Lettuce eat lettuce

Always eat your greens!

  • 9 Posts
  • 494 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: July 12th, 2023

help-circle


  • Immutable distros are great for applications where you want uniformity for users and protections against users who are a little too curious for their own good.

    SteamOS is a perfect use case. You don’t want users easily running scripts on their Steam Decks to install god knows what and potentially wreck their systems, then come to Valve looking for a fix.

    Immutable distros solve that issue. Patches and updates for the OS roll out onto effectively identical systems, and if something does break, the update will fail instead of the system. So users will still have a fully functional Steam Deck.

    If you’re not very technical, or you aren’t a power user and packaged apps like Flatpaks are available for all your software, then go for it. I prefer to tinker under the hood with my computers, but I also understand and except the risk that creates.

    Immutable distros are a valuable part of a larger, vibrant Linux ecosystem IMO.



  • Hearing from “both sides” and coming to some compromise/middle ground only works if the following is true:

    1. Both parties are acting in good faith.
    2. The viewpoints expressed are close enough that they don’t require a total departure from one’s current viewpoint.
    3. The disputed topic doesn’t have a obvious or clear correct answer.

    The problem is, at least in the US, none of these are true for right wingers and even many “centrists.”

    You cannot talk to somebody and try to find common ground if they don’t believe in statistical studies by government agencies, they don’t believe in scientific studies by major universities and research institutions, and don’t care about the rights and protections for minority groups.

    The older members of my family are almost all conservatives, MAGA supporters, and fundamentalist Christians.

    They genuinely believe that Evolution is a myth and the Earth was created 6000 years ago. They believe that illegal immigrants are invading this country and that Democrats are secretly allowing them to. They don’t believe humans have any effect on climate change. They don’t think Covid was anything more than a common cold that the government used as an excuse to try to control people. They don’t believe in vaccines.

    I find Lemmy to be very refreshing. I get news from a diverse collection of Leftists sources. Anarchists, statists, weak socialists like the AOC/Bernie types, government studies, independent guerrilla journalists, Communists, Mutualists, Marxists, etc.

    But I have no interest in further “diversifying” by adding right wing “sources.”

    Cookies can taste good with many different ingredients, but no cookie tastes good with horse poop.



  • I’d give Nobara a try. I’ve been using it for about 2 years and it’s been pretty seamless. Already comes with a bunch of Linux gaming related software, like Steam, Lutris, Proton-up, etc.

    It also has a bunch of gaming performance patches automatically installed.

    If you’re not technically inclined at all and want a console style experience, Bazzite is probably your best bet.

    All that said, most mainstream distros will give you a fine gaming experience, you just might have to do some manual fiddling and installing yourself depending on the distro and the games you’re playing.





  • And yet, this AI expert stated that we don’t know why the AI designed the chip in specific ways. There’s a difference between understanding the rough mechanism for something, and understanding why something happened.

    Imagine hiring an engineer to design something, they hand you a finished design; they cannot explain what it is, how they actually designed it, how it works, or why they made the specific choices they did.

    I never made the false equivalency you claimed I did, and you also never addressed my second criticism, which is telling.









  • history | grep command you’re searching for

    That will return all commands you’ve typed that contain that keyword. Helps if you remember part of a command, but can’t remember the specific flags or the proper format.

    If there are common commands that you use over and over, turn them into a Bash script and name the script something descriptive.

    I do that for long commands that I don’t want to type out, like my whole system update workflow: sudo apt update -y && sudo apt upgrade -y && sudo flatpak update -y

    I saved that as a Bash script and called it “update.sh” then I saved it in my home directory. Now whenever I want to do a full system update, I just type ./update.sh and it asks me for my password, then updates my whole system without me having to do anything else. I do this with several different tasks like my remote Ansible server updates.

    Other than that, you can buy/make a linux command cheat sheet with the most common commands. Keep it with you or next to your computer. Look at it whenever you need a refresh.