Dude! Great comment lol. So true too. For a gigachad neovim kinesis keyboard optimzer Andy, I'm surprised he hasn't at least given it a shot. It's customizable AF.
@@akak5128 For me it is about the level of control I have over my system. If there's bloatware installed, then I'm the one who put it there. As for speed, it's like riding a sports car between red lights; in the aggregate you won't notice a difference, but when you get behind the wheel you feel it.
@@sama7496 a fast 2 seater sports car that runs fine as long as no as you take care of it. Needs a lot of bodywork. Has a really solid Chilton Manual that goes with it and a lot of aftermarket parts you can put on it.
One time, I was bored. So I wrote a script that downloads the entire database of r34 and spreads it randomly across your system until the disk is full. I called it the "uwu virus". It can yiff your pc beyond repair.
as someone who has only briefly tried out linux .. i tried headless debian , nix , crunchbang (i think itt was arch? , manjaro ... etc... and some other debian-based ones wich names i cant remember , i had most easiest time with arch linux ... anything i wanted was 1 pacman command away and it always worked , and if there was something, solution was always one google query away ... unlike with other distros i dont get this arch is hard and "i use arch btw" joke.... only reason ive not switched is , there's too many software i need to use wich doesnt work on linux ... and dualboxing or virtual machines annoy me... had some problems grub randomly stopped functioning and could never fix it , but with the advent of win11 and win10 eventually not supported , there's not much choices left ... need to start using something and config a system for myself i guess... i think i'll go with Nix , reminds me of node/docker ecosystem , where you have to declare your own system, it also forces you to learn about all the packages and stuff (what they do and what they are for) ...
@@larchimagus._. I use endeavour but installed arch32 once at work on an ancient pentium era computer that was collecting dust in a closet. Then hooked it up to a shady printer that wasn't working even on Шindows so it was also in the said closet. And it worked. Felt like I was resurrecting the dead or something. #technomancer
Yes. Use arch if you like the stackexchange forum experience and a wiki that is expansive but written for low level software developer's. I use manjaro, but I would recommend a Debian distro first and am Arch based distro second, unless you like fixing issues yourself every update.
17:55 While Rumble do have some pretty out there politics on it, from a tech perspective I think I've heard that they run their own streaming software and hosting which is pretty interesting compared to the established players.
I am not ashamed to admit that, while I just used to find them funny, my feelings are starting to get hurt by the continuous ridiculing of arch user. 😢. I use Arch btw 😎.
That's why Windows sells. And Mac, except Mac is for submissive people who want to be told what to do. Linux is too open. You can't just walk into a dominatrix shop, you need a sign that says they specifically cater to your CBT.
@@mattymattffs I agree it used to be like that, but nowadays you have the jumbled mess that is settings, the fact that you have to do so much to secure your privacy and get rid of all the bloatware
@@rikschaafYou have to do once (until an update "accidentally" change the settings that is, but I'm sure there's an app to solve the problem), and what you want to do in one version of Windows, you can do in any version because there's practically only one version. Linux is nice at face value, but then you started noticing the hostility around any mentioning of Wayland, GNOME, systemd, Manjaro, etc. Things work in one DE, but not on the others, some configurations works better in Wayland, but it's a mess with lots of missing features, and basically a spawn of satan (according to the community), you want that software? Better hope it's available for your package manager. Manjaro looks nice, oh ouw, it's being run by idiots (according to the community). Zorin? Spyware. Fedora? It's owned by Red Hat, satan. Fine, something mainstream, Ubuntu. Canonical, Satan.
Manjaro is such a savior if you want to use arch but dont want to cry when you forgot one package that prevents your bluetooth or wifi or lan or any other sub service working.
"In Billings Montana" Rare to see a fellow Montanan in the linux space. Us Montanans gotta stick together, even if Butte is 250 miles away from Billings.
I have been distro-hopping for the past 8 years. Different distros and desktop environments. Looking for experience that is best for day-to-day usage as a software developer, media, gaming I settled with Fedora Silverblue (Gnome DE) + nix home manager + devbox. Layered nothing, Flatpaks for gui apps and nix packages with home-manager for cli apps. Automatic updates turned on. You do your work, shut down, and next time you power on you have updated system
150 chrome tabs and counting, with memory optimizations disabled. I'm trying to figure out whether, given enough time and torture, the machines will rise against us.
