this post was submitted on 06 Oct 2023
942 points (95.9% liked)
linuxmemes
20880 readers
3 users here now
I use Arch btw
Sister communities:
- LemmyMemes: Memes
- LemmyShitpost: Anything and everything goes.
- RISA: Star Trek memes and shitposts
Community rules
- Follow the site-wide rules and code of conduct
- Be civil
- Post Linux-related content
- No recent reposts
Please report posts and comments that break these rules!
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Well the solution here is to just use the superior distro, naturally.
This post will surely upset nobody.
Finally, puppy linux is getting the recognition it deserves
I ordered something from someone awhile back and it came with a free flash drive in the shape of a credit card. It had pictures of puppies on it so naturally it's a puppy linux drive now.
This is entirely irrelevant but hopefully someone gets a smile out of it.
Wait, what?
Thin, credit-card-sized USB drives are a popular promotional gimmick because they have a practical use but also have a large surface area for promoting your brand. Most often given out as vendor gifts.
Weird, but interesting!
If you donate to the FSF, you get a member card with pre-installed Linux.
and GNU?
I think you mean Hannah Montana Linux.
Puppy ftw
Puppy's awesome. I've used it on a laptop so old I had to install a bootloader in the MBR so it would boot from USB. It ran like a dream.
Red Hat 5.0 for lyfe.
Kernel 2.0.36 represent! ✊
When did TempleOS start supporting .deb files?
Agreed. Debian Linux is just a children distro with a fibonacci logo that god created.
You're right! If a deb file exists then surely it's in the AUR. ABS will repackage it seamlessly for you and then install it directly with Pacman.
Btw I use Arch
TRIGGERED
Linux mint ftw
BRB. Sharpening my teeth.
is there a way to make it work like a rolling release of sorts? i'd want to use debian, but i don't want to stay with old packages and wait 2 years for an update
You could use debian testing. It's a somewhat "rolling-release" model. You will get more up to date packages with more stability too.
You could also use unstable, but I wouldn't recommend it personally.
Edit: if you really need the most up to date version of some packages, you can pin them to use the unstable repo. This would be a pretty reasonable solution.
You could just go with Debian unstable. I rarely ran into issues while running it in a rolling release style.
Debian testing might also work for you. But it will have a freeze window before each release.
As will have debian unstable. That's the way it goes, for a few months every few years it slows down until the new stable gets released. Testing is just 10 days after unstable to avoid the biggest bugs.
Never had big problems with debian unstable in 15 years though, as long as you use apt-listbugs
sparky Linux is based on Debian and it has stable and rolling release
Most of such packages, be it deb rpm or really whatever, have their AUR entry, install and run fine on Arch.
Savage. 💣