Very nice! I’ll keep using unison for now as I need something stable and reliable, but I’ll keep an eye on the project and may switch to it eventually.
- 0 Posts
- 9 Comments
Thank you for the kind explanation, I did not know about this. I’ll look into it, you never know when something may become useful!
Same, never saw either a server or a desktop running alpine.
Fedora is kind of rolling, but not really.
You’ll have frequently daily updates of 800mb but also have packages being updated months after developer release. It’s a good stable system with pretty modern software versions.
However, keep in mind that fedora has versions. As in Debian you’ll have to upgrade from one fedora version to the other, but I don’t think LTS is as wide as in Debian.
ranzispa@mander.xyzto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Will I survive the Linux CLI if I only switch because I'm a student and Arch distro speed?
11·1 month agoYes, I’m tired of all this distro thing. Let’s stop giving distro advice to new users. Tell them to just pick any as it doesn’t influence their experience in the slightest.
ranzispa@mander.xyzto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Will I survive the Linux CLI if I only switch because I'm a student and Arch distro speed?
21·1 month agoI mean, Arch is a pretty nice place to start for someone who is interested in understanding how the system works and to get a glimpse of what is system administration. But if that is not the objective, and the person just wants to use the pc normally, then I guess any other distribution will be fine. At this point I feel there really is no point to all these different distributions. When Ubuntu came out it was the great new thing simple to use and friendly to new users. When Mint came out it was the brand new Ubuntu even better than before. But at this point… Pretty much any distribution is usable, do we really need so many?
There’s some 5 arch based that came out past year, God knows how many Debian based and so on. I feel this has become futile. Just pick any distribution, it will be fine: arch may break a bit more often than the other ones, provided you can set it up; pick any derivative if you don’t want to spend time setting it up. Debian may have packages that are a bit outdated, pick any derivative if you want a bit newer packages. Fedora will be in between. Suse will also be in between.
That’s pretty much it: do you want something extremely stable? Debian. Do you want the latest update few hours after they’ve been pushed by dev? Arch. None of these constraints? Literally any other distribution.
I thought it was mostly Argentinians

Not sure about this, as it is not developed for this purpose. You may take a look at zotero and make a folder/tag per magazine to group them.