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udon, in Btw i used Arch!

Actually the Arch penguins jump happily on their own

Pirasp,

And then they go on to fight the predators to make it safe for the rest

XTL,

And they send maps that the others can use.

UnfortunateShort, (edited )

The documentary host went on:

After hearing about their “totally riced” setup for hours, the exhausted predator dies a painless death in the icy waters. A mercy the breedable Rust peers of the Arch user, drunk on their freshly claimed victory, will not share. Already displaying socks as part of their mating ritual, no baby-faced creature that knows its way around a terminal is safe. They are not taken by force however. Rather they freeze, smitten by the confidence the incredibly annoying apex predator radiates. Feeling used, but also strangely satisfied, the confused boy is left wondering why they aren’t using Arch, when Wiki and the AUR are so incredibly useful. Maybe it’s that symbiosis that keeps them together: Curiosity, Fear and the common Arch user’s incredible displays of power.

radioactiveradio, in Linus does not fuck around

He’s the Gordon Ramsey of programming. THE KERNEL IS FUCKING RAAAWWWW!!!

Sanyanov,

Gordon Ramsay is terrible scumbag and the fact he’s a star instead of hated freak speaks a lot about society

Happy Linus took a more constructive path and worked out his anger issues

Agent641,

Wheres the lamb source?!

MacNCheezus, (edited )
@MacNCheezus@lemmy.today avatar

This patch has so many bugs in it, Microsoft added it to Windows 11 and called it a feature.

Grass,

Ouch

hakunawazo,
kpw, in It's (usually) already installed

Browsers are bloat.
-- average Arch user

phorq,

As an arch user, I’m confused… Doesn’t everyone use curl as their browser?

rustydrd, (edited )
@rustydrd@sh.itjust.works avatar

Not related to Arch, but behold Richard Stallmann describing how he uses the internet: stallman.org/stallman-computing.html (see section “How I use the internet” and the other section below that with the same title).

acockworkorange,

I generally do not connect to web sites from my own machine, aside from a few sites I have some special relationship with. I usually fetch web pages from other sites by sending mail to a program (see git.savannah.gnu.org/git/womb/hacks.git) that fetches them, much like wget, and then mails them back to me. Then I look at them using a web browser, unless it is easy to see the text in the HTML page directly. I usually try lynx first, then a graphical browser if the page needs it.

Fuck. What the hell.

I occasionally also browse unrelated sites using IceCat via Tor. Except for rare cases, I do not identify myself to them. I think that plus Tor plus LibreJS is enough to prevent my browsing from being associated with me. IceCat blocks tracking tags and most fingerprinting methods.

Ironically I think this makes his the most unique fingerprint in the whole internet.

nixcamic,

In fact, what I use is Maté (an English way of writing the Spanish word Mate).

As a Spanish speaker I’d just like to say

A: wtf is this even supposed to mean?
B: mate and maté are two entirely different words.
C: The mate desktop environment is named after hierba mate, no é.

Synthead,

As an Arch user, why do people care what the default packages are?

kpw,

I recently switched to netcat, this lets me control the TCP stream more directly.

vox,
@vox@sopuli.xyz avatar

also cuter

Willer,

😭

heeplr,

Unironically Lynx and Elinks.

redcalcium,

Let me introduce you to Browsh

Kanda,

Imagine not enjoying the internet via curl

Michael717, (edited )

Imaging not enjoying the internet via raw sockets having fun decrypting manually.

rowanthorpe,
@rowanthorpe@lemmy.ml avatar

printf ‘GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n’ | openssl s_client -connect example.com:443 -ign_eof | html2text

jaybone,

BTW, I use lynx.

kittenzrulz123, in Never again
Bishma, in Let's go! (sorry i used WSL i have my own reasons for it...)
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

watch -n 1 date

bloopernova,
@bloopernova@programming.dev avatar

I was going to post exactly that, lol

Picture_Pig,
@Picture_Pig@lemmy.world avatar

nice

TheGreenGolem,
@TheGreenGolem@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

No, that’s a specific number.

Picture_Pig,
@Picture_Pig@lemmy.world avatar

what

TheGreenGolem,
@TheGreenGolem@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

69 -> nice.

