Nearly all of my friends make less than $5k per month, and all of them have SSDs as the boot drive in their computer.
Nearly all of my friends make less than $5k per month, and all of them have SSDs as the boot drive in their computer.
On Debian Testing or Unstable you don’t have to worry about that as much. Right now, I have rustc 1.80.1 from the Testing repo, just one version behind.
Well, I’ll tell you that I prefer systemd because I can comprehend its declarative unit files and dependency-based system a lot better than the shell script DSLs and runlevels that I’ve had to mess with in other init systems. systemctl status
has a quite nice output that can be really handy when debugging units. I like being able to pull up logs for just about any service on my system with a simple journalctl
command instead of researching where the log file is.
I try my hand at packaging it for my distro.
That would be contrib - free software that downloads or relies on non-free software. non-free and non-free-firmware just contain straight up non-free (but redistributable) binaries.
Was this with the most recent version of Debian? Bookworm includes non-free firmware with the installer now.
Ubuntu did.
I had severe issues when running an NVIDIA card, but after trading that in for AMD I’ve only had minor issues. Nothing major, and certainly nothing worth losing good fractional scaling to avoid.
Forgot to add a hyfetch!
I have most certainly had OS installs (from every vendor) that worked flawlessly for a while. Why are you pretending as if those don’t exist?
Where is the mail server getting incoming mail from?
It would be cool to pay a monthly subscription, that’s then distributed among the software I use or have installed. That could be integrated into a package manager even. I don’t know if any Linux distro does something like it.
I’ve been thinking the same thing lately. It would be cool if at least there were some sort of metadata maintainers could include on packages saying, “if you want to donate money, upstream accepts donations at this link: <…>”. Then I (or someone else) could put together a tool that helps you track what upstream projects you’re donating to.
I understand that isn’t nearly as easy as just a subscription though. The issue I see with that is legal - you’d need a legal entity specifically for accepting payments and disbursing each upstream project’s share, plus all the accounting and such that goes along with it. I don’t see why it couldn’t be shared across multiple distributions though. Upstream packages could create an account with the funding service, then distro maintainers could include some sort of Funding-Service-ID: gnu/coreutils
metadata and a way to upload a list of Funding-Service-ID
s to the funding service’s servers.
I think that would be doable, but it would require buy-in from distributions, upstream maintainers, and someone who could operate such an organization. Not to mention users.
Which came later, Windows XP, ME, or Vista? Sure, you probably have that memorized, but if you didn’t it wouldn’t be immediately obvious. That’s just a problem with using codenames instead of numbers, nothing to do with unserious names. At least Debian releases have reasonable version numbers alongside the codenames, unlike some other operating systems!
I work for a major network infrastructure company. We can choose from Windows, macOS, or Ubuntu for work laptops. I chose macOS, but I’m probably going to switch to Ubuntu with my next laptop refresh since a lot of our internal tooling works better on Linux.
You aren’t stuck to Fedora with Asahi, I’m running Debian on my M1 Pro MBP
It’s technically possible to install the KDE 6 packages from experimental onto bookworm, but it is far from ready and will probably (eventually) break your system.
Debian 12 “bookworm” will never get KDE 6. KDE 6 will be first added in Debian 13 “trixie”.
When I’m confused like that, I check https://packages.debian.org and open the file list for the package. That way I know what binaries are installed.
If your RX 580 works and your packages are up-to-date, I see no reason a more recent AMD card wouldn’t be plug-and-play.