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Alcohol
Do you have a plan on how you’d do version controlling on Arch? It’d be annoying to upgrade, something breaks, and you can’t easily roll back.
The university library I’m most familiar with has Windows, Mac, and Ubuntu desktops available.
This checks out. I love fedora but I hate my life.
I’d just like to be completely free of Google’s app distribution infrastructure if possible. I’ll have to look into unobtanium. I haven’t heard of that one previously.
There’s no proprietary apps on F-Droid. It doesn’t even have Signal which is open source.
I’ve long considered making this switch from iPhone to an ungoogled Android device. What always bothered me is still basically having to install proprietary apps from a Play Store adjacent source. Like the Aurora store is basically just the Play Store logged under someone else’s account. I know you can side load but that’d be a pain to maintain updates. Wish there was like a Flathub-like store on Android I could use instead.
Sounds exactly like the Snap version of Fedora Silverblue. Which is actually pretty great.
Wait, flatpak works on PostMarketOS?
Debian 12 uses Wayland by default.
Only if they’re trying to completely kill their own project lol.
Yep. I basically always use the same one. So it’s beat to hell, but it works fine. It was a pretty cheap one to begin with.
None. I just use a kitchen knife and wash it afterwards.
My point was that there’s way easier versions of Linux to use than Debian. Using Debian has a learning curve associated with it that’s more difficult than simply using their website.
If you can’t figure out something as simple as how to navigate their website, you probably shouldn’t be using Debian as a distro anyway.
Whoa man. Watch it with the slurs.
EndeavourOS is my preference. I appreciate that they don’t really modify the Arch experience in any annoying way. Manjaro seems to always break shit. Plus the EOS forums are amazing.
I love that Debian exists even if I don’t personally enjoy using it. It’s a great baseline for others to build off of and it’s rock solid reliable if that’s your top priority. I just struggle to make it work for my workflows. I’m sure plenty of people would say the same thing about Arch too. I don’t think either deserve a negative reputation.
Yeah there’s some applications I refuse to install just for this reason lol. Some don’t take too long, but bigger ones can take forever. You could always let it run in the background if you’re really determined.
GSConnect works great for GNOME too.