Spyke
itsJoellereply
lemmy.world

When I was first starting out it felt like that. Granted, when I first used Linux it was in 2011.

I returned to Linux three years ago, and I only fucked up royally twice. Granted, I didn’t know how to fix what I did at the time (I removed my only account from sudoers).

5

I managed to ruin Debian stable my first go in 2015. Don't ask how. I still don't know

4

Every time you boot up there would be a brand new file system you'd have to learn until bricked your device.

5
Johannoreply
feddit.org

Ah I see you are talking about nixos.

The dark souls of operating systems.

You can configure everything. But everything can turn into a tedious process of figuring out dependencies and how a program works.

3

nixOS links cool I just struggle wrapping my head around having everything in a single config or however they do it

2

Just did this with my main laptop. Was running mint with zero issues and yesterday decided to wipe it and install endeavor

5

A bad influence I see. But in all seriousness that's awesome. I liked arch a lot when I was using it.

3
lemmy.ml

I need you to know you are not wrong. But also a part of me wants to live one foot off the merry go round. EVEN THOUGH I absolutely know I shouldn't.

7

in that case I suggest keeping general files (as in not apps, except for stuff like a steam library) on a separate drive or partition from root, that's more or less what I was doing when I was distro hopping

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You reached the end

The imp of the perverse is calling | Spyke