On laptop Arch Linux with KDE because all is automatic, on gaming PC Arch Linux with i3wm because games and all runs so fast and so well.
On laptop Arch Linux with KDE because all is automatic, on gaming PC Arch Linux with i3wm because games and all runs so fast and so well.
But on the same links you sent are saying:
A Linux-based system is a modular Unix-like operating system, deriving much of its basic design from principles established in Unix during the 1970s and 1980s.
What difference are between “*-based” and “*-like”? If the meaning are the same then I’m right, if Unix-based means must be like a fork directly from Unix and not just a copy build from 0, then yeah, you are right. And I think based and like are the same meaning.
Edit:
I also found this image: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Unix_timeline.en.svg
Unix timeline:
Edit 2:
I just asked to ChatGPT and seems the AI can explain this:
“Unix-like” and “Unix-based” are terms used in the realm of operating systems, particularly in relation to the Unix operating system and its derivatives. While they may seem similar, they convey slightly different concepts:
Unix-like:
- “Unix-like” refers to operating systems that resemble Unix in terms of design, behavior, or functionality, but may not necessarily be directly derived from the original Unix codebase.
- These operating systems typically adhere to Unix-like principles and may incorporate similar features, commands, and programming interfaces.
- Examples of Unix-like operating systems include Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and macOS (which is based on a Unix-like kernel called Darwin).Unix-based:
- “Unix-based” specifically indicates operating systems that have a direct lineage or heritage tracing back to the original Unix operating system developed at Bell Labs in the 1970s.
- These operating systems often have their roots in the Unix codebase, either through direct licensing agreements, re-implementations, or forks of the original Unix source code.
- Examples of Unix-based operating systems include various commercial Unix variants such as Solaris, AIX, and HP-UX, which have historical ties to the original Unix.In essence, while both terms relate to systems that share similarities with Unix, “Unix-like” suggests a broader category of Unix-inspired operating systems, while “Unix-based” specifically denotes those with a direct lineage or relationship to the original Unix system.
So you are right, and they probably wanted to mean Unix-like. But we could still say based as both has some kind of relationship, and that’s why Linux it’s on Unix timeline from wiki.
He says it’s based, not that is Unix.
Alcohol (beer, wine…).
You could watch a documentary about serial killers or check current wars, it’s full or dumb reasons to kill other people.
You can try with GNU Emacs, looks easy: https://redirect.invidious.io/watch?v=F6HSf5D6TtA
OMG you scared me, there are more instances: https://status.d420.de/
I rarely leave my home and I still use socks every day, and I still change them every day… I have many of them and are very short ones, so it’s easy to wash them all together on the wash machine. Feels like a protector to use with my slippers.
When they are insulting should mean that they have no arguments… maybe they have issues on their life. Who knows, but it’s a waste of time to reply to them.
Teams is very bugged…
In my opinion, it looks that disabling hardware acceleration could increase the security on your browser.
No one here said GNOME desktop is mostly JS.
Yeah, that would make sense as opening TCP connections is not really viable for low latency, hahaha.
But is that related to my comment? I don’t understand why he’s talking about downloading games via P2P.
I always download my games before playing them. I don’t know what you mean here.
I’m not an expert, but I suppose as this patch is on the kernel and not on the game, this will still improve any connection your kernel needs to do, like sending telemetry of your anti-cheat engine and other apps that make TCP requests while you are playing online games.
Now, gamers will want to play on Linux for the low latency on online games.
Well, if you are new to Linux, it is better if you just install new distros to try them, I would go to Arch Linux as it’s the cleanest distro, I could install multiple DE without issues, but then it’s a bit mess of packages, also it’s harder to install, you need to type archinstall
and understand their options. I have a desktop and laptop and I always use the laptop for testing, if you copy the ~/.config
folder, you can restore all your applications settings (just copy the app settings you are using), ~/.mozilla
to restore your browser as you had it before the wipe and some more settings are under ~/.local
. I also copy my ~/.zshrc
because I have a custom prompt, configs, add-ons, alias…
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