It uses the Arch repos directly though
It uses the Arch repos directly though
Which ones? I’m not aware of any besides specialised distros like SteamOS
Or, you know, a simple installer from the dev’s website.
Will you protect them from police raids and cover their legal costs for running a Tor node?
And it’s quite likely they only have 10G locally, with way less bandwidth going to the outside.
They require a lot of driver work to get everything working. Many of their chips for example only support h264 hardware decoding at the moment, although they would be capable of h265 as well. Another example would be the PineTab 2, which now after a few years has working wifi and an alpha bluetooth driver. Yes, it’s always getting better, but very slowly and it might well take another few years until you can just run a mainline kernel with full hardware functionality.
I wonder when the year of people shut up about systemd will be
I meant what I wrote, but couldn’t think of a better way to word it 😅
I’m focusing more on the community building and advancing software parts of the work they did/do. Some products are in a pretty good state, but that’s not the case for others.
I don’t have concerns about shipping, more about the community building and support aspect of their products.
If you’re happy with a product’s current state then fine, but if not you’re pretty much on your own.
I wouldn’t; perfectly placed mistake?
Certainly feels like it and I personally wouldn’t buy anything from them at the moment.
Edit: would -> wouldn’t
Just installing applications is pretty easy though.
---
- hosts: localhost
become: yes
tasks:
- name: Install required software
dnf:
state: latest
name:
- firefox
- telegram
- calibre
ansible-playbook install.yml
Something like that (untested)
As the news says, it’s a breaking change for users of local repo with specific setups.
Please make sure to implement democracy first, we have enough issues with dictatorships and oligopolies already.
I’m not a kernel dev, but I’ve read often enough that there are some places where “everything is a file” somewhat breaks down on Unix. (I think /proc and some /dev)
For an “absolutely everything is a file” system have a look at plan9, it was the intended successor to Unix, but then that got popular while plan9 stayed a research project.
Are you sure you want pipewire
and pulseaudio
installed and trying to run?
Maybe replace pulseaudio
with pipewire-pulse
, unless I’m missing something from your post.
I still see ő
(with dashes), guess for some reason your combination of OS, program and fonts makes that Unicode look different
Different person, but I’ll try to explain some of what I know.
Traditional Linux:
*you might have python3.8
and python3.9
, but those must be created as different packages using different paths in /usr
NixOS, Guix:
Immutable OS (haven’t seen one mentioned by OP, but it’s a category):
SerpentOS:
Not sure why ClearLinux is on that list of special distros and I don’t know half of the rest so yeah. Hope this explains some of it?
Manjaro does “stability” by delaying everything by two weeks. That doesn’t really help at all and might hurt you for security updates, because those will wait the same two weeks.