I referenced an overused, childish joke.

mypasswordis1234, (edited )
@mypasswordis1234@lemmy.world avatar
Picture_Pig,
@Picture_Pig@lemmy.world avatar

it used for cpu cores

youngGoku,

Same

Picture_Pig,
@Picture_Pig@lemmy.world avatar

what does it do?

Bishma,
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

it runs the date command once per second until you hit ctrl+c

Picture_Pig,
@Picture_Pig@lemmy.world avatar

tysm!

simpleslipeagle,

-d if you’re feeling sporty.

Bishma,
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

If we’re adding dramatic flourish, I’ll suggest watch -n 1 ‘date | cowsay’

Picture_Pig,
@Picture_Pig@lemmy.world avatar

tysm

azerial, (edited )

man watch

Nice command! Thanks!

edit: md

TimeSquirrel, (edited ) in the main differences!!
@TimeSquirrel@kbin.social avatar

I like KDE cause it has a cute dragon. GNOME is a stinky foot.

reflex, (edited )
@reflex@kbin.social avatar

I like KDE cause it has a cute dragon.

A what? I've only ever seen the K cog.

TimeSquirrel,
@TimeSquirrel@kbin.social avatar
toothpaste_sandwich,

We need a non-binary KDE dragon, it seems.

Knusper,
rostby,

It’s never enough

russjr08,
@russjr08@outpost.zeuslink.net avatar

Oh wow, I didn’t know about Kandalf and KDE valley, that’s awesome!

RogueBanana,

You say that as if the later is worse

reflex,
@reflex@kbin.social avatar
librechad, (edited )

I always thought the GNOME icon was a indirect meme about Richard Stallman eating something from his toe

woelkchen, in I don't...
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Wayland is not killing smaller distributions. Who even came up with that batshit crazy idea?

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Someone on reddit.

douglasg14b,
@douglasg14b@lemmy.world avatar

Might as well be someone on lemmy since you reposted it here?

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Doesn’t mean I agree with it. It’s still an interesting topic to discuss IMO, hence the repost.

steakmeout,

I mean you do agree with it, clearly.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

I actually stated in the title I don’t.

steakmeout,

Well that’s confusing because the meme is complaint text with Hulk saying that he sees this as an absolute win and you titled the post “I don’t” which means you don’t see this as absolute win and therefore agree with complaint text in the image.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yes, I don’t see this is as a win at all… what’s your point?

steakmeout,

Which means you agree with the completely false notion that Wayland is killing X, which was my point. Clearly.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

I don’t see what the person wrote in that meme as an absolute win, even it was true.

acockworkorange,

Killing is overly dramatic, but it’s putting a burden on certain projects if they want to convert to it and not all have the resources to tank it. I don’t see Window Maker porting their toolkit to Wayland, for instance.

But XWayland exists so I don’t see what’s the fuss.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

My comment was about distributions specifically and those package Wayland since ages.

h0rnman, in I found it! The manual! I'm not sure it's helping me though...

I know this is a meme /c, but for real, I bought this exact same product a while back. If this is your photo, just be careful about what you put on it. Mine lasted 2 months with a grape vine on it before it collapsed.

Source: Arch user

Patches, (edited )

I can’t think of a more appropriate time for

You had one job…

When a grape trellis collapses due to the weight of… checks notes grapes.

Lorindol,

Mine lasted a year with grape vine before catastrophic structural collapse.

deadsenator,
@deadsenator@lemmy.ca avatar

Just wanted to say we have one in our yard that has been there for almost 20-years. Previous owner left it to rot. I moved it close to some wild hops and they are covering it completely after two years. Still standing!

jaybone,

I’m really not sure how much of this thread is a joke. Wouldn’t you just use solid slats of wood?

h0rnman,

Lol. The wife wanted something decorative and liked how it looked. Caveat Emptor, and all that I suppose. I knew I was buying from a less-than-quality source

TheBat,
@TheBat@lemmy.world avatar

Too many points of failure too. A solid arch or a lattice would’ve worked better.

h0rnman,

Oh for sure. I wanted to make sure OP didn’t repeat my mistake

Lorindol, (edited )

One definitely should use solid structures, metal or wooden. The damned thing cost ~10$ and I didn’t have time to build a proper support structure at the moment. I meant to use it only as a temporary solution, which I forgot when everything was fine.

