

Technically, Alpine Linux is Linux, sans GNU. Perhaps it can be called musl/Linux or busybox/Linux.
what are you doing in my lemmy profile


Technically, Alpine Linux is Linux, sans GNU. Perhaps it can be called musl/Linux or busybox/Linux.


i use mpv btw


Mooshroom is the only one I can think of right know, I think their meat would taste like standard cow meat but embedded with mushroom flavor or something like that.
Oh! Also could SCP-999 taste good? It’s like a blob of orange jello from what I recall. I wouldn’t want to eat it but it would probably taste good.


No, I haven’t.


Competition for most humble and selfless person. Yeah, I’d win.


i run sudo xbps-install -Su whenever i remember to, and flatpak update whenever there’s a new Krita version
Honestly I didn’t use it for very long, and while I liked the customization, I didn’t like the Plasma apps as much as Linux Mint’s apps.
It would have been nice to know about that, I already heard about it before but only after I’d switched to Void anyway. Maybe one day if I try NixOS again I will use it.
I mean like apt search or pacman -Ss
NixOS also doesn’t show what packages were updated after an update, and doesn’t show which version they changed to, which is slightly annoying.
To be cringe is to be free
The answer is simple: when I used Debian, I was just starting out with Linux and didn’t mess with systemctl at all. It was an ok beginner experience (I’d already used Mint before trying Debian, so I was at more of an intermediate level) but I probably wouldn’t like it as much nowadays.
I like the idea of using different software for different things, why do systemd timers exist when there’s already crontab, for example?
Meanwhile, I mostly used Arch on my server where I had to deal with all the systemd stuff, which was rarely useful for my purposes.
I can handle it but I wanted a more traditional package manager so I could search the repos from the command line without relying on external tools, so I went back to Void Linux after a year and a half of using NixOS. Also, I tried a lot of those before even knowing about NixOS.
You can’t just say “perchance”.


Like nearly as fluent except when I get lazy and stop thinking of “fancy” words to write. English has a lot of fancy words: vocabulary synonymous to other elements of the lexicon. I don’t know those types of words in Portuguese lol.
I can understand movies fine but prefer captions regardless of the language being spoken unless I am in a very quiet room.
I’m brazilian and my family thinks I am really smart for knowing another language but really I just watched YouTube when i was a kid so uh yeah I’m not sure how fluent I actually am since I’ve only met other second language speakers.
I “tried” installing gentoo once but i didn’t know what a tarball was at the time so i can’t really rate it. the documentation did help me a lot with OpenRC on artix though.
i did hear nixOS is also source-based in a way, but i’m not sure on the details.
I was curious
Gen Y are Millennials


I used to use Neovim until I got tired of it and switched to Helix. I tried Emacs for a bit but turns out that Helix does everything I need it to do without any extra configuration.
And of course I use caps:swapescape because I am not reaching all the way to the Escape key all the time.
They shut down third party apps. Now I like it better here :3