💾 Archived View for midnight.pub › posts › 712 captured on 2021-11-30 at 20:18:30. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
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As a Linux user, I have now been using macOS for some time now. I find that macOS has pretty much everything that I could ask from an operating system, even a decent package manager through Brew.
What operating systems do you use?
What, if anything, would sell me back on Linux? :)
Arch (fast, easy, minimal) + GUIX package management on top because I like the way the system is a sea of links and breaks convention from the LHS whilst being completely compatible with it.
Imagine being able to rollback package installations at a whim. GUIX is really fun, try it!
So I use :
Maybe next year, I will change pro laptop and could not stay on Arch for this for some professional commodities.
What, if anything, would sell me back on Linux? :)
Privacy.
1. being in control of your system
I use the mainstream versions of Windows, Mac, Linux, Android and iOS. By a matter of choice but also for work (making games for main platforms).
I'm intrigued on OS/Distributions/Platforms like BSD, Chrome book OS, Raspberry PI OS, Pico 8... Sadly I don't have that much time to experiment like years before, but always open to learn something cool :)
~kijetesantakalu wrote (thread):
I currently use EndeavourOS because it was easy to setup, but i don't really like it. I tried out Void Linux and it's where my heart lies. I love everything about it, but I can't justify deleting and spending days reinstalling every little thing i have on my pc already
At home I use Debian GNU/Linux exclusively. With just a tiling window manager (i3 or sway). I have toyed with other stuff:
I absolutely need to have emacs and bash running, everything else is a second thought.
At dayjob I have to deal with windows10 and I hate it. But then --- right after DOS I went for IBM mainframes and DEC/VMS equipment, several Unix flavours. I sort of skipped Windows. I never got the hang of it and I honestly don't miss it.
I'm on Windows now. I want to like Linux, and prefer it for development, but it's nothing that I can't do through WSL. At this point I get the best of both worlds: software compatibility and functionality, but also all the development boons. Still drive Arch on my laptop, though.