There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

linux

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

Objects , in What Are Your Favorite SBCs (Single Board Computers), Why, and How Did You Get Into Them?

I have a raspberry pi 3 running pihole. Been trying to get my hands on a pi4 but it’s been difficult.

seperis OP ,
@seperis@lemmy.ml avatar

Watch Vilros and American Raspberry Pi Shop; that’s where I picked up my Zero 2 and second Pi 4 8GB respectively. I tend to like Vilros better; they’re fairly consistent in regularly getting stock, you just have to check in consistently to catch it. The Zero 2 was an actual fluke; I was evangelizing about the Pihole to a friend and went to the site to show her what to buy and the Zero 2 was right there.

Canakit’s good too, but somehow, I am always coming in right after pre-orders close, which is weird, as the one thing you cannot say about me is I am not focused as hell (the COVID Switch and NVIDIA Shortage was very educational on how to stalk merchandise into submission).

Truthfully, for a Pihole, you really don’t need a Pi 4; my Zero 2 runs it with resources to spare (the regular zero technically could, but there was more than one bottleneck).

Objects ,

Thanks for the suggestions. I’ve been watching rpilocator.com for availability but still haven’t scored anything. I’m not in any kind of rush so I’m only sporadically checking.

I was going to leave the pihole on the 3 and use the 4 for other things. Maybe a small k8s box to mess around with.

seperis OP ,
@seperis@lemmy.ml avatar

Oh, that will be fun. Yeah, the Pi 4 is the universal screwdriver of SBCs and there’s so much community and documentation, it’s just amazing. Good luck!

Raphael , in AlmaLinux No Longer Aims For 1:1 Compatibility With RHEL
@Raphael@lemmy.world avatar

AlmaLinux also reaffirmed their commitment to being fully open-source and good open-source citizens.

Thank you, AlmaLinux team. It is truly an unfortunate sight to see so many corpo-apologists in a Linux sub. You’re doing a beautiful work.

oktoberpaard ,

If there’s anyone that hates what Red Hat has done here, it’s me, but what AlmaLinux is doing is exactly what Red Hat was aiming for according to their statement, which is that clones would use CentOS Stream as their upstream and develop and contribute their own patches instead of copying RHEL bug-for-bug. The other reason is of course to convert people that need that bug-for-bug clone to paying customers.

With SUSE having announced a RHEL compatible alternative, I’m hoping that some people/businesses will consider switching their environment over to them as a more OSS friendly competitor that also offers support. If that distribution gains some traction, I foresee that some of the clones might use that as their upstream and that OEMs will follow suit and test their drivers on those distributions. There are enough people/businesses that are reliant on a mixture of RHEL and Alma/Rocky and for those life got a bit harder because of RHEL’s actions.

baronvonj ,
@baronvonj@lemmy.world avatar

With SUSE having announced a RHEL compatible alternative,

Bummer. I know there’s a market for customers who want it, but I’d prefer to finally rip the bandaid off and just leave RHEL compatibility behind.

lemminer , in What developments in the Linux world are you looking forward to the most?
  • At the least Nvidia hardware gets full support for Linux. Which in turn would help me run Wayland on daily bases.
  • Ease at implementing secure boot for Linux.
  • Torification/I2P being used as standard to use and adapt applications running on linux for internet access.
OsrsNeedsF2P ,

I2P by default would be a hilarious F U to surveillance

fugepe ,

its Nvidias fault not Linux. Bitch to them

Eelviny ,

I get you on the NVIDIA side of things, but as another commenter mentioned, it’s an NVIDIA problem, not a Linux one, and I really don’t see it being solved. I finally gave in and replaced a perfectly functional 3070Ti with a 7900XT and damn, wish I’d done this a long time ago! Just works straight out of the box with wayland.

bertmacho , in Void Linux

Been using it a while and I genuinely cant find anything to complain about. xbps is the best pkg manager, runit is quick and gets out the way and all my architectures are supported

Digester , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?
@Digester@lemmy.world avatar

Anything Arch, because it’s hard, it’s a pain in the ass and as an intermediate user I need Arch to break on me so I can fix it and learn.

hibby ,

While Arch does allow a user to do a lot, including breaking their system, I would note that it’s not a herculean task to build and run a stable machine. I broke my Arch system a few times by going against best-practices and it did teach me about some risks, but I knew exactly what I did and why it broke every time. It taught me how to quickly recover, which is good to know for any OS.

I’d call myself an intermediate enthusiast and I don’t have a career that uses Linux, but I have never found Arch “hard”. It just takes some reading and a little patience. The Arch Wiki has a majority of the answers, but if you have tried and failed to find the answer you need, the community is extremely savvy and are there to help you. They just prefer you to dig into the wiki and try for yourself before asking for help.

cow , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?
@cow@lemmy.world avatar

Alpine Linux, repositories contain most software for a desktop and server, minimal base system, fast package manager. I would only recommend it to an advanced user that does not use proprietary software as most of it will not run because it is linked against glibc but alpine linux uses musl libc.

venusenvy47 , in What Are Your Favorite SBCs (Single Board Computers), Why, and How Did You Get Into Them?