The design of the arch itself wasn’t the problem. The interconnecting pipes were only 1-2mm thick, so there was no way it could possibly support the weight of a flourishing grape vine.

It was marketed as a “rose arch”. I guess it could’ve handled this purpose without any problems.

Buy wrong stuff, suffer the consequences.

48954246,

Ha, great tip. I’ll keep an eye on it

xkforce, in The most secure OS named windows

Tbf windows defender is pretty good.

ichbinjasokreativ,

It’s way too reliant on their cloud infrastructure though, causing it to detect and react to malware slower than other solutions and it turns to shit the second the network disconnects. The PC security channel on YouTube has some good analysis of it.

Dettweiler42,

To be honest, for most users, if they’re not on the Internet; it’s not that big of a deal for their antivirus to be less effective. Most threats come from being dumb on the web.

Bishma,
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

It has to be, Otherwise Windows would have succumb to microsoft’s antisecure culture by now.

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Anti-secure culture? Things have changed a lot since the days of Nimda, SQL Slammer, etc.

mctoasterson,

It is fucking horrible with false positives though. RIP if you have a Kali ISO sitting on one of your drives.

That and the Antimalware service executable gets hung up and chugs 30-50% of your CPU and RAM and won’t stop.

LainOfTheWired, in Linux users when
@LainOfTheWired@lemy.lol avatar

Was going to upvote then saw them install chrome. Just why? Use Firefox or Chromium

prunerye,

Typical Gnome user.

ReCursing,
@ReCursing@kbin.social avatar

Use Firefox, not Chromium

HarryS,

No, use GNU IceCat instead, don’t be shacked down by proprietary blobs restricting your freedom in your web browser

Clbull, (edited ) in Year of Linux on the Desktop

Windows 12 may end up being my transition to Linux, especially if they go for a subscription model. If you told me just a decade ago that Linux was a viable OS for gaming, I would have laughed at you.

Valve have outdone themselves with Proton. So have those who worked on DXVK and VKD3D.

cRazi_man,

I’ll be the first to hope for the demise of Windows…but I thought the “subscription model” rumours were all discredited. Obviously anything could happen in the future I guess.

lud,

Yes, the subscription would only apply to Windows IOT.

Win IOT is for embedded systems, so pretty much only corporate customers would be affected.

mynamesnotrick,

With proton and lutris i can play any game with little effort in linux.

ILikeBoobies,

For both thats Wine

Thank Wine

Rolive,

I’ll drink to that.

mynamesnotrick,

Lutris does use other runners but yeah, wine is awesome. Thanks wine.

rbos,
@rbos@lemmy.ca avatar

There was a decent selection of games on Linux ten years ago. Just because your favourite games didn’t run didn’t make it a nonviable games platform. Xbox doesn’t run all games either, but it’s still viable.

ILikeBoobies, (edited )

Yeah Linux has been better at gaming for 15 years

The issue is native software

No one puts a PS disc in a computer and say Windows isn’t good for gaming because it cant play PS games

MeatsOfRage,

I don’t think that comparison tracks. If you’re a heavy gamer and the platform doesn’t allow you to play a lot of your favorite games, I wouldn’t recommend it as a platform. Xbox doesn’t get everything but it does get about 95% of all the titles you are looking for that aren’t platform exclusive to Sony or Nintendo. A decade ago linux could only play a much smaller fraction of the games you could play on windows. What your percentage of viable vs non-viable is, is up to you but I’d wager for many heavy gamers that percentage was much too low then.

spikederailed,

Outside of competitive shooters, which is my favorite genre to play on PC, a lot of stuff runs well through Proton. And that’s an issue of the anti-cheat systems.

Linux gaming isn’t for everyone, I play what I can on PC and have a PS5 for other experiences. There are plenty of games I wish I could play, but I’m not interested enough to dual boot windows. I would do vfio passthrough for a VM, if they weren’t getting better at detecting that.

Ultimately I have enough games I can play to stay busy.

rbos,
@rbos@lemmy.ca avatar

I played a lot of WoW back then, it ran fine. Speaking personally. I guess if you want to gatekeep gamer hard enough you could call Linux nonviable back then but I always thought it was dumb. A ball and a deck of cards are viable gaming platforms. :p

rbos,
@rbos@lemmy.ca avatar

I guess ‘viable’ means different things? Is this an American usage where something isn’t viable unless it can do literally all the things?

