this post was submitted on 12 Oct 2024
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Nix / NixOS

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Homebrew is the most popular package manager on MacOS, and for good reason. However personally, I believe that Nix is more powerful.

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Can’t put my finger on exactly why but I really struggled with the cadence of the video author’s narration.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Agreed. He's reading his notes while filming and it sounds like he isn't himself convinced of what he's explaining. Really odd.

It would be interesting to hear what you think of the youtuber Sega Lord X. His content is great but his seemingly deliberate intonation ground my gears so much to the point I unsubscribed.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago

Just tried a video and faced the exact same issue. It reminds me of news readers who are reading but don’t actually know the text or what sentence comes next and the cadence and tone is really off from how someone would speak it naturally.

I’m sure their content is top notch but the narration feels hollow and I can’t connect with it.

[–] DetachablePianist 2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I really want to like both nixOS and their nix package manager, but so far I'm not there yet. from a PM perspective, it seems like anything I tried getting from their repos was always way further behind the mac OS homebrew or Debian apt versions.

nixOS is really slick in concept, but has a steep learning curve to get it properly customized as a daily driver. The learned skills don't really translate outside the nix realm either, so I decided it was too much effort for my use case. I love this concept as a way to build reproducable servers or workstations tho, so I'll def be playing with it again.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I have no idea how you're getting packages older than Debian. Unstable is a rolling release and stable has a 6 month release cadence with no LTS. Were you pulling from an old dead repo? If you followed an outdated guide, they probably linked you to an old one.

I do agree that the learning curve is steep and the knowledge is nontransferrable though. In my case, that just encouraged me to unify all my systems onto NixOS at home. Not sure if that's a solution or addiction yet.

[–] uthredii 1 points 2 months ago

anything I tried getting from their repos was always way further behind the mac OS homebrew or Debian apt versions.

Nixpkgs are the most up to date of any package respiratory source

It is likely that you were using the current 'stable' channel that does not have the very latest packages. The 'unstable' channel does have the very latest packages and is what I think most people use.

nixOS is really slick in concept, but has a steep learning curve to get it properly customized as a daily driver. The learned skills don’t really translate outside the nix realm either, so I decided it was too much effort for my use case. I love this concept as a way to build reproducable servers or workstations tho, so I’ll def be playing with it again.

I totally agree, I wish it was easier to learn.