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Posts
10
Comments
1,481
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Most laptops will be more or less fully compatible

    If by "most" you mean only the ones over 500 bucks. Chromebooks have almost completely taken over the bottom end of the market (which is more than adequate if you're not gaming) and Chromebooks are not compatible with Linux unless you enjoy getting your hands very dirty.

  • Possibly it's about personality types. I was only going on my own experience. Of always being told by a chorus of experts "Oh no you don't want to do that!" and ending up being terrified to touch anything. When I now know that I usually had nothing to be afraid of, because dangerous things tend to be locked down by design, exactly as they should be.

  • it depends how secure you want your network to be. Personally I think UFW is easy so you may as well set it up

    IMO this attitude is problematic. It encourages people (especially newbies) to think they can't trust anything, that software is by nature unreliable. I was one of those people once.

    Personally, now I understand better how these things work, there's no way I'm wasting my time putting up multiple firewalls. The router already has a firewall. Next.

    PS: Sure, people don't like this take - you can never have enough security, right? But take account of who you're talking to - OP didn't understand that their server is not even on the public internet. That fact makes all the difference here.

  • The fact that you're even saying such things as "time constraints" or "to learn new software" suggests an attitude to computing shared by about 0.01% of the population. It cannot be re-stressed enough to the (sadly shrinking) bubble that frequents this community: the vast majority of people in the world have never touched a laptop let alone a desktop computer. Literally everything now happens on mobile, where FOSS is vanishingly insignificant, and soon AI is going to add a whole new layer of dystopia. But that is slightly offtopic.

    It's a good question IMO. Choosing software freedom - to the small extent that you still can - should not just be about the freedom to tinker, it should also just be easy.

    The answer is Ubuntu or Mint or Fedora.

  • IMO most of the suggestions here are small beer.

    If you want to be very scientific about this, and to calculate cumulative sums of harm, with no discount for the future, then just look for some little-known hydrocarbons corp - it will top the list.

    If you apply a future discount, but no discount (or a small one) for the suffering of non-human animals, then some meat company will probably top the list.

  • Yeah I know all that, but for whatever reason this dumbass domain seems to be the only one I ever see. Personally I'm all in favor of having a respectable ,canonical domain for newbies and occasional users, but this one is not going to cut it.

  • Immutable distros like NixOS don't stop you from tweaking stuff, they just record every tweak centrally, so that you can undo them and do rollbacks.

    Others can confirm that I've got that right. Haven't tried it but the idea sounds great.

  • I would like to have a system when I know what I did, what is opened/installed/activated and what is not

    Story of my life after 20 years on Linux. Maybe we could call it "modification anxiety".

    I believe this is the case for an immutable OS.