Xbox isn’t a viable platform because you can’t play world of Warcraft!

MeatsOfRage,

I’m not American so I don’t know where this is coming from but you have to consider different contexts for the word. Viability is going to differ based on needs.

MeatsOfRage,

And that’s fine, you had your game that ran well. We’re not gate keeping here, we’re just talking about the reality that most people want to play a wide variety of games and that simply wasn’t something you were able to do then. We’re also not saying that’s the case today, things have changed and we should celebrate that.

rbos,
@rbos@lemmy.ca avatar

There was a good selection back then too is what I’m saying. Minecraft. Literally every web based game. It was a fine gaming platform, there was more than enough to keep you busy, if you weren’t picky.

variants,

Well we’re glad it’s better either way even if it was good enough before

rbos,
@rbos@lemmy.ca avatar

Agreed! Way better. I just hate how ‘viable’ is such a moving target. You can always find SOMETHING to dismiss it with. Linux is ‘unviable’ because of some random game that doesn’t work or because of some new feature in the latest whizbang. If that is viable we’ll never be there.

Viable is when it meets one’s needs sufficiently, not when it can do some impossible list of tasks perfectly. Viable isn’t perfect, and I hate it when people pretend it is.

Welt,

Chess is a really good game too

CosmicCleric,
@CosmicCleric@lemmy.world avatar

Chess is a really good game too

You have to play it in full screen mode though. When you play it windowed the wind keeps knocking the board over.

Chobbes,

It definitely wasn’t as good of a situation as it is now, but 10 years ago was actually pretty good for Linux gaming too. At that point Valve was already starting to support Linux and there were a bunch of native Linux releases for games at that time, including lots of indie titles in Humble Bundles and even a good chunk of AAA titles were getting Linux releases (e.g., Bioshock Infinite). If you had specific windows games you wanted to play you could very well have been out of luck, but there was actually a really solid number of native Linux ports at the time. I was personally pretty happy with it and just completely blew away my windows partition at that point. Of course you didn’t have access to the full catalog so to speak, but honestly you probably had access to more titles than on many consoles at the time, which arguably made it a viable gaming platform at the time (I made do with it!) Naturally, like any platform, you may or may not be okay with the selection of games available so it really depends on the person, but I was a pretty happy camper.

CosmicCleric,
@CosmicCleric@lemmy.world avatar

but 10 years ago was actually pretty good for Linux gaming too.

Feels to me like that’s going too far back, to make that statement. I would say the last three/four years, personally.

Chobbes,

It depends what you’re comparing against, but I had plenty of games on Linux when steam released their Linux client. 10 years ago was the start of a huuuge shift. It died down a little bit after a few years (I think a lot of developers stopped caring when steam machines petered out and developers started to decide the Linux releases weren’t worth it), but then after a little while Proton started kicking off and the rest is history. Obviously you didn’t have nearly the selection of windows, but there was still selection.

lolcatnip,

I don’t have an opinion on Linux as a banking platform, but that analogy is bad. An Xbox can play 100% of games made for the same generation of Xbox hardware. If Linux can’t play close to 100% of the games released for PC hardware for at least a few years after the hardware was new, then it’s a substandard option. That was the case until pretty recently.

JTskulk,

Linux plays 100% of games made for Linux.

page,

I was going to say the same thing. Pretty much all the games I was playing at the time worked on Linux 10 years ago, Portal 2, Civ 5 , Kerbal Space program. There were others I’ve forgotten too.

rbos,
@rbos@lemmy.ca avatar

oh man. I played SO much KSP. I think my lifelong love of indie games partly stems from being a Linux user: I tried things I wouldn’t otherwise have tried. Factorio, as well, was a Linux game right out of the box. SNES and NES emulators.

Sure, a lot of the latest and greatest corporate shiny didn’t work (or not without caveats) but there were tons of perfectly good games.

