soundconjurer

joined 9 months ago
[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

@possiblylinux127 @DaPorkchop_. ZFS has a persistent L2ARC cache now.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 1 points 2 weeks ago

@possiblylinux127 @chris Hence their statement "I’d consider btrfs if ...".

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 1 points 2 weeks ago

@EuroNutellaMan @teawrecks 2/ I think in Windows Server 2019, they went back to allowing for pure commandline OSes. I am sure that has always been the case before it, or maybe the desktop could be disabled in previous installations. But, why waste resources of a desktop environment for server operations.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

@EuroNutellaMan @teawrecks 100% agree , terminal is the king of computing. GUIs are convenient, sure. However, when I am writing software to do computation, I am definitely not wanting to run it in an environment with a GUI. I want every speck of resources free for my program. It's easier to write scripts as well expressing the algorithm in my head than it is for me to coordinate settings on a GUI or keyboard inputs.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 1 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

@traches , I firmly believe that. It wouldn't be what it is if it didn't do it well. In my opinion, Arch has the best documentation and I use it for other distros. I don't use Arch and wouldn't recommend it to someone new to the scene.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 0 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

@pupbiru @traches I have used Arch, I am definitely not new to the Linux scene. I have servers, all my workstations and laptops run it. I professionally write software. I didn't like the Arch experience at all. I qould definitely never recommend it to anyone, that's something they can one day decide for themselves.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 1 points 3 weeks ago (4 children)

@pupbiru @traches , I certainly second this. People don't need to become experts in Linux Distros, but they need to know what they want and need from their OS.

If it's browsing and writing word documents, maybe you don't need a constant stream up updates and a stable LTS would suffice. Maybe even a regular 6 month release like Fedora will probably suffice. Even Debian would be great, if upgrading is annoying and newest software isn't really important.

Gaming? There are distros for that.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 2 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) (5 children)

@okamiueru @glaber , well it is an issue to fuck up by design. There are third party plugins for ODF for MSO that work better than its own implementation.

I am forced to use MSO for work, but it's LO for everything else of mine.

Edit: One should also see what they can do to make Microsoft improve/fix their ODF implementation since it is an ISO standard. There has to be something to get that ball rolling.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 2 points 1 month ago

@mr_MADAFAKA , I guess thier developers have some bad spaghetti code and can't debug it enough to work on anything else. And if you were to get it to work, you'd outclass their developers and thus could cheat.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

@uranibaba @kernelle , well, yes and no. Yes, visiting most websites will absolutely not matter. Streaming however, does matter. Streaming from services is either not supported for some services and only supports lower resolutions. I am not sure which are supported or not currently, I remember Max not working on Linux, it might have worked with OS spoofing.

Edit: I dropped Max a while ago and haven't tried to use it for a long time after it initially didn't work while I had the service.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 6 points 1 month ago

@Psyhackological
Work stations all run Ext4.
Main server: Ext4 on main partition, ZFS RAIDZ2 on the data.
Secondary server: BTRFS on main, BTRFS RAID1 on data.

If BTRFS could natively encrypt and had stable RAID6, I'd be using it probably on everything.

[–] soundconjurer@mstdn.social 0 points 1 month ago (1 children)

@RmDebArc_5 @clark , I know MS Office can open and save ODFs, I am not sure how well it does it. One would pressume that it being an open document format (hence the name) and it being a NATO standard, MS office would have proper compatibility, but I am rather reserved to confidently pressume this.

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