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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • I remember back in the day running Ubuntu and playing around with python. First I was doing some stuff in python 2 but then I realized python 3 exists and if I learn python I should learn the one that’s relevant for longer (hopefully) so, since I’d installed python 3 I figured python 2 will not be needed anymore so why not remove it. And let’s be extra clean and do a apt-get remove --purge python2.

    I realized my mistake when I saw a bunch of unity-desktop packages being removed I cancelled the removal but a reboot later the machine was truly fucked … Well I decided I might as well reinstall.

    Haven’t had this kind of broken in a while. I don’t think I ever bored any of my arch installs in a way I couldn’t recover from a Liveboot (yes I could have recovered the Ubuntu install but that was in the beginning of my journey and even today reinstalling would probably be quicker)


  • I think the benefit of resolved is that you run a local DNS server and you can do a lot of additional things with that (I think for example avahi hooks into that so you can interact with other machines in your network by their hostname etc.) Also afaik NetworkManager by default can’t do split DNS for example which is nice for VPN.

    I mostly use resolved on my work machine (Ubuntu) and I do use it’s plot DNS feature


  • I’ve been on 16GB of ram on all of my machines for so long … It’s really the sweet spot for everything I do (gaming etc. ) I don’t do media production or anything like that. All that said I’m currently in the market for a new machine and will probably get 32GB “just to be safe” but since my next laptop will probably be a framework I don’t have to make the decision till I actually need the ram and even then I can still decide to get one stick first the other later and the prices scales pretty linearly.

    8GB might still be enough for some web browsing and stuff but apple should not put this little RAM in anything they call professional.

    And before anyone says “you only need that much ram in Windows” well … I don’t and won’t be running Windows ;)


  • I love ThinkPads especially the “good old” ones. Especially for their accessibility of parts and easy repair/upgradability.

    My personal laptop has been a Thinkpad since 2013 (Thinkpad Edge E135 > Thinkpad X220 > Thinkpad x260) and at work we are also given ThinkPads (currently running a T14 gen 3).

    Most ThinkPads I encountered are also sturdy built and not Gleis together or some crap like that. However I recently had an issue with my x260’s power button no longer working and to get it to work I had to replace the top bezels. Well maybe to put it more bluntly I had to get a replacemt bezel and put my Thinkpad into it since to replace the bezel I had to take out almost everything and then put it back in the reverse order. The mere fact that I managed to do it and there are officiall step by step instructions on how to (hmm) are a big upside of ThinkPads. But like others have said it used to be even better.

    Well long story short: I’ve recently preordered a framework 13 amd while I honestly would have preferred a “Thinkpad black” Chassis framework just seems to have the right idea to me.


  • Smartphones have been “good enough” for a while now. Enough power and battery to do all the things needed for enough time before running out of battery.

    IMHO there are 2 reasons we still regularly upgrade.

    1. “Obsolescence” wether it would be perceived new hardware features or just new software not being available
    2. Use/breakage (I include batteries dying in that) with no reasonable way to replace parts

    I’ve had a few phones over the years some of them I “legitimately” just broke (one had a cracked mb after a bike accident) I broke my second to last phone trying to replace the battery (thought I would be able to, broke the screen). The fact that everything is glued down and made to not be replaceable irked me so much that my current phone is a Fairphone. Replacing the battery takes 1 minute and requires no tools. Replacing the screen takes like 5 min and 8 screws. I plan on using this phone for at least 5 years more if possible. But I understand not everybody can shell out 600 dollars for an “OK” phone.


  • Nothing. Also everything.

    You can probably do most of not all of the things I do on Linux on a regular basis on windows just as well. But at this point I feel like I have a reverse “Windows is the default” effect going on since for me Linux has been and is the default for over 10 years.

    When I start work in the morning I turn on my Linux laptop to ssh into some Linux servers (and RDP to the occasional windows servers/desktops).

    After work I play games on my Linux handheld or do some work on my Linux desktop. Maybe move some files on my Linux Nas.

    Like I said I could probably do all of this on windows. It would be a major change and in would have to relearn some things in addition to figuring out how to do some stuff on windows that I just never do. But at this point why even bother. There are a lot of ideological reasons to move to Linux there might be some technical reasons on either side but I just don’t have any pull to use windows unless I need to (some special program/firmware updater whatever) for which I do have an install hanging around, which I boot once in 6months or so