As a former NixOS maintainer, everything said is 100% accurate. From the crazy community drama to the polyphasic sleep to the ludicrous amount of time it takes to get anything done with it. As an Arch user of 20 years, I don't have any of those things though.
Not sure, i might be wrong because im not part of them, but Rust, and Arch sometimes associated not just Furries but also Femboys and any LGBTQ+ community due to highly personalized and highly expressiveness of the technology, or maybe they just the exposed one due to many reasons so they are the one who's getting recognized Idk i digress, i write Go and Uses NixOS lmao
MX Linux: You understand that systemd is an NSA backdoor and you are smart enough not to use it, while still having Debian stability and a built-in flatpak manager.
@@ryuk9414 nothing right now. i think its the only viable option. but its not trying to improve because Canonical doesnt know or care what the people want. they're just trying to be a desktop thats "good for Linux standards" . But System76 and Cosmic are trying to be a "good for ANY standards" desktop. Gnome has completely neglected its App Store and its basically unusable. No built-in Tiling Window Manager. They rely on plugins and extensions to be halfway decent and they think thats ok. System76 is making a desktop that can be not only usable but actually polished and clean without plugins or extensions. Which is a game changer as far as Linux desktops go.
The Gnome devs insist on Gnome being an unusable piece of trash with 0 features that real people need to work on their computers. Almost everything you would associate with Gnome is done via 3rd party extensions, which are not officially supported making them buggy
@@ryuk9414 it literally is the least amount of effort you can put into a desktop while still somewhat usable. Their motto is, "Why create a great desktop when other people can make extensions and try to do it for us" Cosmic is an ACTUAL desktop with its own features and an actual App Store
For dev stuff, you can get over most of the Distro religion by using something like asdf and install stuff home-local. That also gives you version management for most tool chains. I like the stability and reliability of plain Debian. Where stock debian packages or asdf does not work, I use distrobox with arch to get access to the newest releases or UI apps I don't want to have running directly on my workstation. Then I use incus for VMs or OS containers and podman for app containers, that's proven to be the least painful toolset for most virtualization needs. Like that I'm mostly independent on Distro choices, can easily switch if there is a sufficiently good reason and keep my work environment up and under control. Everything is nicely integrated and it's possible if not easy to understand what's happening while updating or changing the OS is really easy (just mounting a home where I need it).
I'm a new arch user and I' not guilty on any of these. However, as the days pass, the socks seem so nice for winter days in a cold basement. Also, Arch is super stable. It hasn't broken. Though my laptop is an 2020 ideapad. Maybe slightly more recent. Every problem is due to me not having installed the correct thing. Or not using the correct thing.
I use nix btw Cons: - 6-7 straight days of waking up and configuring (F Nvidia) - Ssd space go bye bye Pros: I know EVERYTHING, I know my system uses pipewire, I know the css used for waybar, I had to configure a notification manager. I had a lot of time as it was a week before the college semester started. I can instantly replicate my system between my desktop and my laptop. So all the packages are synced. That is nice
I use pop os and love it. Can’t wait until they finish the cosmic desktop environment so I can just do a base install of Debian and use the DE on top of it.
Switched to PopOS from win 10 and couldn't be happier. That being said, last week tried out arch and pretty keen on it as my understanding of linux grows. At this point I can pretty much run all of my windows games/programs with no issues (unless it uses anti-cheat, so fortnite wont run on it.. which is great, keeps the kids off my machine 😆)
This younger generation of what I like to call script kiddies has no idea what it was like during the Sneakernet era. In the mid 90s when I was Middle School - High School, during the DOS 6.0 - Win 3.1, OS/2 era leading into Windows 95, after the common BASIC era I can still remember copies of DOOM and Back Orifice being passed around like hot candy.
I used Linux on my first own laptop at 14. Went through a fuckton of distros, switched to OpenBSD, then MirOS, then Dragonfly and then I grew up and got a bunch of Macs. there is the occasional open source server or raspberry for something in my house but honestly for most there is no need.
1:49 just to help you out here, chromium-based browsers like chrome use sandboxing, which means each tab you run is a seperate chrome process. this is done so if one tab crashes then the whole browser doesn't crash. however, there's no limit to the amount of sandboxed tabs you can have. this is most likely why your problem with browser tabs is occuring, so i recommend firefox if you haven't switched already. firefox still uses sandboxing, but has a limit of 6 sandboxes before grouping tabs into each sandbox, thus making firefox run faster than chrome.
as someone who converted to arch a week ago, I can say that I have never done any of those things. Maybe I will eventually fall victim to the curse, but for now, I am safe.
insta permanent ban for Ukraine mentioned was kinda sad tho. It was just a hello, although could've been in English for sure. Thanks to the explainer brigade in chat tho, appreciate you.
I never had problems managing my package, but if I did, i'd look for a proprietary solution. No way am i going to open-source management of my package. This isn't a team-effort. The most important criteria I look for in a package manager is discretion.
6:55 - I had 2 different NB pairs of shoes. They were all F'N TERRIBLE. These are the worst shoes I had ever experienced, walking just for 5 minutes made my feet peal off my bones.
I haven't had memory issues with Chrome for years (even before the update that lets you more aggressively suspend inactive tabs) and I rarely have less than 200 tabs open. I gave Firefox a chance a while back and it was already using more CPU than my 200+ Chrome tabs with only 20 tabs open. I'll take memory usage over CPU usage any day. For reference I currently have 293 tabs open across two instances of Chrome and it's using a total of 2.4GB of RAM. That being said it's usually a bit higher so let's be really unforgiving and call it 4GB, a number that is still completely reasonable for almost 300 tabs.
I had a hacker phase in high school too, I was rocking backtrack 3 on my netbook during those days. I couldn't care less about that stuff anymore though, I've fallen into web development degeneracy. Kind of a topical video today, I think a lot of us are feeling the urge to ditch windows and start using a Linux distro. I was also thinking of being basic and going with Ubuntu since I'm already pretty familiar with it
if youre a software developer ubuntu is the gold standard. you will find your IDEs and programs/programming languages available in the original repos without the ever need to compile anything. comparing that with arch linux, original repos arent that exclusive. you will have to use the AUR for some programs. like android-studio, flutter, visual studio code is not available. getting those programs from the AUR is like gentoo simulator. you will build and compile the entire program youre getting, which is gonna take insane amounts of time on an old computer. meanwhile on ubuntu all you do is like "snap install flutter --classic"
You should link to the original video in the description. Although you might have just forgotten to update the description since the "delete me" text is left
I use Linux Mint on my Fanless Netbook, about to install a form of Linux to my main PC. 3 months in, it has been great. Playing ESO on my Netbook, that would never work on Windows.
I have about 30 tabs open at all time. "/ Doesn't matter if it's Linux or Windows, it's something I always kind of do. I also have about 10 tabs open and pinned as a standard.
Appreciate you not skipping the sponsor segment. Too many people will just watch someone's elses video and not give them the basic decency of showing their sponsor
@@fus132 Except that the performance of that sponsor spot is directly tied to whether or not the RUclipsr will get another deal, and the amount they'll get paid for it. No company is going to sponsor another video that gets them 0 new customers, but they will if they get 100+.
Linux has come a long long way and I have used a ton of distros but for me, it's a tool that I just want to use that enables me to do the things I actually want to do. I'm not really into OS dev, so every time an OS gets in the way, I consider it a failure of the OS. I got tired of having to deal with quirks and being needed to compile basic tool... I settled for Ubuntu because they are financially incentivized toward ease of use and stability and for basic things like Bluetooth, I don't have to go down weekend benders to troubleshoot why it won't see my damn keyboard suddenly, etc. This is not too dissimilar to why I've stuck with VS Code... every vimmer will freely admit, that they are never done, always tweaking their config, and always learning new tricks and it's a constant thing they are thinking about. I don't want that. I want to pretty confidently be complete in my knowledge of my editor and the stop thinking about it and focus on the thing I'm editing.
