Anybody else use Slackware...? Are you as tired as I am of
waiting for a new release? It's starting to get ridiculous.
Hello all,
Anybody else use Slackware...? Are you as tired as I am of
waiting for a new release? It's starting to get ridiculous.
Yeah, I know I could switch to something else, but I don't want
to. Just wish he'd hurry things up a bit, it's been over 4 years
now. Arrrgggghhhhhh.
On 13 Sep 20 21:27:00, Dan Clough said the following to All:
Anybody else use Slackware...? Are you as tired as I am of
waiting for a new release? It's starting to get ridiculous.
Is Slackware the one that doesn't have systemd?
Nick Andre wrote to Dan Clough <=-
Anybody else use Slackware...? Are you as tired as I am of
waiting for a new release? It's starting to get ridiculous.
Is Slackware the one that doesn't have systemd?
That is correct, it is one of the few. Another that I know of is
"MX Linux" which is quite nice, and a fork of Debian called
"Devuan", which I have heard mixed reviews about.
... Gone crazy, be back later, please leave message.
There are more Linux distributions that don't carry systemd besides Slackwa
Devuan and Gentoo are the two big ones that come to mind, but there are als small ones (such as Tiny Core Linux). Knoppix has SystemD but does not use as an init system. Knopper is very vocal about SystemD messing up his tidy distro :-P
gentoo have it default disabled in kernel, but if users or even admins want the trouble it can be enabled, is slackware the one that miss portage from gentoo ?
Richard Falken wrote to Dan Clough <=-
Anybody else use Slackware...? Are you as tired as I am of
waiting for a new release? It's starting to get ridiculous.
Is Slackware the one that doesn't have systemd?
That is correct, it is one of the few. Another that I know of is
"MX Linux" which is quite nice, and a fork of Debian called
"Devuan", which I have heard mixed reviews about.
I think MX linux has ystemD, but you make me doubt.
Devuan is quite ok. It is what I use when I need a Debian-like environment, which is not very often. Still I prefer Slackware. I
have been booting some OpenBSD systems as of late though.
FreeBSD used to have proper jails and great ZFS integration, but I
don't know how great of an advantage it has on those fields these days.
Oh, and OpenBSD has PF. Some people prefers it over Linux packet filtering interfaces.
I messed around with Gentoo only once, about like 15 years ago.
why leave it then ?
Is Slackware the one that doesn't have systemd?
That is correct, it is one of the few.
Is Slackware the one that doesn't have systemd?
That is correct, it is one of the few.
No, it's not, it does have systemd:
https://github.com/Dlackware/systemd
systemd for Slackware. These slackbuilds are provided to compile
systemd on top of Stock Slackware
Is Slackware the one that doesn't have systemd?
That is correct, it is one of the few.
No, it's not, it does have systemd:
https://github.com/Dlackware/systemd
A default installation of Slackware does not use systemd.
A default installation of Slackware does not use systemd.True but that was not the question.
Some people think having a gun is far better than using it.
Is Slackware the one that doesn't have systemd?
That is correct, it is one of the few.No, it's not, it does have systemd:
https://github.com/Dlackware/systemd systemd for Slackware.
These slackbuilds are provided to compile systemd on top of
Stock Slackware
i find it funny that Nick thinks kernel source in gentoo have more secureit holes then any precompiled systems like slackware
Is Slackware the one that doesn't have systemd?
That is correct, it is one of the few.
No, it's not, it does have systemd:
https://github.com/Dlackware/systemd systemd for Slackware.
Are there some significant number of idiots who will do that for any
other reason than having fun and saying "yes, it builds"?
Thats not what I said, but continue the laughs.
fair, i have no more ritter sport left :)
Светлана хочет меня.
What ever?
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What ever?
Tell that to Svetlana and see where that gets you.
i think SPOT on amiga is well designed to know why LATIN-1 is
well choiced
blame 8-bit
we today are limited to 7 bit with multiple problems to solve
oh never mind got a new kernel....
if computers was 32bit from the beginning, keyboard charset would have being solved from the start, we today are limited to 7 bit with multiple problems to solve, HTML works since it can be safely parsed as JSON
maybe i am just older amiga user ?
Guys, what kind of problem are you talking about??
If you code all humans writing symbols to HTML you will have the same situation like now.
HTML will need multiple bytes to define a symbol.
No matter if the HTML charset will be limited to 7 bit or not,
the software must know which symbol have to be displayed for that multibyte sequence.
HTML will need multiple bytes to define a symbol.
same as unicode when its 8 bit charters
programmers dont understand double encodeing problems
the software must know which symbol have to be displayed for that
multibyte sequence.
and unicode solve that much better then html, hmm
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