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Joined 2 年前
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Cake day: 2023年6月9日

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  • Mint is honestly your best bet. I installed it for my parents on their aging laptop and they’re allergic to the terminal and they’re getting on great with it. Requiring a password for administrative actions is generally a good thing for security but you could disable it (unfortunately the only way I know how is via the terminal!). I’m biased here because I’m a techy person but I’ve used Windows, macOS and Linux professionally for years and I always have to troubleshoot things. Windows, in my experience, has always been worse than the others because while Linux has very technical or terminal-based solutions a lot of the time, Windows official support generally tells you to “just reinstall or restore from a system restore point” which is such overkill for most problems. That or registry edits.




  • One of my primary use cases isn’t covered by this article and that’s a consistent user experience from one terminal emulator to another. I have personal and work devices, and I don’t have control of what terminal emulators I can use on the work device, so tmux is the only way I can work with consistent keybinds and a consistent experience across all terminal emulators with nothing but a single git clone of my dotfiles. Yes I get stuck behind in features but I kind of couldn’t care less about terminal notifications or title renaming (the examples used in the post). I’m always in the terminal, I don’t need notified to come back to a terminal I’m already using.

    If I’m wrong please tell me but it’s worked for me for years without too many issues across tons of terminal emulators from iTerm to gnome-terminal, xfce4-terminal to windows terminal.






  • I don’t provision any two devices exactly the same way, and if I did there’s nothing stopping that provisioning script/tool from changing or becoming out of date over time since I’d only run it once every couple of years. I briefly looked at nixos but as another reply said, the major hurdle was the documentation and trying to get “the right way” to do things. I remember flakes being mentioned but being experimental and there being two other things competing as the solution to the same problem and at that point I lost interest. I moved to fedora for the first time in a decade recently and installed what I needed via dnf. It wasn’t a difficult enough process to justify learning another programming language.







  • I think that’s because they don’t understand or don’t care about the risks. Annoyingly I was in the process of making my own version of this campaign when it launched but I was aiming to explain why someone should care that the os is no longer supported and why its a problem first, then suggesting what to do about it. Options weren’t exclusively Linux but I realise buying a new device isn’t always an option either so some people will absolutely keep using 10. It’s not about getting to 100%, just enough that you can make a difference or keep devices out of landfill.