.

awderon , in Oracle has declared war on Redhat & IBM. The enterprise linux war has begun

Here is the source blog post from oracle: oracle.com/…/keep-linux-open-and-free-2023-07-10/

RedHat really fucked up with this move. I know RedHat employees and everyone from RedHat I met so far was proud they work there and how much open source meant to the company. I guess there will be more and more redhatters looking for new opportunities in the coming months.

ablackcatstail ,
@ablackcatstail@lemmy.goblackcat.com avatar

Yes, it was indeed a really stupid move.

nani8ot ,

But Oracle? How are they better in any way? RedHat still writes FOSS software. Oracle just profited off it being easy for RHEL customers to migrate to Oracle Linux. They do add on top of RHEL, but they could built a distro themselves too.

This article reads to me like satire from Oracle.

PS: I don’t like what RH done either.

awderon ,

Never meant to defend oracle. I dislike them even more than IBM.

Ddhuud ,

IMHO Redhat cloud was just as proprietary as oracle’s. Sure, Redhat was one of (if not the) the greatest contributor to open source, but since acquired by IBM it seems the momentum is going down (I don’t have any data on this, only a few articles like this I’ve reaad)

Ddhuud , (edited )

IBM

Everyone keeps saying redhat this, redhat that as if they’re talking of an independent entity. IBM bought redhat, and probably to run it into the ground too. Fuck IBM.

By the way, I still don’t believe oracle’s “commitment” to open source, but that writing was a cool slap to IBM’s face.

kanzalibrary , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?
@kanzalibrary@lemmy.world avatar

Unpopular opinion: Antix Linux for workstation, because:

  1. It’s Debian
  2. Very lightweight (100mb on RAM)
  3. Live to RAM
  4. Frugal installation
  5. Small size ISO (1gb) with full function utility
  6. Flexibel recovery, from old to modern system
  7. Responsive (no systemd)
  8. Retro-kind WM (icebox-wm), perfectly match on retro system
meurglys ,
@meurglys@lemmy.ml avatar

I’ve long enjoyed using antiX. Their forum is very friendly and useful. Highly recommend!

ClaretNBlue , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?

Slackware is still my go to, but I have many diatros installed on VM’s.

ramius345 ,

How’s J.R. Bob Dobbs doing these days?

meurglys ,
@meurglys@lemmy.ml avatar

Woooohooooooo…love live the Church of Slack! :-P

crystal , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?

I use NixOS on my main PC.

If you want to use NixOS, you have to be willing to read.

Two things are especially difficult:

Coding: You will have to learn the Nix-specific way for everything you do. How does Nodejs work in NixOS? How does GCC work in NixOS? How does my IDE work in NixOS?

Using unofficial packages: The nix repos are very large and you’ll most likely find everything you need there (or on flatpak/flathub). But if something isn’t there, the easiest way tends to be packaging it as a nix package yourself. And that’s something many people probably don’t want to do.

The coding thing is annoying enough that I may switch away from NixOS at some point.

Other than that, NixOS is great.

NightingaleMev ,

I’m trying to solve problem with coding in NixOS with Distrobox and Archlinux container with all the tools for development. Work fine for me.

KemalKilicdaroglu , in Ankarayı da sikimmi
@KemalKilicdaroglu@akparti.xyz avatar

Hayır, Ankara başımızın tacıdır.

UmuTRexe , in Ankarayı da sikimmi

↑↑↑↑ SONUAN GADAR ↑

TiffyBelle , in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?
@TiffyBelle@feddit.uk avatar

Debian. I always come back to Debian.

It’s just a rock solid, multipurpose distro that has everything. If you have an issue with some older software versions, you can just track testing or sid and treat it as rolling release or use flatpaks for GUI apps.

To me, Debian is almost perfect.

owatnext ,

To me, Debian is almost perfect.

I agree, but ever since systemD, well…

Simpsons “Old man yells at cloud” meme, but it reads “Old man yells at systemD”

non_feistel ,
@non_feistel@lemmy.world avatar

Devuan then!

owatnext ,

Devuan is awesome, but I’ve moved to Void! Devuan is a ripper though!

smpl ,
@smpl@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I decided to switch to Devuan a long time ago, because it’s an opinionated Debian that align better with my preferences. The Devuan community prefer the simple solutions like ALSA, sysvinit (and others), udev independent of systemd, would rather avoid dbus and so on… the thing is I’ve never made the switch. I’m now running old old stable Debian with sysvinit, ALSA etc… but soon™ when I decide to clean up the mess that is my computer, I’ll rebase to Devuan which does what I want out of the box :P

mrmanager ,
@mrmanager@lemmy.today avatar

I wouldn’t call it rock solid… It was running old versions of kde with lots of bugs. Bugs that had been fixed months ago.

So I don’t know. It’s good we have choice but I don’t personally see Debian as more stable than arch. I see it as having older bugs than arch.

aport ,

KDE could fix 80% of it’s bugs overnight and it will still be the most bug-ridden DE by a longshot

mrmanager ,
@mrmanager@lemmy.today avatar

Yep, most features and most bugs. I go back and forth between kde and Gnome when a bug annoys me too much.

JoYo , in Why is snaps hated
@JoYo@lemmy.ml avatar

Because I can’t dismiss the Firefox update notification, no matter how many times I update it.

I’ve had to reboot every time.

Which, way to go you’ve reimplemented windows xp era updates.

phx ,

Stop the app and run “snap refresh” and it should update anything that’s queued

JoYo ,
@JoYo@lemmy.ml avatar

yes, I did kill the process and update the image though snap.

this did nothing to remove the update notification that cannot be dismissed without rebooting.

phx ,

Oh, weird. The notification itself disappeared for me when I click it (KDE)

JoYo ,
@JoYo@lemmy.ml avatar

maybe they fixed it, I switched to Debian over a year ago.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines