I think that a Marxist society should allow for 0 proprietary software, and instead support for everything in free and open source decentralized technology.

  • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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    21 year ago

    Is there a strong reason why someone would move away from a ‘beginner-friendly’ distro? Is it mainly wanderlust?

    • relay
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      51 year ago

      I’m in debian because it uses less ram.

      I’ve played with alpine linux for the wonderlust of seeing if I can work with all of the alternative smaller code bases for the theoretical stability it provides.

      Why use bash when you can use ash?

      Why use the unauthorized escalation bugs of sudo, when you can use doas?

      Why use all of the gnu tools of stallman when you can use the smaller version of those tools with busybox?

      Why use the garganuan sprawling systemd when openrc has a much smaller codebase and fewer vulnerabilities?

      • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
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        41 year ago

        I have to say I’m a fan of light (lite?) software.

        I can’t tell you how pissed off I was when browsers switched to infinite ram. One day they were capped at using ~4gb ram and the next, I need a new machine.

        In general, I just prefer the idea of only using enough resources to do what I need a program to do. Options are great, but e.g. with a word processor all I need is stability, footnotes, a few tags, grammar/spell check, and track changes. A few other features are nice to have but almost all the rest is unnecessary bloat and bugs, for me.

        • relay
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          21 year ago

          I was able to run LMDE (linux mint deiban edition) on a 3 gb Imac with libreoffice installed by default, I don’t know if I’d still reccomend that but it would freeze if I had too many tabs open