Yeah, who’d hate using a package manager that increasingly slows down your boot time with every package installed, or that uses a closed source store to provide you FOSS
Maybe there’s a reason canonical has to force it on their users
Yeah, who’d hate using a package manager that increasingly slows down your boot time with every package installed, or that uses a closed source store to provide you FOSS
Maybe there’s a reason canonical has to force it on their users
No, Debian doesn’t take your apt install ...
command and install a snap behind your back…
I dislike that it takes way too long to boot
Emacs had some “premade IDE” project I recall that I tried and wasn’t that enthusiastic about.
Doom Emacs, spacemacs, etc.
And there are plenty of nvim “distros” like that (lazyvim for example).
They make getting started pretty easy. I’ve been using Doom for years and never bothered to make a full config of my own.
WELL SURE, BUT BOIZ R SHROOM N BOIZ 'AVE TEK
Zergs are purely biological, this is more 40k ORK territory
MEKBOI SAIZ WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGH!!!
AI is quite fit for the task of understanding
Sure, and parrots are amazing at spotting fallacies like cherry picking…
if there’s something that I can adopt as a default goto solution without having to worry about how each system is packaged/configured.
Go is probably your best bet. Simple to use, and you can compile it so it runs everywhere
Having everything in a single file is not really a problem.
Having extremely outdated info on topics like below is a major issue though.
One cannot have bookmarks, or refer to page numbers.
Icy peepee
Or
I see peepeee
???
I mean, org-mode was invented because LaTeX is too hard
73 and 76, but I got them mixed up, ed is older.
That’s for original Emacs though, the gnu version came out in 85
Inb4 it becomes/is a subsidiary of the NSO group…
Second council of Nicaea?
Separate your system and user lists. Use home-manager for example for your user packages. I think separating those configs is the official recommendation.
As for the rest, I’m using nix on MX because of declarative package management. Screw going back to imperative and having to remember what packages to install. If it’s something I use often it goes on a list, if I don’t nix shell
comes to the rescue.
I’d rather mess around with dev envs for nix than distrobox.
Damn you broke my brain for a second there. I thought you meant that nixos replaced k8s, and was wondering what the hell are you talking about.
Zerowriter Ink should get up to a week of battery life
ESP strikes again…
AFAIK everything was dropped in the end, and people went back to using audacity