Exactly. archinstall is pretty nice, and if you want the frustration of dealing with random errors, it’s still there. But it’s straightforward (but keep the docs handy since you’ll likely need them).
Exactly. archinstall is pretty nice, and if you want the frustration of dealing with random errors, it’s still there. But it’s straightforward (but keep the docs handy since you’ll likely need them).
I’m just surprised people still use it.
Yeah. My sister uses Linux, and I’ve taught her basic commands to just make things easier (apt install, cd, ls, that sorta thing). And she knows how to find a decent website for support and copy the commands, which are usually fine.
Oh no. That fits the bill perfectly lol.
OOTL: what happened to MFP?
Linux Mint with Cinnamon. Easiest transition. If you want customization, use KDE. If you want your desktop environment to make choices for you, GNOME.
I wonder why that non-pocketable phone isn’t more popular.
Borked your bootloader already? You’re a true Linux user lol. You’ll eventually learn to not do that (and back up regularly).
Good choice with Fedora! I love dnf and the choices Fedora makes overall.
It’s a good first step imo. It maintains compatibility with Google apps, which as the author notes, would be needed for it to not be a dead project. It’s a pretty good balance.
That said, I’m not familiar with Graphene, so I could just be wrong.
Curiosity, followed by realizing how good it is for development.
Interesting. Sounds like DevOps folks would love it. Maybe I’ll look into it more. Thanks!
Can someone tell me the recent hype about immutable distros? What exactly is the immutable part, and why is it attractive?
I’m a bit rusty on this, but I think you’d need to split your Sass/SCSS/etc before Webpack will perform tree-shaking or allow lazy-loading. I don’t think many devs wrote it that way: personally, I like my mobile rules beside my desktop ones, since my styling is component-wise.
Yeah, quite frankly I watch so much that it’s just worth it. I don’t use other streaming services, so it’s fine for me.
Terminal fan here (though I’m on Mac). GUIs, in an attempt to contain all the features of a CLI program while being user friendly, make compromises on simplicity. It’s difficult to remember the combination of buttons to click to get what you want. For CLI programs, you have man and —help to figure it out. Of course there’s the pipes and automation aspects of it too.
True, but when done in jest I think distro wars are fine. The charm is that each distro has stuff you’ll like and dislike.
It’s useful for short term renting. I’m interning and it’s stupid hard to find a 3 month lease.
It worked for me once I logged in.
Oh god these things. So delicious and cheap, and just what you needed on a hot summer day, but the worst packaging ever
Yeah. Part of what I get for paying is the Bridge app so I can use Thunderbird instead of the website. I don’t want or need the LLM thing.