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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 2nd, 2023

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  • Honestly, this is a pretty good example of why this isn’t an inherent Linux problem. It’s a problem of using any OS that isn’t popular enough to be supported by manufacturers. More people using Linux would cause problems like this to stop happening.

    I realize that’s a distinction without a difference to a lot of people, and that’s totally okay. I’m not saying that’s wrong, but it matters to me that the benefits of Linux are specific to the OS, while most of the problems are not.


  • I tried out Gentoo for a while, and just using binaries for the web browser and office suite made the compile times a complete non-issue. The problem I had that made me give it up was that when there is software you want that isn’t in the official repos there are a thousand different ways of getting it, and all of them suck. Overlays are supposed to be the solution for that, but man that experience was just awful.

    I tried all kinds of things, but in the end all the options basically boiled down to risking breakage, maintaining my own packages, or not using emerge at all, which just feels like it’s defeating the whole purpose of being on Gentoo in the first place.


  • Look, if you love declarative systems that’s cool. I’m genuinely happy for you that you have much better options now. That can only be good.

    That being said, they only solve problems that I don’t have. I do not care even the tiniest amount about whether a system is declarative or not, and I’m definitely not going to go out of my way to seek them out. If you want to call that “out of touch” then so be it.












  • Yes, my “only” point is that analog has less maintenance. If you want anything to last more than a decade, maintenance is the only thing that matters. How long will something last is the same question as how hard is it to maintain. They are the same thing.


  • You cannot possibly be this stupid. I refuse to believe it. If you stuff a vinyl record in a cabinet for a century, you’ll still have a mostly functional recording. If you stuff an SSD in a cabinet for a decade you’ll probably just have a paperweight at the end, and that’s comparing 70 year old analog storage technology to the current standard of digital storage. This is a consistent pattern throughout all of history. Analog storage is just far, far more robust to data loss. All the error-correction in the world doesn’t help if you aren’t actually running that error-correction constantly forever. That is the entire point I’ve been trying to make this whole time that everyone just keeps ignoring to spout non sequiturs about how digital data transmission works at me.