• 6 Posts
  • 269 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 10th, 2023

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  • I can’t wrap my head around this comment. You think playing video games is a wealthy people hobby? Or are you saying the author of the article is a wealthy person who doesn’t work? And he has to remind us that becuase that’s apparently something rich people do all the time that I missed? Or is it that only wealthy people have time to read these articles? Did I miss elon musk promoting path of exile or something what does he have anything to do with this?

    The real answer doesn’t make sense neither, the article makes no mention of how much money the game has made, it’s just a surface level review.






  • Don’t get mint if you’ll get a remotely capable laptop or plan to game on it. Its so called ‘modern’ desktop environment (wich still defaults to the old X window system) feels awful to use imo and while the ‘retro’ ones are better there’s no point in using them on a new laptop. Choose a distro that ships with KDE, GNOME, or a wlroots based desktop environment.

    I’ve also had driver issues with it that didn’t happen with Ubuntu or arch.

    Pretty much every distro has a caveman compatible installer.



  • It always puzzles me why they chose the one distro without systemd to base this on and are now trying to add it themselves.

    Also I have thoughts about this:

    Move sudo to community
    At present, sudo is in the main repository, which requires us to provide security support for 2 years. Upstream sudo does not provide an “LTS” lifecycle, so this requires either performing security upgrades during the maintenance lifecycle, or backporting security fixes by hand.
    Benefit to Alpine
    Prior to the creation of the security team, there was an unofficial preference to push doas as the preferred pivot tool for Alpine. This reinforces that messaging. Additionally, we do not have to support sudo for a 2 year lifecycle, since there are no LTS branches for it.

    How often does sudo have security vulnerabilities that it’s worth moving to a lesser used tool whose vulnerabilities are less likely to be discovered against your security team’s wishes? What do all the other distros do?