What is ‘viability’? Like, if viability is this Holy Grail state where everything works perfectly, we’re setting ourselves up for failure.

gtaman,

A decade? For me it would be 3 years

SendMePhotos,

Windows 11 is my stopping point. I will use windows 10 until end of life (either myself or the os). BUT knowing windows every other os, the next one after w11 should be OK. Time will tell.

cymor,

Oct 2025

DriftinGrifter,

AS a c/c++ rtos Microcontroller programmer reliant on Platform io i pray they dont eol windows 10 before platformio supports Linux os’s

aksdb,

Maybe not your particular board, but platformio supports Linux for ages. I worked with that 6 years ago (on arch, btw).

DriftinGrifter,

Went back to check and it turns out Microsoft only allows it in vscode and not in vs codium Windows ten might get dropped

rottingleaf,

A decade ago I was already firmly away from playing games under Windows.

World of Tanks, SW:TOR (IIRC), Warcraft III TFT, SW: KotOR I and II, Jedi Academy and Jedi Outcast, X-Wing Alliance, X-Wing vs TIE Fighter, Empire at War, older Paradox games and a few others ran fine for me under Wine. I’m not sure if I had Rome: Total War working back then (definitely ran Medieval II: Total War with a few heavy mods later), I think at some point RTW worked fine. Well, also Galactic Battlegrounds (again Star Wars) and the second Battlefront (again Star Wars). And Battle for Middle-Earth I and II (these are boring), and War of the Ring (that one was and is really good), and some little-known space station manager game from a Russian studio, and likely some other things. Ah, also Star Wars: Rebellion without tactical space battles (would crash on these).

It wasn’t a viable OS for gaming for adults, but for teens with interest in Linux - no problem at all.

Dasnap, in usb formatting
@Dasnap@lemmy.world avatar

Your USB is probably named ‘/’ or ‘~’ so give that a go.

HiddenLayer5, in Accurate?
@HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml avatar

What the fuck the do you have a life question is so offensive! Stop trying to just be edgy in memes!

I’m so sick of these stupid stereotypes that the Linux community has. I’ll have you know that I use both Debian and Fedora and I do not in fact have a life.

Winco, in STOP SCROLLING BROTHER
@Winco@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Alright, I stopped scrolling. Now what? Do I write a disapproving letter to my local politician?

Urist,
@Urist@lemmy.ml avatar

You install Hannah Montana Linux on their cars and their spouses.

name_NULL111653,

Instructions unclear, a local senator’s wife throws a kernel error and won’t boot now… Help.

Coasting0942,

Did you swipe the credit card through her cleavage or ass cleavage?

andrew_bidlaw,
@andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.works avatar

Push a LiveUSB inside her. It’s not rape if you are a sysadmin. Let’s see if you find something’s fishy down there.

WeLoveCastingSpellz,

just insert a “live USB” and troubleshoot inside her

bartolomeo,
@bartolomeo@suppo.fi avatar

But for gods sake don’t install on bare metal

tourist,
@tourist@lemmy.world avatar

you hijack cartoon network’s broadcast and play this meme over it until their lawyers physically beat you to death

cupcakezealot, in Linux users when
@cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

it’s always important to install chrome so google can see the first website you visit before you uninstall is www.firefox com/download

QuazarOmega,

Ah yes, the bait-and-switch strategy

Peter1986C,
@Peter1986C@lemmings.world avatar

The GIF shows a system where generally speaking this is not required (it could have been Firefox instead of Chrome).

catsarebadpeople,

Ok but the joke is that you install Chrome just to install Firefox then uninstall Chrome…

Peter1986C,
@Peter1986C@lemmings.world avatar

Which applies mostly to Windows and maybe to MacOS. You do not download an installer on Linux if the package manager has got you covered.

catsarebadpeople,

Yeah we know but that’s not the joke lol. What’s your deal dude? Explaining jokes to socially inept people is actually pretty boring. I’m out

c0mbatbag3l,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

Nobara came with Firefox, do most distros not?

You999,

Does nobara still include Firefox? They moved to chromium as the default browser in 39 because kiosk mode in Firefox is Bork’d

c0mbatbag3l,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

Oh I haven’t installed 39 yet, 38 came with it out of the box.

WeLoveCastingSpellz,

I installed 38 first and than upgraded to 39 back thab firefox was the default, with the upgrade they didn’t remove firefox and install chrome into my pc so I am hapoy avout that

captain_aggravated,
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

I know Raspberry Pi OS apps with chromium.

AnUnusualRelic,
@AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

But… Firefox is always already installed.

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