i have one hand holding a baby asleep on my shoulder and one hand to type :)
switched to freebsd a while back and am liking it. seems with nvidia
liking it much better than linux, lots of linux distros have things i
like but none have all the things.. i think probably artix (arch fork)
was closest but freebsd is comfy now.
any way what a ramble!
Sounds like a happy life!
Curious, what in particular do you like? I've used bsd in the past but
have always come back to linux. Are you using it for general desktop purposes, development, both..?
best of it. Honestly without any philosophical opinion on the matter, systemd meets my needs pretty well at this point. But I have heard
cool things about Artix.
Thanks for kicking off a convo!
It is when he's sleeping :) He can get rather grumpy at times.. but yeah it's a happy life :)
Yeah, both. I'm not sure if I can really put my finger on what I particularly like about it. Linux is ok, I suppose there's just the
little things about distros that turn me off. It seems that they're
either too bleeding edge - eg arch or tumbleweed, or too out of date, eg debian. I really don't like snap packages due to the way it uses loopback devices, so that puts ubuntu out, I like LXQT, which puts mint out (I
also like KDE) openSUSE leap comes close, but again, a bit out of date. AlmaLinux doesn't have certain packages I need - I could probably find them in some other repo, but it's also a bit out of date. Void Linux
comes very close, but it's default kernel doesn't include the minix file system, fedora and opensuse use a grub 2 package instead of plain grub.
Yeah a lot of those things are a bit picky, minix filesystem and grub package are particular for my OS I like to work on from time to time, and I haven't got that sorted out on freebsd yet.
Perhaps I'm more forgiving of freebsd as I also just like the idea of it
- ZFS, I really like, no systemd is cool, I don't feel like I'm forced to adopt wayland (though, perhaps that will happen eventually) I like that it's not crazy about licenses and pure free software etc - of course they respect them, but it's not like GNU firmware blobs are evil kind of
thing.
Perhaps also it's less things work on FreeBSD.. I don't have steam, so I am not wasting money on games I'll never end up playing.
I guess I am just very picky about what I want, and short of making my
own linux distribution (which I have done, but it's way too much work practically) they all seem to be just off.
Systemd is one of those things, it seems to work fine for most things, I got a little turned off when there was talk about them managing home directories. As far as an init system it works, but I don't think it's a silver bullet or anything, other init systems work too. I do like how units are easy to write, it's much easier than manifests on solaris
that's for sure.
Artix I liked not having to mess about with installing it (I have installed arch, it's not hard, just a little tedious) and it had an LXQT image i think that was set up nicely.
Gotcha. There was recently an issue with Grub that was preventing
people from booting ... this was hairy. I use systemd-boot so for me
it wasn't an issue but things like that are fairly scary if you need
your computer every day lol.
I still use ext4. ZFS is excellent, though. It needs better first
class support in the linux kernel.
Yeah, I have systemd-homed/homectl on my personal laptop but just out
of curiosity. From an administrative perspective, I actually think
it's brilliant - true roaming accounts in a business or school when
using linux workstations. But for most people it's unnecessary.
Actually if you get bored some time, spin up a vm with a new arch
install iso and try the 'archinstall' script. It seems to do a lot of
things well, other than an issue I ran into with the fstab.
apam wrote to All <=-
i have one hand holding a baby asleep on my shoulder and one hand to
type :)
even got lord of the rings online running under wine on freebsd.
been experimenting with rest api crate in rust i think its called axiom-web or something. but my enthusiasm has waned a bit.
switched to freebsd a while back and am liking it.
wife is probably happy too loli have one hand holding a baby asleep on my shoulder and one hand to type :)Sounds like a happy life!
same here.. BSD has its quirks for sure, but i havent played much with it to be honestswitched to freebsd a while back and am liking it. seems with nvidiaCurious, what in particular do you like? I've used bsd in the past but have always come back to linux. Are you using it for
general desktop purposes, development, both..?
liking it much better than linux, lots of linux distros have things iAh, think I understand :) I use Ubuntu 22.04 Server and Arch and have embraced systemd with all its warts and am just trying
like but none have all the things.. i think probably artix (arch fork)
was closest but freebsd is comfy now.
to make the best of it. Honestly without any philosophical opinion on the matter, systemd meets my needs pretty well at this
point. But I have heard cool things about Artix.
any way what a ramble!
can't we allSounds like a happy life!It is when he's sleeping :) He can get rather grumpy at times.. but yeah
same thing here. I gues sit's just what you happened to get used to...... *cough* emacs *cough*Curious, what in particular do you like? I've used bsd in the past but
have always come back to linux. Are you using it for general desktop purposes, development, both..?
Yeah, both. I'm not sure if I can really put my finger on what I
particularly like about it. Linux is ok, I suppose there's just the
little things about distros that turn me off. It seems that they're
either too bleeding edge - eg arch or tumbleweed, or too out of date, eg debian. I really don't like snap packages due to
the way it uses loopback devices, so that puts ubuntu out, I like LXQT, which puts mint out (I
also like KDE) openSUSE leap comes close, but again, a bit out of date. AlmaLinux doesn't have certain packages I need - I
could probably find
them in some other repo, but it's also a bit out of date. Void Linux
comes very close, but it's default kernel doesn't include the minix file system, fedora and opensuse use a grub 2 package
instead of plain grub.
Yeah a lot of those things are a bit picky, minix filesystem and grub package are particular for my OS I like to work on from time to time, and I haven't got that sorted out on freebsd yet.
I do on linux too. I noticed red hat clones seem to default to XFS when you don't chose BTRFS, but still select ext4. I don't think ZFS will make it anytime into linux due to licensing, and I expect they would rather focus on BTRFS than re-implementing ZFS.
I'm sure it is useful in some instances, I think the thing that I was worried about at the time that it was going to be adopted in distros and forced on me. I can't remember exactly why I didn't want it.
What is that game like? I checked out the web page but don't have
time until at least next weekend to try it out.
Actually if you get bored some time, spin up a vm with a new arch
install iso and try the 'archinstall' script. It seems to do a lot
things well, other than an issue I ran into with the fstab.
I'll have to do that.
First time I tried, it crashed making partitions, so I thought maybe because I had used ZFS on it previously, I should wipefs the disk. Second time it crashed after making the FAT32 partition (for efi booting) the error was something about unable to find the UUID after creating the partition.
apam wrote to Tiny <=-
it's a bit like world of warcraft classic. but set in tolkien universe
i like it :)
Sysop: | Gary Ailes |
---|---|
Location: | Pittsburgh, PA |
Users: | 132 |
Nodes: | 5 (0 / 5) |
Uptime: | 123:27:43 |
Calls: | 733 |
Files: | 2,171 |
Messages: | 81,542 |