Snaps themselves are a GPLd format
Snaps themselves are a GPLd format
Been running Ubuntu LTS releases on all my server VMs for 8 years and haven’t had a single problem. Absolutely solid as a rock. Fantastic support, loads of guides to do anything. Plus you can get 10years of support as a home user with a free Ubuntu Pro subscription.
I’d honestly just go Ubuntu server LTS and learn to configure it through the terminal. It’s not too difficult to setup. NFS and Samba shares.
If more than 0.1% of people do that I’d be flabbergasted
At this point if you use Chrome I think there is something wrong with you.
fortune | cowsay -n -f $(ls -1 /usr/share/cowsay/cows | shuf | head -n 1) | lolcat -f | aha --black
A big reason for owning a gun is protection of property. No one owns FOSS, so you can’t shoot anyone, and that’s no fun at all.
This is an interesting read, even if it is a few years old https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2021/09/examining-btrfs-linuxs-perpetually-half-finished-filesystem/
I gave up on it in in 2016 and it sounded all the same back then too with too many people giving it a pass for unacceptable behavior. I don’t think anything has really changed since.
It was fine for me too, right up to the point that it really wasn’t.
I’ve been burned by btrfs before. Never again. It’s not a good file system, especially for multi disk systems.
I imagine they use it in much the same way as any enterprise. Running servers and workstations, mostly.
F16’s run Kubenetes clusters.
Lots of individual bits of hardware on specialized devices will be running embedded operating systems. QNX is big in automotive for the same reasons it’d work on a rocket.
As someone who worked on a pre-systemd linux system with multiple NICs and needed them all configured automatically from an OS image based on where it was in the rack, I can’t stress enough how good deterministic interface names are.
Booting up a system and each time having different names for each NIC was a nightmare.
Frankly 90+% of what systemd has done is tremendously positive and makes linux a better operating system to use, both for sys admins and end users.
EndeavourOS on my desktop and laptop. Works like a charm. By far the happiest I’ve been with a desktop distro.
On my server VMs I’m running Ubuntu Pro because it’s absolutely impeccably stable, Pro is free and I like the idea of having the option of not upgrading them for 10 years.
All running on Proxmox. I have a few appliance type VMs like opnsense and 3CX and they’re nice and stable too.
Or save yourself a character and just yay
Just because a DE looks sparse doesn’t means it also uses less resources. In imagine KDE would actually run well as it doesn’t need all the bells it offers and is actually a well written performant DE.
Same as any OS, yes
It doesn’t tell you up front that it’s going to break
Probably helps add a certain gravitas.