I'm curious if "must use browser X" is a deal breaker for many people.
Would you quit a job for forcing a specific browser?
I'm curious if "must use browser X" is a deal breaker for many people.
Would you quit a job for forcing a specific browser?
So my intuition and guesses from what I've heard is that Fedora might be the best for you.
Here are some links:
https://labs.fedoraproject.org/jam/ https://linuxmusicians.com/ https://archive.ph/hYxrO
Not sure if oudated:
https://fedoramagazine.org/configure-fedora-to-practise-and-compose-music/
If you want to use NixOS, the one I recommend elsewhere, I'm not sure what your experience will be whether good or bad. Probably more fiddling, but more flexible/stable in the long run.
Here is a matrix room if you are interested in asking more knowledgable people about that path:
Oh, well when you spoke of convenience I thought it was less likely you had self-hosting in mind ;)
I just want to make sure people to know how easy it is to avoid youtube with the further prooliferation of their enshittification.
Thanks! Do you know if an equialent of this exists for nitter?
Haskell. It might be kind of an odd case though given the different ways.
Probably logseq or Obsidian, but... if you like plain text and really need customization you might go with what I use: emacs + org-roam
Guides
text: https://jethrokuan.github.io/org-roam-guide/
video:
Start Using Org-roam Today | Install, Configure, and Use https://piped.video/watch?v=AyhPmypHDEw
Intuitively, without doing a detailed comparison, I agree that Guix and lisp would make things easier.
Network effects so far has been my reason for not trying Guix sooner along with the free software only... though free software only has also simulatenously pushed me towards it :)
Distrobox, is something, I don't think I'd be too interested in. However I'm probably just annoyed at being forced to use unreproducible docker images all the time and biased against containers because of it.
I'll have to give it a try!
NixOS, and hopefully soon SnowflakeOS which makes it more approachable for more casual users.
Another user mentioned Guix, which I'd like to try soon to compare to NixOS.
It's hard to compete with how much there is in nixpkgs though... as much as I... a professional Haskell programmer... hate to acknowledge the realities of network effects.
Recently a flurry of changes happened at $job, including that we must track time spent on tasks.
I've never had to do that at salary programming jobs before... So not a fan.
It would be interesting to see how this ranking changes if the goal is "very succinct, but not unreadable" or "most idiomatic" rather than the code golf incentive of "any arcane nonsense for 1 less char".
Go sacrifices too much for superficial simplicity
Can confirm. Chooses simplicity in the small over simplicity in the large.
I just never agreed to the terms of my smart TV because their privacy policy is horrid.
Been fine 3 or so years and counting.