whoami

joined 3 years ago
 

This is about a month old, but this distro is now released. It's a completely independent distro from China.

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 2 years ago

the thing it offers is no systemd, and the mx-linux gui tools to configure your system. Also the advanced hardware support (AHS) is a neat feature. They basically take Debian and make it slightly more user friendly. It's just less well known than something like ubuntu or mint.

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 2 years ago

No it's not widely used. But I think it has a small loyal community. Some people really love it. I've only tried it a couple of times, and only on virtual machines. I liked doing admin via text files, and I like that using the "kitchen sink" option you basically have a tool for every task after install. It's linux but sort unixy or bsd-like in how it approaches some things. That works for some and not so much for others. I might try it out again, but most likely I will stick to Debian.

If you want more software it's up to you how to do it. With 3rd party tools like sbopkg it's easier than before, and with tools like flatpak install other software is even easier.

There is also slackware current, and all the other repos, like the work alienbob does to provide plasma desktop etc.

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 2 years ago

I like it, for the most part. Obviously you need to check to see if your hardware is supported, but it's a good OS. It's stable, has neat features like boot environments, and it with pkg and the ports tree you can have newer versions of software. Also, they don't make changes to the OS for the sake of it, or because one person or group wants it. They make change with a clear plan in my mind. Sometimes that means features land later in FreeBSD, but they're implemented more thoughtfully imo.

OpenBSD and NetBSD are also cool projects in their own right.

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 7 points 2 years ago

thanks for reminding me about the tri continental

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml -1 points 2 years ago

since you're used to debian, maybe try something that isn't debian based.

PCLinuxOS

Mageia

Slackware

OpenSuse

Free/open/netbsd

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 2 years ago

they're pretty great imo

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 2 years ago

that's what I was thinking of....I knew they had used someone elses VPN just couldn't remember which one

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 2 years ago

awesome thanks

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 2 years ago

would have to check on that specifically.

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 2 years ago (2 children)

even when chrome was obviously faster, and was gaining in popularity, I still used FF. It's my preferred browser, and using it along with ublock origin makes going online more hassle free. Add to that multi account containers, reader mode, and just the general ability to customize it, I really can't see myself using another browser

 

Maybe this is better asked elsewhere, but question basically in the title. I was wondering if anyone had any experience with Mozilla VPN, and if so what they thought about it.

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 2 years ago

btrfs and snapshots is one solution

Also, it looks like you were able to solve the problem, even if you aren't 100% sure why. Maybe the difference in package versions lead to some problem with the bootloader, causing it to go to emergency mode, and updating it fixed the problem?

Another is using a more stable distro....

[–] whoami@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 2 years ago

rif was one of the reasons I stuck with android lol.....It was probably my most used app. Probably borderline phone addiction due to it lmao.

 

Seeing mixed reports about the head of wagner rolling into Rostov, Russia. All kinds of other rumors swirling around. Anyone have any good info, or good sources to follow?

 

I started using Jeboa about a day and a half ago, no problem. It defaulted to lemmy.ml rather than lemmygrad.ml. No problem as I was browsing anon just to see how I liked the app.

Now, when I open the app, nothing is loaded, and changing from local to all still loads nothing.

Is this a problem with lemmy.ml? How can I change instances.

 

Chimera is an interesting new Linux distro with no systemd, BSD utils instead of gnu, and other unique design choices.

Reading about it on lobste.rs, the developer (or one of them) commented:

"

why does every other linux distribution exist? most of them provide far less added value compared to the others, yet nobody questions their existence, perhaps because they are fundamentally uninteresting

it’s always a combination of many smaller factors

i just wanted to make a well-rounded and somewhat opinionated system without cruft or sketchy parts, but still featureful and generally usable (no suckless junk), with a low-maintenance but high-correctness package build system and infrastructure, no systemd but taking service management and everything around it seriously (there are exactly 0 other non-systemd distros that do that), easy to bootstrap, architecture-agnostic, and hardened (as much as possible without introducing visible breakage or significant performance loss; the only “linux distro” that really takes this seriously is android, and that’s not general-purpose)

none of the individual choices like userland base or libc or whatever are goals in themselves, they are a means to an end or just the most obvious thing given the circumstances"

 

I use lemmy and reddit. Reddit can be awful for politics, but it has lots of little niche subs that make using it worthwhile for me. But since reddit is about to die, and I only use lemmy on desktop, I was wondering what android users think is the best lemmy app?

 

Interested in hearing everyone's experience using alternative phone OS's. Have you ever used Lineage or Graphene, Pursim, pinephone? Was it good enough to replace your android/iphone?

 

Talk about a new micro kernel called Helios, written in a language called Hare

view more: next ›