

I’m a senior IT type. My work laptop is Debian.
We like good pastries, coffee, good booze and feeling appreciated. Go make friends with the senior IT types and the help desk manager. Trust me it’s with it.
I’m a senior IT type. My work laptop is Debian.
We like good pastries, coffee, good booze and feeling appreciated. Go make friends with the senior IT types and the help desk manager. Trust me it’s with it.
Also…
Oh if your looking for a distro? Mint is a great entry point (and even can support crusty old graybeards as well).
Fair. And short of someone publishing a study I doubt we will ever know what the best entry point is. So, advocate the atomic distros, I’ll advocate the crusty old dinosaur that moves (slightly) faster then molasses. And someone else reading this thread can recommend one of the rolling distros. At the end of the day to me the importance bit is that someone is interested in Linux as a whole.
Also a lot harder to wrap your head around atomic distros when your first playing with Linux. Windows > a traditional distro (even arch) is a lot more similar then making the switch to an immutable distro.
And to be clear. I’m not going to say Debian is not without it’s flaws. It is the system you choose if all you care about is stability. Case in point, I work with Linux day in and day out for my job, the absolute last thing I want to do is tinker with my laptop when I’m not at work - so I picked Debian. For me, the absolute stability is the most important thing - for others the fact that software can come preconfigured or is just old will be deal breakers.
As for Ubuntu vs Debian - ultimately they are similar. However Ubuntu has made some (IMO) choices I dislike (eg snaps).
It’s a different family then what you have been playing with, but if you want “just works and not fancy” - Debian.
It won’t have the latest and greatest software (security patches sure but nothing else). You trade that for stability.
While I knew some of this, I will happily say I did not know it all. Thank you for taking the time to do this level of info dump.
Honestly. I have no idea. They generally all do the same basic thing. Get one that has features you like at a price you can live with.
Aw. I did not realize Bukele was also authoritarian. That was the missing part.
Thanks!
It takes 5 mins to install and a few weeks to get comfortable using it. Then you wonder how you ever lived without it.
I’ll be the first to admit that I’m not following every nuance about the deportations - but can someone point me in the direction to understand why El Salvador? Why there?
There is a Cascadia Independence movement but it’s not widely talked about.
I mean. Imo that’s only fair. Sure they are getting one of the world’s larger economics (WA state + Portland), they are also getting Montana, Idaho, and a good chunk of the Dakota’s…
Hell. Don’t take the whole thing. Just move the boarder to the 45th parallel as opposed to the 49th.
Good that it’s working (kinda).
So it sounds like your DNS resolver is botched. Id dig into the doc on how systemd-resolverd should look and see if you can’t rectify what went wrong (the arch wiki should have examples of what a default config looks like).
I don’t remember if arch uses cloud init configs but it being reset at boot feels like a cloud init config problem.
Let us know the following
If ping works for: localhost, your gateway, 1.1.1.1, google.com.
The contents of your /etc/resolve.conf
If you have a tun0 interface (ifconfig or ip a
)
You said you uninstalled tailscale. Are there any running process or active systemd units laying around?
See I just like LMDE. Everything works without fiddling (I want my OS to be boring). And if I feel spicy - backports.