I tried Fedora, Centos, Ubuntu, Debian, Slackware, Gentoo, and Mint. Finally settled on Arch Linux about 15 years ago. Never looked back.
I tried Fedora, Centos, Ubuntu, Debian, Slackware, Gentoo, and Mint. Finally settled on Arch Linux about 15 years ago. Never looked back.
More often than I think.
This is actually pretty good.
Isn’t that what Hollywood did for America and democratic values?
Why is it excellent? It’s still based on chromium, which I refuse to run because of performance issues. I’m happy with Safari and Firefox.
Ha! Now there’s something in evaded. I’m too socially awkward to even respond to everyday greetings.
Ha! Now there’s something in evaded. I’m too socially awkward to even respond to everyday greetings.
Ha! Now there’s something in evaded. I’m too socially awkward to even respond to everyday greetings.
Ha! Now there’s something in evaded. I’m too socially awkward to even respond to everyday greetings.
I recently read “Tomorrow, tomorrow, and tomorrow” and I don’t recommend it.
Can’t wait to accidentally run rm -fr
You should’ve first posted this on twitter, then taken a screenshot and posted here just to add to the irony.
The future of Lemmy and the eventual demise of sheddit.
Check. Check. And check.
I’ll take rolling updates over twice a year major release upgrades any day. My experience with Centos and Ubuntu was that anytime I needed to upgrade the OS, I had to spend a few hours fixing random stuff. Never had a problem with Arch that I couldn’t fix.
Calling them underwhelming is an overstatement. I can find at least 50 better ways to burn my money.