jacob

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 17 points 8 months ago

source: stonetoss

[–] [email protected] 18 points 8 months ago (1 children)

stonetoss is a nazi

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago

NixOS has snapshots built in as well but I've never had to actually use them to recover anything because Nix packages are built in isolation from one another, and their dependencies are declared, so packages can't break each other when installing or upgrading them.

NixOS is also an immutable distro, which prevents accidental bad changes to the system. Tumbleweed is very friendly and stable compared to many other distros out there, but it's still vulnerable to accidental breakage in the same ways most other distros are. I think the cherry on top for the average joe using Nix compared to OpenSUSE, however, is just the fact that the Nixpkgs repository absolutely dwarfs OpenSUSE's.

Luckily, if you prefer to stick with whatever distro you're running already, but want the power of the Nix package manager, you can get the best of both worlds and install just Nix (without NixOS) on any distro.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 8 months ago (2 children)

+1 for Nix. In my case I switched from Opensuse Tumbleweed to NixOS about a year ago. Before NixOS I had spent years distro-hopping fairly regularly just in an effort to find something that was atleast moderately simple to setup/troubleshoot, (I'm no developer, and my Linux technical expertise really only covers the basics) and that would be resilient to the careless tinkering I tended to do in general.

Using NixOS on a daily basis has been a complete pleasure. After experiencing the sane-ness of a declarative system I'll never go back. As of late, NixOS seems to have been growing steadily in popularity, although most of its userbase are experienced developers, businesses, and almost no Linux beginners. This is understandable given its current state and reputation as an advanced distro, but I am of the opinion that--if a GUI software store for nixpkgs and a GUI program for editing the system's configuration options were developed--NixOS could quickly become one of the most desktop user-friendly distros available given its underlying immutability and unrivalled stability in general.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 8 months ago

If you have any additional software which you are looking for FOSS Linux alternatives for, feel free to list them. Your options are much greater than most people coming from Windows expect them to be, and many of us have already spent a lot of time deep down the rabbit hole of finding quality open-source software alternatives, so we can surely point you in the right directions.

[–] [email protected] 27 points 8 months ago (8 children)

NixOS is immutable and highly reproducible, with the ability to rebuild identical systems with a declarative configuration file--including installed packages.

So in the case of multiple public computers, you would only need to create/maintain one configuration file that defines all of the user profiles, permissions, restrictions, settings, software packages, you name it.

It would without a doubt be what i'd choose for a fleet of public library computers. Extremely reliable and easy to setup to prevent tampering or misuse.

 

[–] [email protected] 9 points 9 months ago (3 children)

Another option on Android is NewPipe. Doesn't look as nice as Libretube imo, but it goes to Youtube directly for content which is useful since public piped instances can be a bit unreliable or slow from time to time. (Also on Libretube you have to sign up and re-import your subscriptions whenever you switch instances which can be tedious)

 

(also ft. the hot air balloon i just built)

 
[–] [email protected] 2 points 9 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Very nice! The polished deepslate pillars compliment the amethyst well.

(P.S. While you can only select one cover image per post, you can put as many images as you want in the body section of the post.)

 

I felt that the asymmetry of the first extension (the purple part with green roof in the middle) was a bit too jarring and the support for that structure was questionable looking, so i added another section to even it all out and put an observatory dome on the top so that it didn't look too symmetrical.

 

I added the purple section arching over Dojo Street with a green roof on top. As an added bonus it provides rain cover for the Dojo Street Subway Station entrance below it 👍