@wyatt ElysiaOS was toooooooo weebie for me 😂

I guess I am more of an #oldtaku

@jlw_the_jobber

Give me all the waifu and husbando stuffs. Sign me up!

@wyatt @jlw_the_jobber

25 days until I've been on Debian for two years.

@amin @wyatt How does one celebrate this achievement?

@jlw_the_jobber @wyatt

I have no clue, my previous record was one year. Anyone have any ideas?

@rl_dane maybe?

@amin @jlw_the_jobber @wyatt

Well, it's something like:

  • you install Debian when it's had a recent release (like now)
  • you install all the packages you need
  • for packages you need to have more-up-to-date, you install flatpaks
  • you gather the few packages that you need to compile, and compile them,

and then, you just... enjoy the stability. XD

#Debian

@rl_dane @amin @jlw_the_jobber

Compile your first Gentoo install?

@wyatt @rl_dane @amin All roads lead to gentoo 😈
@jlw_the_jobber @wyatt @rl_dane @amin And then right past it. Gentoo betrayed me many years ago and I won't return to a jilted lover again.

@dmoonfire @jlw_the_jobber @rl_dane @amin

That was me with NixOS. But I am trying at again. Not going the Home Manager route. And haven't made a flake yet.(again)

@wyatt @jlw_the_jobber @rl_dane @amin Yeah. NixOS is not for the sane of mind.

Explains why I like it.

@dmoonfire @wyatt @rl_dane @amin or y'all can be like me and head into the mountains, the Alpine mountains ;p

@jlw_the_jobber @dmoonfire @wyatt @amin

Is Alpine really meant to be a fully-fledged desktop distro, though?

@rl_dane @dmoonfire @wyatt @amin It can be. There documentation has pretty thorough guides to set it up to be used as a daily driver. Add Flatpak and all is good.

@jlw_the_jobber @dmoonfire @wyatt @rl_dane

Alpine and Gentoo both sound really nice to me in theory but I'm not sure I could daily drive them in practice. In any case, I'm too happy with Debian to move.

@rl_dane @jlw_the_jobber @amin @dmoonfire @wyatt

You should try it for a couple of months. It’s definitely a learning experience.

@alatartheblue @rl_dane @jlw_the_jobber @dmoonfire @wyatt

Maybe after I graduate this December. I don't wanna mess up my computer this close to the finish line.

@amin @alatartheblue @rl_dane @jlw_the_jobber @dmoonfire

Haha you said the same thing during the spring leading up to summer break. But use what software you want! I just think once you get past the hard part of Gentoo, (installation and navigating USE flag issues/troubling update) you'll be fine and actually like it.

@wyatt @alatartheblue @rl_dane @jlw_the_jobber @dmoonfire

And during the summer, I went from Debian 12 to 13, with plenty of time to work around breakages. :)

@wyatt @amin @alatartheblue @rl_dane @jlw_the_jobber My problem with Gentoo was the other end. I had systems that were working and nice and stable, so I didn't touch them for a year. By then, enough of the Gentoo infrastructure had changed that it was impossible to update to the latest version.

When I asked for help, the only thing I got was "it's your fault not for updating weekly". And it wasn't just one person who told me that.

Sadly, RedHat (well, Mandrake) was the same thing. Thing were working so I didn't need to update it very frequently (it was behind a firewall and limited access), so I didn't. Then RPM file format went from v2 to v4 (I don't remember) and the update couldn't handle it.

That is when I jumped to Debian who has a package format that continued to work even if you didn't touch a machine for a few years. :D

@rl_dane @jlw_the_jobber @amin @wyatt @dmoonfire

Indeed; I definitely wouldn’t run Gentoo on a long-neglected machine or something I don’t intend to update with incredible frequency; that’s exactly Debians use case.

I’m surprised with RHEL you got that answer; you should have been able to step upgrade to get where you needed to be. That’s their enterprise guarantee - we’ll support this pinned version for 10 years, and when you go to upgrade you can get there, though you’ll need to step through the versions you skipped because 10 years of changed.

@alatartheblue @rl_dane @jlw_the_jobber @amin @wyatt This was twenty-something years ago. I don't think RHEL was a thing then. I just don't forgive easily even though its my fault for setting up internal machines and then not touching them unless I have to. :D

@wyatt @amin @rl_dane @jlw_the_jobber @dmoonfire

There’s a use case for that- Debian and RHEL both target it. It’s a great use case, and the one most internal server deploys should target. I’d argue that you made the right choice by sticking Debian on them.

There’s 27495826295 different flavors of linux, each one with different strengths. Trying to use a high-frequency-update-barely-stable distro on a “set it and forget it” server is the path to madness and an easy way to wind up “hating” a specific distro. It’s kind of like saying I hate socket wrenches because when I tried to use one to bash in a 10 penny nail it broke - and that’s where I see a lot of the conversations go off the rails when people are distro-shopping.