Notices by raptor (raptor@ryona.agency)
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raptor (raptor@ryona.agency)'s status on Tuesday, 11-Oct-2022 12:26:16 JST raptor @D00B @MisterRogersSnapped @bot I didn't take the vaccine because of the deus ex human revolution bait and switch mission with the chinese aug update -
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raptor (raptor@ryona.agency)'s status on Wednesday, 05-Oct-2022 14:56:29 JST raptor @ShinobuRespecter @grumbulon mumu
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raptor (raptor@ryona.agency)'s status on Sunday, 02-Oct-2022 12:59:21 JST raptor @ryo @xianc78 my point is if you have a decade of linux experience arch is nothing hard to use. You said you don't consider arch to be advanced, and then you proved you have over 20 years of general linux experience. I would consider that point to be proven. -
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raptor (raptor@ryona.agency)'s status on Sunday, 02-Oct-2022 12:48:19 JST raptor @ryo @xianc78 if you started linux since XP days thats a looooong time that teaches you concepts that help you across every distro. -
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raptor (raptor@ryona.agency)'s status on Sunday, 02-Oct-2022 12:46:10 JST raptor @ryo @xianc78 So you used linux since 2005 and have no issue with arch? Thanks for proving my point. People that gravitate towards Ubuntu and Mint can barely operate Windows and don't have all that advanced knowledge. -
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raptor (raptor@ryona.agency)'s status on Sunday, 02-Oct-2022 12:41:54 JST raptor @ryo @xianc78 I completely disagree with your take on advanced distros. It takes about 10 years of linux to use arch with ease, which means being able to solve really obscure issues almost immediately. Things like not being able to boot to DE because you need to remove an fstab entry that was created as result of messing around with KVM volumes, or losing your x session on artix because you're on nvidia and you changed unigine valley benchmark to 720p and now your x session is >900hz and your monitor just says "this signal is not compatible with your monitor" and all the articles online talk about systemd which you are not running. Ubuntu and Mint and definitely entry level but it doesn't mean they do not break down in odd ways. I'd say every stable version of Ubuntu has something awfully wrong with it and that thing changes every release. The worst that can happen on Windows is something works the way you don't want it to, the worst that can happen on linux is nothing works and you best figure out what happened - fast. Only way to get good at linux is just experience dealing with it, which is why I am saying the whole 10 years thing.