows user retard.You have to go back. This is not a Linux or gaming thread and any non-Windows systems are unwelcome here.
You too, you have to go back. Nobody is shitting up the Linux thread with work stories about Windows Server or Windows IoT.
One hell of a pivot from the pajeet guardmy nigger nobody cares about games
All part of the fun!Linux at home is hell because you have to be your own sys admin,
Alternatively, never update. (Applies to Windows too.)you’re constantly tweaking things and then updating and then tweaking again because the update changed everything.
Windows makes slight changes to the UI and certain MS apps. Linux changes the whole fucking windowing system for example.All part of the fun!
Alternatively, never update. (Applies to Windows too.)
I’ve sperged about this before in the Linux thread, so I’ll try not to sperg too much here, but essentially the way that Posix systems handle dynamic linking sucks massive dick and Windows does it way better. The simple reason as to why is that Windows makes it really easy for applications to have application specific libraries by just placing them in the same directory as the executable, while on Posix you have to essentially subvert the linker using containers or other means. The problems that Linux faces with this are not unique, but they are exacerbated by its reliance on a large amount of effectively 3rd party software.I won't get into details. The container didn't work for [reasons]. There was a squirrelly little binary that escaped notice. The workaround is unacceptable because it won't pass audit standards. Basically the little stick in this picture broke:
View attachment 8586653
The root problem is the six million (wooden doors on kernel modules? impossible!) crumbly pieces of crap that make up a full Linux distro feel no real obligation to keep binary compatibility from release to release. The amount of shit that breaks from one RHEL major release to another (or SLES, doesn't matter, they're all the same). It is a damn shame Solaris, IBM, and HP were too greedy and retarded to work together on a single commercial UNIX version and sell it at a reasonable price. We've lost so much great technology over the years because big corporations are run by monkeys.
I never had any problem with .so linking in Linux.I’ve sperged about this before in the Linux thread, so I’ll try not to sperg too much here, but essentially the way that Posix systems handle dynamic linking sucks massive dick and Windows does it way better. The simple reason as to why is that Windows makes it really easy for applications to have application specific libraries by just placing them in the same directory as the executable, while on Posix you have to essentially subvert the linker using containers or other means.
You probably can’t reveal too much, but if it wasn’t libraries breaking compatibility between versions, what was the ABI issue you were talking about?I never had any problem with .so linking in Linux.
I think you're either impatient or mentally challenged if you consider Mint and Ubuntu a "pain the ass".Mint and Ubuntu. Tried a few others in the (distant) past. Everything is just a pain in the ass on Linux. I know everyone says it has gotten a lot better and obviously it depends on the distro but I just don’t see it.