From what I hear, doas is more secure. I don’t think it matters though, as long as you keep your system updated. I use sudo still.
From what I hear, doas is more secure. I don’t think it matters though, as long as you keep your system updated. I use sudo still.
What will the boys at Linux Incorporated come up with next?
Nice! Might be helpful for SBCs with a MIPI camera slot as well
Makes it so when you install packages with pip, it will only work if it’s using a virtual environment. This keeps any installed packages separate from ones your system uses.
If you want to learn about python virtual environments, check this out.
Sometimes I copy and paste an awk command from online, but I can never remember how to write it myself
It’s just a proof of concept. They wanted to keep it clean and easy to read while still showing off how to run the function in the background
Neat!
Oh nice! That’s the key type I use anyway, so nice to know I don’t have to pass as many options in now
Middle right and bottom right are my favorites
I don’t really care either way. I like things to be more minimal, but I’m not really anti-systemd or anything like that. I’ve just been using openrc for a few years now, and haven’t used systemd enough to learn about the homed stuff I guess
I don’t even know what that stuff is, so I guess my answer is that I just don’t use it 🤷♂️
I just use the defaults for everything, haha! Just grub2 for the bootloader, openrc for the init system.
By “home” do you mean DE/WM? If so, I use dwm for my laptop and sway for my desktop.
Gentoo. Been using it for over 3 years now, and I haven’t found a reason to leave yet.
From what I hear, it just makes things slower, and it’s proprietary. Basically exactly what OP said. It also makes a ton of loop devices, so if you’re working with them yourself it’s kind of annoying.
What if wheel referred to a wheel of cheese? Best of both worlds that way!
Oh ok, cool!
Alpine is very lightweight. I think it was built so that it would run well inside docker containers, which means it should be fairly easy for low-end computers to run it.
Afaik, it doesn’t come with a DE out of the box, so it won’t be very user-friendly
It’s so true though. I found an old game on my mom’s old PC from years ago. It doesn’t even exist on the market anymore. I started it up with Wine and it ran perfectly. My brother tried it on his Windows 11 laptop and it wouldn’t run. Weird how that works, haha!
In the uses section, it mentions Tux being shown at the top of the boot sequence for Gentoo.
It’s kinda funny because I’ve been using Gentoo for almost 4 years and never knew that there was one Tux per CPU core until I read this article. That’s fun!
Just thought it put out the same number on every system I guess, haha!
Can’t wait for Need for Clicks 2077!