Garuda. It’s an Arch derivative that creates a snapshot of your system every time you update. That way, if the update breaks something, you can just roll your system back to the last working snapshot.
Garuda. It’s an Arch derivative that creates a snapshot of your system every time you update. That way, if the update breaks something, you can just roll your system back to the last working snapshot.
I read a biography of Stallman several years ago. The whole free software movement was an attempt to preserve the early hacker culture where everybody freely swapped code. So, Stallman didn’t really “invent” FOSS; he just codified that early hacker ethos.
What was minix then? A non FOSS version?
It wasn’t FOSS, but then neither was Linux originally.
GNOME + Debian
Into the trash it goes.
There’s always one in the comment section. And today, it’s you!
Thanks for doing your part.
Doing things the hard way doesn’t make you smarter.
Yeah, same, but I always set my editor to insert spaces instead when I hit Tab, so that the spacing won’t be different in other environments.
You’re always going to see people with problems in support forums. If your Linux system is running well, you’re less likely to post about it than if you’re having problems.
Heck even having a specific window manager vs another can seem farfetched.
That’s unfortunate, because people can be turned off by GNOME and decide that “Linux sucks” without being aware that GNOME isn’t Linux, and they can have a different (better) experience using KDE.
You know, I enjoy using Linux and everything, but I have to quit and go back to Windows. Sorry, I don’t have a choice. I just can’t stand penguins.
but if someone with 20 years of IT experience gets this feed up with it, imagine how your average user would feel.
Do you think “your average user” would run into something like this? How many people are running 4 monitors?
Fish + starship is a killer combo.
Positivity is good. I would rather see 100 positive posts than one negative one, even if there’s a lot of redundancy. It helps encourage others to switch to Linux, which is good.
I was going to try to set up Ampache so that I could access my entire music library at work.
Really? There aren’t updates with new features that you look forward to? Ever?