• Starski@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    I had someone ask me what os I used, then when I said Linux he went “oh you could only go 10 minutes without saying you used Linux huh” and I’m just like dude you literally asked, wtf do you want from me

    • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      Without knowing your dynamic or their tone:
      They probably just wanted to poke fun and baited you into setting it up. It’s kinda like updog or ligma.

      Of course, it could also be ignorance, or malice, but personally, I don’t randomly ask people what OS they use unless I expect them to even understand that question. Their reply suggests they are well aware that you’re using Linux, so ignorance is unlikely, and if they knew your answer and didn’t want to hear it, they probably wouldn’t ask.

    • unknown1234_5@kbin.earth
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      2 days ago

      my friends do shit like that all the time like you were just saying “windows does stupid thing” and all I said was “linux does this instead they should be doing that on windows” and immediately the neckbeard with fedora gifs start flying

  • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Guy in the bathroom stall: … I use Mac!

    Guys and gals pissing in the hallway, lobby, parking lot, bushes, behind the building and inside the office: … we use windows 11!

      • Anivia@feddit.org
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        1 hour ago

        Mac isn’t really a walled garden in the sense iOS is without jailbreak. You can install unsigned code out of the box, have similar Admin privileges as on windows (but not as powerful as a superuser on Linux), and it integrates very well into an otherwise non-Apple household. You can use quickshare with android phones or windows PCs instead of using apple airdrop for example, which is something iOS users can only dream of

        I prefer hackintosh over Linux on my Thinkpad, even though battery life is slightly worse (but still way better than it was out of the box with windows)

        • anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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          28 minutes ago

          There is su on MacOS, I just didn’t ever need it for the kinds of dev work I did.

          It runs bash(or zsh) and most of the rest of the things you’d use in a dev environment and (before docker was so popular) it was pretty easy (maybe 15-20 minutes from scratch with makes) to set up a new Mac to mimic a Unix server environment for local dev work.

          • Anivia@feddit.org
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            6 minutes ago

            Yeah, I meant unlike with Linux you can’t change certain core functionality of your OS. Stuff like just entirely replacing the window manager for a different one. You can do a lot of powerful stuff with kernel extensions, but even those are limited (and apple made it a lot more complicated to install kernel extensions on Apple Silicon compared to how it worked on Intel Macs)

    • tetris11@feddit.uk
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      2 days ago

      He thinks it’s a bathroom stall, but he’s actually shitting in a box with no doors

    • Supervisor194@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Same here, I got hired as a “webmaster” at a place that had been using some Yahoo web services for their website and they had dialup Internet accounts for everybody in the office. For the same money I got them access to a fractional T1 and set up a server on an old 486 gathering dust in the back room. We served up their webpages from in-house. They thought I was a god, I was just a big fat resume-padded liar who stayed up reading Usenet all night lol. Those were the days and I’ll never forget that distro:

        • mech@feddit.orgOP
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          1 day ago

          I wish there was one that’s up to date today. I’d pay good money for that.
          If you install Slackware now, you can’t open linuxquestions.org (the official support forum) because the Firefox version is too old for the Capcha. If you then do slackpkg upgrade-all and reboot, it won’t boot cause you forgot to point the bootloader towards the new kernel. Things like that can really bounce you off the distro.

        • teft@piefed.social
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          1 day ago

          My first slackware install guide was a three inch thick book so 36 pages is like the absolute bare minimum.

    • qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website
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      2 days ago

      Slack got me through college on an ancient (even at the time) ThinkPad 600e. Good times!

      I had a suite of scripts to log in to the university Linux cluster, download the kernel source and out-of-tree modules (required for the PCMCIA WiFi adapter), compile it, and rsync it back to my laptop.

    • SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      Me too! Slackware 1.0 installed by floppy disk … so much faff the first time to get X to load, and then the only thing I could do with it was to run xeyes.

      Emacs was 5 floppies, the C compiler was about 11.

  • stupidcasey@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Fattest, loneliest, smelliest, basement livingest mofo this world has ever seen:

    Struts up.

    Squeezes right between.

    Forces them to the adjacent urinals.

    Adjusts glasses taped together.

    Clears voice through braces that should have been removed years ago.

    In an authoritative weezy voice.

    I use LFS by the way.

  • Lena@gregtech.eu
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    2 days ago

    I use Ubuntu and no I’m not going to switch to mint. I use Debian on the server though.

  • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I use debian bt… ouch. my laptop keyboard is burning my fingers because I’m too stupid to install the correct drivers and my laptop has started overheating.

  • infinitevalence@discuss.online
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    2 days ago

    eh, I used to use slackware, then moved to gentoo, and then to manjaro, arch based but low maint = less tweaking time more game time.