Two days are worth the years you’re gonna spend living with that system.
Two days are worth the years you’re gonna spend living with that system.
The Python docs are outstanding and I would definitely recommend giving that a try before moving to something perceived as more approachable.
Because everything is labeled safe and unsafe, right?
Okay, but are you still going to audit 200 individual dependencies even once?
You presume incorrect
It’s not a fact that updates regularly break the system. I’ve been using Arch for like 20 years now and I can count the amount of times that’s happened to me on one hand. I can do the same for CentOS and other distros as well.
It also wasn’t what I was referring to when I said I broke my shit by a mistake so you’re sticking words in my mouth.
Recognizing your own mistakes is self-gaslighting now? FFS. And making a mistake sure is not “using a system in exactly the way it’s supposed to be used.”
Sometimes we make mistakes, it’s okay. If I wanted my OS to coddle me I wouldn’t be using Linux.
Don’t know what you’ve been using but I sure wouldn’t describe Arch as any of that. Once things are setup, I’ve extremely rarely run into issues that I didn’t cause myself.
Seems more like an opportunity to learn then if that’s the case. Fixing things has almost never taken me longer than a full reinstall.
Also, this whole meme misses out on the whole fun factor of getting everything setup exactly how you want and all the learning along the way. The Arch user is way more likely to fix any issues that come up in the future rather than just nuking the install and starting over Windows-style like this meme suggests.
Arch user rage bait and I guess I fell for it. I use arch btw.
ha, I thought this slide was literally about the OS/license
Is there an official roadmap for Lemmy?
What are the current needs of the project, if any? For instance, are you currently looking for skilled or financial contributions?
What kernel parameters should I use?
At least 3 times. 5 to make sure.
Linux users are in the (well constructed) tent camp in the local park that Mac users ride their electric scooters past while desperately trying to avoid eye contact.
Fluxbox users are in the walls!
I’m flagging that AUR package and you can’t stop me.
I really need to get my screen sharing working. It’s been a miserable slog so far.
Dulwich is decent. Has some good porcelain functions. But it’s organized kind of weird. I sort of recall it’s the only one that isn’t a wrapper on the git CLI?
Anyway, they all kind of suck in my experience.