bismuthbob

joined 1 year ago
[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 3 points 3 months ago (2 children)

You clearly haven't met all of my friends.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 3 points 3 months ago

Fair point, but I still need a quick way to tell people about upcoming funerals. On the plus side, I'm between the wave of friends' baby photos and the wave of grandbaby photos. Which is nice.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 17 points 3 months ago (7 children)

I don't integrate it with anything else, but facebook remains my best option for getting current contact info for anybody from my past. Even after the enshittification, it remains an effective Rolodex. Rolodex...I am old.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 4 points 3 months ago

I've been having fun with VoxeLibre lately on single-player mode. Nothing too fancy, gameplay is eerily similar to vanilla Minecraft. I'm looking forward to trying other games built on the engine that offer a bit more variation.

One nice thing is that the android version of Minetest is compatible with the PC version, so it is possible to sync save files and play on the go. It also seems to load faster than Minecraft does.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 13 points 3 months ago

Arch offers a combination of rolling software updates, a simple but easily customized base, pacman for the package manager, the AUR, a barebones installation process by default, good documentation, and active development. That may or may not be a good combination based on your goals.

Other distros offer a different combination of characteristics. Those characteristics are a starting point and you can get to the same destination no matter what you use. The trick is figuring out what starting point is closest to your destination or which starting point makes the journey fun for you. For some people, Arch is that. For plenty of people, Arch isn't that.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 9 points 4 months ago

Easy if you go step by step and don't accidentally skip anything. Archinstall will get you to the same result with lower risk of failure, in a tenth of the amount of time spent. And unless you install operating systems for a living, it doesn't matter how you get there. Source: Installed Arch on about a dozen different devices, twice without Archinstall.

If you're looking to learn something, do Linux from Scratch instead. The process is way more granular, way more documented, and way more educational than parroting the steps of installing Arch from the wiki.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 14 points 5 months ago

I think that phrases like 'anti-consumer' can stick to any target, so long as they're thrown with a sufficient amount of bullshit.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 2 points 5 months ago

I played around with Mandrake and Debian around the turn of the century. A bit of a break, but then I started dual-booting Ubuntu in the Windows Vista/X86 OSX era. I jumped to Xubuntu and started running Linux by itself on several machines around 2012.

I largely shifted to Arch around the time that snaps came out because they weren't playing nice with some of my low-end machines. Nowadays, mainly Arch. Exceptions: Fedora on my M1, Debian Bookworm on an old x86 tablet and any time I set up WSL on a Windows machine.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 1 points 5 months ago

Agreed. My old pebble lasts for over a week, not that I use it for much more than an alarm clock/metronome nowadays.

It does those jobs extremely well, though.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 3 points 6 months ago (1 children)

I upgraded in place from 39 and didn't experience any hiccups on my M1 MBA. Works fine for me.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 1 points 7 months ago

Amber pairs very well with retsina.

[–] bismuthbob@sopuli.xyz 2 points 8 months ago

Ubuntu isn't my favorite, but I used xubuntu for many years. A lot of noise gets thrown around about Snaps, but from an end-user perspective they tend to work fine unless you have very low system constraints. Better than adding a half-dozen repositories that may or may not be around for long. A lot of developers work to make sure that their software runs well in Ubuntu and the LTS releases tend to be a good long-term option if you don't want any significant changes for a long time.

Even with their regular releases, I daisy-chained upgrades on an old Core2 laptop for something like seven years without any major (computer becomes a paperweight) issues. Sometimes (like with Snaps) Ubuntu insists on going its own way, which can result in errors/shitty OS things that don't pop up in other distributions. I've had to deal with some minor issues with Ubuntu over the years (broken repositories, upgrades causing hiccups, falling back to older kernels temporarily), but I think that you'll get issues like that regardless of what distro you pick.

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