Lex Fridman is a judo black belt (like assumedly all Russians) and has been into bjj for a while (I suppose because the US is the only country in the world where it's difficult to practice judo). He sparred a bit with olympic medalist Travis Stevens and he's had interviews with stars in the judo world, people like Neil Adams, Jimmy Pedro and Travis Stevens. Funnily enough the guy who spammed cyrillics said something like "hello from Ukraine". But spamming in language people can't understand is still spamming in language people can't understand.
I'm an arch linux user who doesn't fall into any of the categories mentioned. ...I was a member of a Star Trek fan club for many years though, so I guess it counts.
I also don't like 3rd party repos, but they reason they exist is because its too hard/too much friction with the maintainers of the distro to update packages. You don't see them as much with distros like void and nix that host their package building files on github so it's easy to contribute.
if you can't have more than 4 tabs open on chrome why not change it? I've literally had more than 4000+ tabs open on Vivaldi (I'm serious, it was months of work) with no issue other than running slower than normal
why watch a 5min video if you can watch a 5x long prime reaction
When it's a firecode video, the ratio of the original video to the primagen reaction reaches 10x
i watch both
10x dev experience
I'll tell you what else is 5x long
@@darukutsu😂😂
prime after 10 years: "I used to be that guy, but Arch has increased my development speed significantly."
Dude! Great comment lol. So true too. For a gigachad neovim kinesis keyboard optimzer Andy, I'm surprised he hasn't at least given it a shot. It's customizable AF.
Nixos*
@@mancool450 Guix*
@@akak5128personally, after failing to answer your question, I went back to ubuntu and fedora
@@akak5128 For me it is about the level of control I have over my system. If there's bloatware installed, then I'm the one who put it there. As for speed, it's like riding a sports car between red lights; in the aggregate you won't notice a difference, but when you get behind the wheel you feel it.
I use Debian, work at a farm stand, and drive a reliable car 😂
I guess my punk era really is over
You'll be aiiight! 🦾😎
what is the arch of cars ?
@@sama7496 a fast 2 seater sports car that runs fine as long as no as you take care of it. Needs a lot of bodywork.
Has a really solid Chilton Manual that goes with it and a lot of aftermarket parts you can put on it.
@@UnhingedNWit’s okay, you can say _Miata_ out loud.
@@beefchicken lmao
"I'm okay being the default Andy" - proceeds to nvim
You aren't a real Linux user until you stop using vscode and use neovim or just vim
and here I am using Arch for almost 20 years, still proudly using nano
I´m a quiche eater. I´m a goddamn furry quiche eater
We eatin quiche, boys?
@@blarghblargh I love a good quiche, but that guy can keep the furries.
@@TehKarmalizer furry hate is so normie. Live a little
@@blarghblargh no. Some things are too degenerate to normalize, and that’s one of them.
@@TehKarmalizer live with the fact that there's a better shot than not that anything digital you interact with is maintained by furries
One time, I was bored. So I wrote a script that downloads the entire database of r34 and spreads it randomly across your system until the disk is full.
I called it the "uwu virus".
It can yiff your pc beyond repair.
Why wouldn't you use e621 for that? R34 is for anime.
I think it would be even funnier to write one in assembly and put r34 data in every memory it can find.
@@Sammysapphira I thought about that, but r34 has more data lmao
Turn on the PC 😮
Furry appears on screen 💀
That's crazy, and epic
I’m a windows refugee on mint. No big complaints so far.
just get ubuntu/pop os (same thing)
Congratulations on leaving your abusive relationship with Microsoft
@@ab-tl2zt obnoxious unsolicited advice (average Linux user comment)
@@ab-tl2ztif it's the same thing why would he switch?
Can't go wrong with stable distros like Mint. Plus the cinnamon de is eye candy
I use arch btw
as someone who has only briefly tried out linux .. i tried headless debian , nix , crunchbang (i think itt was arch? , manjaro ... etc...
and some other debian-based ones wich names i cant remember ,
i had most easiest time with arch linux ... anything i wanted was 1 pacman command away and it always worked , and if there was something, solution was always one google query away ... unlike with other distros
i dont get this arch is hard and "i use arch btw" joke....
only reason ive not switched is , there's too many software i need to use wich doesnt work on linux ... and dualboxing or virtual machines annoy me...
had some problems grub randomly stopped functioning and could never fix it ,
but with the advent of win11 and win10 eventually not supported , there's not much choices left ... need to start using something and config a system for myself i guess... i think i'll go with Nix , reminds me of node/docker ecosystem , where you have to declare your own system, it also forces you to learn about all the packages and stuff (what they do and what they are for) ...
I-use-arch-in-prod-btw
@@larchimagus._. Bleeding edge on the server means you get the security patches first.
@@jan.tichavsky yes
@@larchimagus._. I use endeavour but installed arch32 once at work on an ancient pentium era computer that was collecting dust in a closet. Then hooked it up to a shady printer that wasn't working even on Шindows so it was also in the said closet. And it worked. Felt like I was resurrecting the dead or something. #technomancer
10:15 every single person I know who took multivariate calculus started crossing their Z's, it feels so normal
It may be just me, but it's wayyy to easy to confuse a 2 with z when solving
I started writing it once i started studying complex numbers and their geometric application
but in Poland "ż" is sometimes written as a crossed Z........
yeah, I know, skill issue
literally same, upper level math improved my handwriting from that of an illiterate peasant to an elegant noble
So what I'm hearing is that I should get my maid outfit wearing miku collecting ass from Windows to Arch
You will be welcomed. (I use arch btw)
Yes. Use arch if you like the stackexchange forum experience and a wiki that is expansive but written for low level software developer's.
I use manjaro, but I would recommend a Debian distro first and am Arch based distro second, unless you like fixing issues yourself every update.
share pics, i use arch btw
@@hardbrocklife I have heard about the update fun from a friend that has to fix gaming things every time there's any kind of update.
Using arch is amazing, just 1 thing to keep in mind while still learning: if you see anything labeled AUR run.
The fact that there's a Brazilian distro with with almost 20 years of support and you're NOT using it is crazy.
which one
Haha! Spotted the Sinclair ZX Spectrum at the end there :)
17:55 While Rumble do have some pretty out there politics on it, from a tech perspective I think I've heard that they run their own streaming software and hosting which is pretty interesting compared to the established players.
@@Olodus There's no reason to favor monopolies on video and streaming content. It's a very bad take by Prime.
If Prime uses Arch, we already have his fursona naturally it is a protogen; flawless logic.
Given that the closed-species name for Protogens are literally called Primagens, that makes your comment a million times better.
description still has placeholders btw
I am not ashamed to admit that, while I just used to find them funny, my feelings are starting to get hurt by the continuous ridiculing of arch user. 😢. I use Arch btw 😎.
The cube makes sense since it's ubuntu, which always does their own thing.
But yes, please make a nix install/config stream :)
I gave my sister my laptop with PopOS and she has been using it with no problems
+1
One more Linux user, billions left.
@@rockpie.iso.tar.bz2 Microsoft's been doing a good job with advertising linux
Is it too much to ask for an OS that helps you to never have to think about your OS?
Honestly, that's pretty much windows. No thinking really needed, but it's a handicap in other ways
That's why Windows sells. And Mac, except Mac is for submissive people who want to be told what to do. Linux is too open. You can't just walk into a dominatrix shop, you need a sign that says they specifically cater to your CBT.
i feel it depends more on you than on the os itself
@@mattymattffs I agree it used to be like that, but nowadays you have the jumbled mess that is settings, the fact that you have to do so much to secure your privacy and get rid of all the bloatware
@@rikschaafYou have to do once (until an update "accidentally" change the settings that is, but I'm sure there's an app to solve the problem), and what you want to do in one version of Windows, you can do in any version because there's practically only one version.
Linux is nice at face value, but then you started noticing the hostility around any mentioning of Wayland, GNOME, systemd, Manjaro, etc.
Things work in one DE, but not on the others, some configurations works better in Wayland, but it's a mess with lots of missing features, and basically a spawn of satan (according to the community), you want that software? Better hope it's available for your package manager.
Manjaro looks nice, oh ouw, it's being run by idiots (according to the community). Zorin? Spyware. Fedora? It's owned by Red Hat, satan. Fine, something mainstream, Ubuntu. Canonical, Satan.
Gentoo is just “Let me leave and do stuff while my computer builds everything”
I started on the Arch side (Manjaro) and I love that I never have to reinstall to truly update.
09:00 - That cube ranting is a tell-tell sign of an Arch Linux user. Busted!
Manjaro is such a savior if you want to use arch but dont want to cry when you forgot one package that prevents your bluetooth or wifi or lan or any other sub service working.
Arch user in the channel. Not guilty of one. Can only afford rubber ducks on my desk.
YT is where you find stuff. Rumble is where you go to find out where it went.
"In Billings Montana"
Rare to see a fellow Montanan in the linux space. Us Montanans gotta stick together, even if Butte is 250 miles away from Billings.
I don’t get the “4 tabs lifestyle”. I have tab stash, and yet I consistently have more than 50 tabs open at any time
I have been distro-hopping for the past 8 years. Different distros and desktop environments. Looking for experience that is best for day-to-day usage as a software developer, media, gaming I settled with Fedora Silverblue (Gnome DE) + nix home manager + devbox. Layered nothing, Flatpaks for gui apps and nix packages with home-manager for cli apps. Automatic updates turned on. You do your work, shut down, and next time you power on you have updated system
watching a guy react for 20 minutes to a 5 minute video and have him troubleshoot sound for over 2 minutes... this is content
Yeah, at least the sound bit should have been cut out...
The second tatoo, is a mix of the Penguin and Che Guevara with the birret and the star
I guess that's where Shadowman (T-Rex punching Stegosaur) tattoo came from.
Beret*
Saw that Og cideo when it released like 2 mins after, gotta love that guy hehe reactung to it is even funnier
Low Level Learning is in my Subscription List with a many great others! Some of my favorites are Ben Eater, James Sharman and many others...
11:30 Deaf people: 😇
Blind people: 💀
150 chrome tabs and counting, with memory optimizations disabled. I'm trying to figure out whether, given enough time and torture, the machines will rise against us.
How wide are your chrome tabs?
Debian stable + all of my labyrinthine kludges to get specific things working. It just works.
I currently have about 900 tabs open in Firefox on Arch, btw.
As a former NixOS maintainer, everything said is 100% accurate. From the crazy community drama to the polyphasic sleep to the ludicrous amount of time it takes to get anything done with it.
As an Arch user of 20 years, I don't have any of those things though.
Why is Arch associated with the furry community? I mean not that I can complain but I'm curious. I use arch btw :3
Not sure, i might be wrong because im not part of them, but Rust, and Arch sometimes associated not just Furries but also Femboys and any LGBTQ+ community due to highly personalized and highly expressiveness of the technology, or maybe they just the exposed one due to many reasons so they are the one who's getting recognized
Idk i digress, i write Go and Uses NixOS lmao
I have no idea. I do know a furry that uses Arch tho. xd
6:58 I could have been an Arch user, but I bought some sketchy New Balances from Prime and now I have flat feet
MX Linux: You understand that systemd is an NSA backdoor and you are smart enough not to use it, while still having Debian stability and a built-in flatpak manager.
I've just installed Arch yesterday BTW
Suddenly I feel like ordering a fur costume
There is no way he forgets to turn off alerts EVERY FUCKING TIME
Once Cosmic comes out,
Pop will no longer be "basically Ubuntu".
Ubuntu will continue using Gnome by default, which will give a huge advantage to Pop
what's wrong with gnome?
@@ryuk9414 nothing right now. i think its the only viable option.
but its not trying to improve because Canonical doesnt know or care what the people want.
they're just trying to be a desktop thats "good for Linux standards" .
But System76 and Cosmic are trying to be a "good for ANY standards" desktop.
Gnome has completely neglected its App Store and its basically unusable.
No built-in Tiling Window Manager.
They rely on plugins and extensions to be halfway decent and they think thats ok.
System76 is making a desktop that can be not only usable but actually polished and clean without plugins or extensions.
Which is a game changer as far as Linux desktops go.
The Gnome devs insist on Gnome being an unusable piece of trash with 0 features that real people need to work on their computers. Almost everything you would associate with Gnome is done via 3rd party extensions, which are not officially supported making them buggy
@@EidasMusic exactly
@@ryuk9414 it literally is the least amount of effort you can put into a desktop while still somewhat usable.
Their motto is,
"Why create a great desktop when other people can make extensions and try to do it for us"
Cosmic is an ACTUAL desktop with its own features and an actual App Store
Deeply offended, Arch has been the stablest distro I’ve tried. Oh, I use Arch, btw
Gotta pick: your mind, or your arch, both can'be stable at the same time
For dev stuff, you can get over most of the Distro religion by using something like asdf and install stuff home-local. That also gives you version management for most tool chains.
I like the stability and reliability of plain Debian. Where stock debian packages or asdf does not work, I use distrobox with arch to get access to the newest releases or UI apps I don't want to have running directly on my workstation.
Then I use incus for VMs or OS containers and podman for app containers, that's proven to be the least painful toolset for most virtualization needs.
Like that I'm mostly independent on Distro choices, can easily switch if there is a sufficiently good reason and keep my work environment up and under control. Everything is nicely integrated and it's possible if not easy to understand what's happening while updating or changing the OS is really easy (just mounting a home where I need it).
I'm a new arch user and I' not guilty on any of these.
However, as the days pass, the socks seem so nice for winter days in a cold basement.
Also, Arch is super stable. It hasn't broken. Though my laptop is an 2020 ideapad.
Maybe slightly more recent.
Every problem is due to me not having installed the correct thing. Or not using the correct thing.
I use nix btw
Cons:
- 6-7 straight days of waking up and configuring (F Nvidia)
- Ssd space go bye bye
Pros: I know EVERYTHING, I know my system uses pipewire, I know the css used for waybar, I had to configure a notification manager.
I had a lot of time as it was a week before the college semester started.
I can instantly replicate my system between my desktop and my laptop. So all the packages are synced. That is nice
I use pop os and love it. Can’t wait until they finish the cosmic desktop environment so I can just do a base install of Debian and use the DE on top of it.
This is getting weird, I also worked in the shoe department at Big Bear and then my first job out of college was at Computers Unlimited.
Switched to PopOS from win 10 and couldn't be happier.
That being said, last week tried out arch and pretty keen on it as my understanding of linux grows.
At this point I can pretty much run all of my windows games/programs with no issues (unless it uses anti-cheat, so fortnite wont run on it.. which is great, keeps the kids off my machine 😆)
Chrome finally has sleeping tabs feature, combine that with Zram to express and allocate RAM better so backwards tabs don't taste resources is the key
Great, i finally got old enough that Slack isn't mentioned anymore... 😅
I pick up guys at the farmers market, too.
This younger generation of what I like to call script kiddies has no idea what it was like during the Sneakernet era. In the mid 90s when I was Middle School - High School, during the DOS 6.0 - Win 3.1, OS/2 era leading into Windows 95, after the common BASIC era I can still remember copies of DOOM and Back Orifice being passed around like hot candy.
my arch update broke while watching this video
Nothing like watching Primagen react to a video only to have your finger constantly over the right arrow key to skip all the tangents he goes on
or you could just go watch the video and be done with it
Do we get to choose which animal tail to insert? 😂
what?
@@coinbongo4694Bruh, don't pretend you don't know.
@@coinbongo4694 Furries
You can create hybrids if you want
It entirely depends on your fursona
I used Linux on my first own laptop at 14. Went through a fuckton of distros, switched to OpenBSD, then MirOS, then Dragonfly and then I grew up and got a bunch of Macs. there is the occasional open source server or raspberry for something in my house but honestly for most there is no need.
I'm not guilty of any of those Arch things, but I want to try thigh high socks at some point... they look comfy.
