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So what’s the ‘best’ way now?
Hi! I sincerely want to thank you for your well thought out response. I apologize if the word troll came off wrong. I probably should have used a better descriptor. My primary goal was to be a voice FOR enterprise distros at home - because I saw mostly posts from people who probably aren’t professional sysadmins and have never even tried an enterprise distro.
I fully concede on the VERY new hardware being a challenge for RHEL, an Ubuntu LTS or similar. I’m unfortunately not in a situation where I can afford that problem (kids and daycare costs) so it’s fallen off my radar. I do occasionally run into it at work with research groups that just buy the latest/fastest gaming hardware without checking with IT (we would generally steer them towards workstation/data center grade hardware instead of gaming hardware…not applicable to this discussion for home use). If somehow I could acquire something with new enough hardware to have that problem I’d probably use Fedora on it (so I could just modify my Ansible to work with both), and wait for current Fedora to become RHEL and then that hardware would become RHEL for the rest of it’s lifetime. Mainly - the huge number of constant updates and the every 6 month big updates on Fedora are just too much hassle for me.
On gaming and the other comparisons about improvements on newer packages: I do agree with you. My personal approach has just moved to use what is “tried and tested” and “good enough”. It’s a pretty common approach for sysadmins to let other early adopters find all of the bugs in new stuff. For example: I’m excited about bcachefs, but when I installed Fedora Rawhide just to test it after the recent 6.7 release - I found it largely NOT ready for anything I would need to trust (commands that return the console, but no indication that they did nothing for example - doesn’t give me a good feeling about putting all of my family photos on it until it matures). For now, I’ll still use XFS for small systems and ZFS for large systems or where I need send/receive.
All of that said: I acknowledge these are preferences and my approach, not a " right" way. I do still think it’s a valid approach for some who wants less updates and a more stable config if they’re happy with “fast enough” and less potential for update breakage.
Thank you again for being respectful and detailed in your response. Cheers!
How do you copy/paste to/from xterm?
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•I don't see the point of keeping OS X Yosemite 10.10.5 on my MacBook Pro, Core i5, software is so old SSL certificates are out of date, I can't update neither the stock software or any application14·1 year agoGood time to install Linux and switch for good. You’ll save thousands of dollars over your lifetime if you stop buying Apple.
Sincerely, a former mac user from 1999-2016
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto Open Source@lemmy.ml•What are some good FOSS fitness/weight/health apps?4·1 year agoLike the other commentor- I also tried hard to use wger but it was just too unintuitive. I switched to Liftosaur and love it for making a weight lifting routine easy to design and track:
https://github.com/astashov/liftosaur/
I did test self hosting it and it’s not too bad, but just switched to my iPad and subscribing for the premium because the auto calculating the plates for each lift saves me a lot of time and I feel good supporting this developer.
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto DeGoogle Yourself@lemmy.ml•In an age of LLMs, is it time to reconsider human-edited web directories?2·1 year agoSounds like you may enjoy https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gemini_(protocol) if you haven’t installed a browser and tried it.
I run RHEL on my personal desktop and laptop. Why? Because I use it at work and the more I use it the better I understand it. This benefits me both at home and at work. I’ve even built Ansible roles and playbooks in git to setup my home machines. Overkill? Sure, but I have great peace if mind if I lose a boot drive that I’ll be right back to normal quickly.
You can absolutely use an enterprise distro at home. Ignore the trolls about “It’s all too old” or “it doesn’t have X software”. I don’t care what version vim, GNOME or pretty much anything is, as long as I can open the core tools I need. For “missing” software: I’ve yet to find any software I “need” that I haven’t figured out how to install (again: Ansible-d) including Flatpak for all the normie stuff (spotify, slack, discord, etc) and I’m golden.
My $0.02
This isn’t true since Dec 2021.
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto Android@lemdro.id•Xiaomi Poco X6 Pro review - One of the best smartphones for less than 400 EurosEnglish73·1 year agoIf I can’t run GrapheneOS on it, is has no value to me.
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•I like it when you don’t even need to click the search result to get the answer10·1 year ago‘Best for what?’ is the issue with this never-ending pointless discussion.
RHEL is a fantastic distro… For some things. It’s also a horrible distro… For other things.
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto Map Enthusiasts@sopuli.xyz•𝘊𝘩𝘪𝘢 𝘥𝘢𝘢𝘒𝘸𝘰𝘬𝘸𝘦𝘺𝘦𝘩, or North Sentinel Island, home of one of Earth’s few other groups of 𝘏𝘰𝘮𝘰 𝘴𝘢𝘱𝘪𝘦𝘯𝘴 (1240×904)2·1 year agoWait.
So the average temperature fluctuates between 86F in summer to 73F in winter, surrounded by beaches AND they can ignore most of the world?
I’m jealous.
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•Snap store from Canonical (Ubuntu) hit with another crypto scam app12·1 year agoI hate them because they make Ubuntu useless for a desktop in an enterprise environment. Snaps have a bug where they will NOT open with a network home directory, which is common for a business … And now they’ve made Firefox snap only.
So for a business environment: you can’t even open the included web browser. WTF?
Do you understand now?
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•First Look at Ubuntu’s New ‘Desktop Security Center’1·1 year agoHey Canonical, how about you spend that effort fixing (or removing) snap instead?
I still can’t open the default Firefox install when using NFS home directories with autofs.
Ubuntu is now almost useless in an actual business desktop environment.
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto[Dormant, please move to !television@lemm.ee] Movies and TV Shows@lemm.ee•Jon Stewart Says ‘Daily Show’ Return Was Prompted by Wanting to Have a “Place to Unload Thoughts” Ahead of 2024 Election152·1 year agoHe’s the one we need, but not the one we deserve.
Thank you! These are the search terms I was missing.
What’s still not obvious to me is the remote management of the nix config on 500 machines. Without a config management system like Ansible, how to you push a change to those systems?
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•Ubuntu Core Desktop Delayed, Won't Be Released in April122·1 year agoThey probably realized snaps are garbage and are still trying to desperately un-garbage them before the release.
GnomeComedy@beehaw.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•Do new patches that are incorporated in the "stable tree" of older kernel versions make it back into the distros?0·1 year agoThe distro you’re using and the model of laptop and a link to the bug/commit would make it easier to answer what you can expect.
I’ve been zwifting exclusively on Linux for a few years now with this: https://github.com/netbrain/zwift
It’s pretty distro agnostic. I’m using it with Podman on RHEL 9.
Still requires you to use the companion app on your phone for your Bluetooth connections, but it beats keeping a Windows machine around. Good luck!