Wikiless?
The original project was taken down by Wikipedia, but this appears to be an active fork of it:
https://github.com/Metastem/wikiless
Full stack developer and privacy advocate. I like to keep the mentality, if you can program one language well, then you can program in any language!
Wikiless?
The original project was taken down by Wikipedia, but this appears to be an active fork of it:
https://github.com/Metastem/wikiless
I went with Manjaro due to the way they do their package releases.
Arch is bleeding edge,
a double edged sword if you ask me,
all the latest versions,
and all the bugs that come along with them.
I’m looking for stability in my daily driver though.
Manjaro keeps releases a few weeks back on their stable branch.
And tests the releases first on their unstable and testing branches.
Resulting in near bleeding edge with enhanced stability on the stable branch.
For me the experience has been:
Which imo makes it a good distro,
idiots would not make a good distro…
Sure the people behind it made some doubtful decisions in the past, but that doesn’t change the fact that using it has been a bliss.
Additionally, it’s all open source,
so if they would ever turn anti-consumer,
it can be forked into another distro.
As I mentioned earlier, stop the distro hate.
I’m not throwing acquisitions against other distros, instead I let people enjoy whatever flavor of Linux they desire…
By now I helped a fair amount of Arch and other distro users through Lemmy / AUR / Issues, and I also learned a fair amount of Arch / Manjaro and other distro users.
Linux is not the enemy here,
not a single flavor…
Why?
It has been my main distro for years now,
and I have only enjoyed the experience.
2 points you’ll likely mention which do not make it a bad distro:
Stop the distro hate,
it divides the Linux community…
Instead we should unify against M$/iFruit,
and let people use whatever distro they like.
Your comment is my reasoning why I use Manjaro :P
All the Arch niceness,
with fewer bugs / breakage
and easier to use.
Sure you might get an issue from outdated dependencies from AUR packages from time to time, but the chance / impact of those is usually rather small.
Update your system frequently,
that minimizes the chance of things breaking in my experience.
Legacy software still requires maintenance.
Legacy dependencies still require to be used in new projects.
Dual booting multiple times a day is not feasible.
For those reasons none of my co-workers can fully switch to Linux.
I write PHP on the daily and don’t understand the hate it gets :/
At least I can work on Linux at home while my co-workers are stuck on Windows with their C#
Flatpak:
To limit shady proprietary software from accessing your full storage / hardware.
You can manage the sandbox access through tools like FlatSeal.
Snap:
To ruin your day / user experience.
Both where introduced as a universal way to distribute packages on various distros.
Enuf with the Arch hate already…
Fedora and Debian are cool,
but Arch is too,
their Wiki is amazing and so is the AUR.
And no I don’t use Arch btw,
I use Manjaro,
which has suited me fine for years now.
You can try rolling back to a previous version though.
By checking the log section in the AUR,
you can see all the commits (changes) done to the build files.
https://aur.archlinux.org/cgit/aur.git/log/?h=util-linux-selinux
Clicking on a commit message shows you the diff.
Start by the last commit,
undo the changes (green lines),
re-apply the removals (red lines),
then attempt to re-build.
If that did not work out,
do the same for the commit before that until you rolled back up to the latest working version.
If working with the AUR,
you can alter the PKGBUILD and other build files on your own behalf.
To either fix what’s wrong,
or to roll back to a previous version of the package.
I’ve did both a few times already,
however I’m on Manjaro.
Pamac, their graphical installer,
prompts me if I’d like to edit the build files before starting the build/install process, unsure how to do it in Arch, but the ArchWiki should be able to tell you.
Also, if you’d fix what’s wrong,
please post your diff on the AUR package thread, that can save the maintainer some work / help with rolling an updated package out to the other users faster.
It automatically happened,
I believe with every install of an updated Flatpak, which is rather often.
Been a while though, since lately I’ve been happily using AMD for quite some time.
But I do recall Nvidia driver updates slowing down my update process by a lot,
while I have none of that with AMD.
Even not the “issue” that basically every time you update something, you have to wait a long time to download proprietary nvidia drivers?
That’s what annoyed me the most back in the day with the Nvidia drivers,
so many hours wasted on updating the drivers.
With AMD, this is not the case.
And haven’t even talked about my issues with Optimus (Intel on-board graphics + Nvidia GPU) yet, which was a true nightmare, took me weeks of research to finally make it work correctly.
In my experience,
AMD is a bliss on Linux,
while Nvidia is a headache.
Also, AMD has ROCM,
it’s their equivalent of Nvidia’s CUDA.
Lol, I’m done discussing with you fruity.
You’re blatantly ignoring / laughing away evidence to protect the image of a bad, but for some reason, you’re favorite spyware slinging company.
And on top of it,
now also bashing the privacy and linux communities since you can’t make valid debunkments :P
Instead of bashing,
to suck up to that spying company,
perhaps you should try defending your rights to privacy for a change.
You may rant in the void now,
I won’t waste time on your fanboy nonsense anymore.
What are your sources for debunking mine?
Besides you just not liking to face the truth?
Blanket surveillance is not clickbait,
it’s spyware, and a problem.
But sure continue to stick your head in the sand,
that will surely help humanity beat this problem.
Here are a few examples, but if you do some research like I told you to, you’ll stumble upon many more:
I do own my devices.
Companies want you to not own the devices, and rent them through a subscription model,
however I refuse to do that.
If you do that / fall for that,
then you’re part of the problem making such a future a reality…
Wayland might be the future,
but today we’re still living in the present…
I was a fan, and tried Wayland,
but it took less then 24hrs before I switched back to X.
Just too many random bugs remain in Wayland rn…
E.g: