Not the OP, but I switched to helix, because I always wanted to learn something vim-like, and helix is just perfect for that. It’s simple, working great without any configuration, and has nice keybindings.
Not the OP, but I switched to helix, because I always wanted to learn something vim-like, and helix is just perfect for that. It’s simple, working great without any configuration, and has nice keybindings.
Not the OP, but I switched to helix, because I always wanted to learn something vim-like, and helix is just perfect for that. It’s simple, working great without any configuration, and has nice keybindings.
Still not as good as native package
I don’t think that this one is as reproducible and declarative as NixOS or Guix.
OpenAI Insider
Ah, what a reliable and unbiased source
Ubuntu Server (for school) -> Fedora (daily driver for a month) -> Arch (same as fedora) -> NixOS (it’s almost a year and I think that I’ll stay with NixOS)
AFAIK they didn’t. This time we have natural growth
No alt right, no nazis, no terfs.
How it’s possible to enforce this on self-hostable software?
Cool website
deleted by creator
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Kernel#Officially_supported_kernels
Arch Wiki has a nice short summary of kernel variants
Yeah, but sort of unofficially… I wait for this: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/259641
I really appreciate that they’re working on new desktop environment. I’ll probably switch from Hyprland to Cosmic once it’s available on NixOS
PopOS
would be better (IMO)
I recommend LibreWolf instead of Firefox
X11 is a protocol too. Xorg is the binary you are talking about
You can contribute to Nixpkgs without GitHub account
https://discourse.nixos.org/t/about-the-patches-category/477
C# has native compilation capability, thanks to Native AOT
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/deploying/native-aot/