I’m a different person from who you were talking to before. I’m just trying to understand why you feel they aren’t supporting Linux.
I’m a different person from who you were talking to before. I’m just trying to understand why you feel they aren’t supporting Linux.
Wait, so what is this supposed situation we’re currently in?
I’m struggling to understand your version of reality.
I switched aid after windows 10 was launched. It was kind of tough in the beginning, but after a couple years any and all concerns about this or that not working or how to do something on Linux had disappeared.
Nowadays the os feels like a powerful tool that can do anything I need, and never gets in the way. It’s truly a pleasure to use.
So I guess id say that there is light at the end of the tunnel, even if the transition seems hard at times.
Devs who don’t use git and devops properly are infuriating to work with. I’d recommend getting started with that ASAP.
You’ve forgotten about exFAT my dude. Nothing uses FAT32 anymore. All your usb drives will be exFAT.
The torrents include the normal http download URLs and fetch from them too. Official torrents never die.
dd’ing /dev/sdx will copy all IDs
dd’ing /dev/sdx1 will keep UUID but PARTUUID will remain the same on the destination
Filesystems are incredibly antiquated, and while I don’t agree with Kent’s attitude, it is very important in the long run that filesystems catch back up.
As it stands just about any enterprise system you can poke a stick at is rolling their own customised file storage system, with a traditional filesystem typically being a misshapen dead weight sitting somewhere in the middle of it - existing because it’s the only thing the kernel can integrate with.
It is pretty important that this trend reverses, and bcachefs was a big step in the right direction. Unfortunate that Kent is the way he is.