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It took me as a solo project 5 years plus to get to dwmX 1.0 ( I am not a developer/coder...fun learning project!)
I didn't know that. :8
Therefore my esteem for your work. I apologize for the impatience I expressed above regarding the German language attitudes.
Thanks!
Last edited by unklar (2019-10-12 10:11:10)
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I like distro-hopping. (I like pie - Forrest Gump)
It's hard to judge responsiveness from a thumbstick, and I like to check out the installer. Interesting to jump between two similar distros to check something out. But it got so slow to do anything disk related with so many partitions, I gave it up and went down to just two or three distros installed at one time.
-A-grub-menu-booting-100-systems-of-Dos-Windows-Linux-BSD-and-Solaris
8bit
Last edited by deleted0 (2019-10-21 02:01:53)
I'm down to two partitions in heavy rotation, Bl Lithium (current Debian stable) and BL Lithium (the same but as a FrankenDeb, for fun). The second will be replaced with Debian testing when the soft-freeze for Bullseye comes in a year-and-a-half or so.
No, he can't sleep on the floor. What do you think I'm yelling for?!!!
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I haven't distrohopped in roughly three years. My current AL install had it's second birthday last month. Other than playing around with distros on my craptop, my main system has been AL since I launched the first ISO.
"All we are is dust in the wind, dude"
- Theodore "Ted" Logan
"Led Zeppelin didn't write tunes that everybody liked, they left that to the Bee Gees."
- Wayne Campbell
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I've just installed Neptune 6.0, a Debian 10-based distro which uses KDE as its desktop manager.
I had a few problems installing it because of what looks like a video driver incompatibility with KDE 5, but it's now working well with Fluxbox and Openbox taking care of the window management (I'm in Openbox right now).
Last edited by Colonel Panic (2019-10-24 22:23:02)
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I have no complaints with KDE Plasma on Buster. It's complete, it's fast, more or less, it's gorgeous to look at, and it's lighter on RAM usage than GNOME. If BL Lithium wasn't coming along so well, ot's the desktop I'd be running. I ran it on Buster (Debian testing soft freeze) for six months with very few issues.
No, he can't sleep on the floor. What do you think I'm yelling for?!!!
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That's good hhh, it's probably just my machine that's at fault here (or not having the correct driver for the video card).
I should probably take the problem to the Neptune forum and see if they know how to fix it. For now though, it's not a major issue because all the KDE-specific programs I've wanted to use in Neptune so far have run just fine in Fluxbox.
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SharpBang (♯!) Do not bling it, just swing it!
https://head-on-a-stick.github.io/
Last edited by or1o9 (2019-10-26 14:46:45)
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The Trident devs have just announced their decision to ditch FreeBSD, on which their distro is currently based, in favour of Void Linux;
https://itsfoss.com/bsd-project-trident-linux/
and these are the reasons they gave;
https://project-trident.org/post/os_migration/
Question: Is this the writing on the wall for FreeBSD on the desktop, i.e. an admission that it is no longer competitive with Linux on that score? Or should we cut FreeBSD (and maybe the other BSDs too) some slack and see them as just as valid a choice for the desktop as Linux. but just different?
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The Trident devs have just announced their decision to ditch FreeBSD, on which their distro is currently based, in favour of Void Linux;
https://itsfoss.com/bsd-project-trident-linux/
and these are the reasons they gave;
https://project-trident.org/post/os_migration/
Question: Is this the writing on the wall for FreeBSD on the desktop, i.e. an admission that it is no longer competitive with Linux on that score? Or should we cut FreeBSD (and maybe the other BSDs too) some slack and see them as just as valid a choice for the desktop as Linux. but just different?
Cut the *BSD some slack. I've used FreeBSD and DragonflyBSD on the desktop without issues OOTB.
You must unlearn what you have learned.
-- yoda
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I see *BSD as a valid choice for a laptop/desktop GUI scenario.
Just not my choice
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Back in the day (meaning before the systemd holocaust) I learned more about basic *nix system administration from the BSDs than Linux, mostly because of their (mainly FreeBSD and OpenBSD) superior documentation. For certain scenarios/people, the BSDs definitely have their place on desktops.
Fwiw, I'm a bit of an OpenBSD fanboy myself, and have run it on desktops/laptops for extended periods in the past. It won't win any Phoronix benchmarks, but stability verges on the absolute and it had better ootb power management than any Linux distro on the machines I put it on. Also, OpenBSD's sndio shits all over pulseaudio and jack (Void employs sndio as well, iirc). No longer run it on bare metal for superficial reasons (I want my flicker-free boot, sue me), but in a world filled with operating systems I hate (Windows, Android, whatever my car's infotainment system runs on) and operating systems I somewhat tolerate (GNU/Linux, iOS), OpenBSD is probably the only one I truly like.
Last edited by glittersloth (2019-11-09 06:04:29)
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^ yes, sndio is available with Void.
You must unlearn what you have learned.
-- yoda
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Still kinda looking for the best laptop distro for a thinkpad x250...
I want a simple no-DE setup like BL. Either Openbox, or something that can easily be changed.
Not too keen on "based on Ubuntu" either.
But the very most important thing is Laptop-specific stuff like power management (and I mean power management way beyond "how many minutes before the screen goes off"), Do The Right Thing on lid close etc.
Tested Manjaro Openbox today and didn't like it one bit... It's all very "look what cool stuff we can do with CLI", but underneath it still uses networkmanager, just the TUI that doesn't work very well for manual wifi setup.
Polybar is so cool, but then it doesn't have a classical taskbar (list of open windows), so there's a tint2 at the bottom just for that ... WTF?
And then the installer froze after the first step.
I might bite the bullet and do an Arch install after all.
Last edited by ohnonot (2019-11-09 18:32:14)
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Still kinda looking for the best laptop distro for a thinkpad x250...
I want a simple no-DE setup like BL. Either Openbox, or something that can easily be changed.
Not too keen on "based on Ubuntu" either.
But the very most important thing is Laptop-specific stuff like power management (and I mean power management way beyond "how many minutes before the screen goes off"), Do The Right Thing on lid close etc.Tested Manjaro Openbox today and didn't like it one bit... It's all very "look what cool stuff we can do with CLI", but underneath it still uses networkmanager, just the TUI that doesn't work very well for manual wifi setup.
Polybar is so cool, but then it doesn't have a classical taskbar (list of open windows), so there's a tint2 at the bottom just for that ... WTF?
And then the installer froze after the first step.I might bite the bullet and do an Arch install after all.
Is it worth trying ArchLabs?
"All we are is dust in the wind, dude"
- Theodore "Ted" Logan
"Led Zeppelin didn't write tunes that everybody liked, they left that to the Bee Gees."
- Wayne Campbell
Online
Still kinda looking for the best laptop distro for a thinkpad x250...
I have an x230 running BL with i3wm. For my use of this machine this is pretty optimal, me thinks.
/Martin
"Problems worthy of attack
prove their worth by hitting back."
Piet Hein
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Tested Manjaro Openbox today and didn't like it one bit... It's all very "look what cool stuff we can do with CLI", but underneath it still uses networkmanager, just the TUI that doesn't work very well for manual wifi setup.
I might bite the bullet and do an Arch install after all.
Ever since i discovered setnet.sh ive not installed anything else for net connectivity, its set and forget, not sure about VPN as i dont use it but might be a deal breaker if you do.
Ive always been a fan of a minimal install and choose my own components, Arch would be a good choice imo, although Void is getting better and better lately, especially the musl libc versions.
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