They are
0:08 Now that's a crossing between Ernesto "Che" Guevara and Ludvig from Flaaklypa Grand Prix.
Ukraine mentioned with an insta ban 😂
tbh the dude raised multiple red flags at once by spamming in Ukranian
even if they would spam in English - the result would be different
@@SyberiaK I know. Whenever you see Cyrillic it's most likely russian. And whenever you see russian it's most lilkely racist.
@@TheIvasyl 🤨
1:49 just to help you out here, chromium-based browsers like chrome use sandboxing, which means each tab you run is a seperate chrome process. this is done so if one tab crashes then the whole browser doesn't crash. however, there's no limit to the amount of sandboxed tabs you can have. this is most likely why your problem with browser tabs is occuring, so i recommend firefox if you haven't switched already. firefox still uses sandboxing, but has a limit of 6 sandboxes before grouping tabs into each sandbox, thus making firefox run faster than chrome.
That random person was saying "Hi from Ukraine!"
Not sure why would they do that in Ukrainian though on an English speaking stream...
Rip Big Bear. The way they went out was absolutely wild tho.
as someone who converted to arch a week ago, I can say that I have never done any of those things. Maybe I will eventually fall victim to the curse, but for now, I am safe.
insta permanent ban for Ukraine mentioned was kinda sad tho. It was just a hello, although could've been in English for sure. Thanks to the explainer brigade in chat tho, appreciate you.
🧀
Fuck Ukraine
I never had problems managing my package, but if I did, i'd look for a proprietary solution. No way am i going to open-source management of my package. This isn't a team-effort. The most important criteria I look for in a package manager is discretion.
6:55 - I had 2 different NB pairs of shoes. They were all F'N TERRIBLE.
These are the worst shoes I had ever experienced, walking just for 5 minutes made my feet peal off my bones.
shoutout to that one person in chat who uses BeOS!
I haven't had memory issues with Chrome for years (even before the update that lets you more aggressively suspend inactive tabs) and I rarely have less than 200 tabs open. I gave Firefox a chance a while back and it was already using more CPU than my 200+ Chrome tabs with only 20 tabs open. I'll take memory usage over CPU usage any day.
For reference I currently have 293 tabs open across two instances of Chrome and it's using a total of 2.4GB of RAM. That being said it's usually a bit higher so let's be really unforgiving and call it 4GB, a number that is still completely reasonable for almost 300 tabs.
Looks like you forgot to edit the description with the link to the video. The placeholder DELETE ME text is still there!
08:20 The NixOS cube is a different way, because it is not imperative approach, Arch one is a user config.
20:05 yes! absolutely!
I had a hacker phase in high school too, I was rocking backtrack 3 on my netbook during those days. I couldn't care less about that stuff anymore though, I've fallen into web development degeneracy. Kind of a topical video today, I think a lot of us are feeling the urge to ditch windows and start using a Linux distro. I was also thinking of being basic and going with Ubuntu since I'm already pretty familiar with it
if youre a software developer ubuntu is the gold standard. you will find your IDEs and programs/programming languages available in the original repos without the ever need to compile anything. comparing that with arch linux, original repos arent that exclusive. you will have to use the AUR for some programs. like android-studio, flutter, visual studio code is not available. getting those programs from the AUR is like gentoo simulator. you will build and compile the entire program youre getting, which is gonna take insane amounts of time on an old computer. meanwhile on ubuntu all you do is like "snap install flutter --classic"
20:33 No ultra processed sh*t in that place; and my cars are from 1968 through 2015.
You should link to the original video in the description. Although you might have just forgotten to update the description since the "delete me" text is left
Arch user but am married, I like farmers' markets, old cars, and don't have any smarthome appliances...
Real engineers right out their own Linux Kernel in Assembly for the 6502...
Bro, your vin diagrams are pretty on with some slight inaccuracies but hilariously close anywho
I use Linux Mint on my Fanless Netbook, about to install a form of Linux to my main PC. 3 months in, it has been great. Playing ESO on my Netbook, that would never work on Windows.
Watched this video yesterday and it's an absolute banger
19:32 you should try to watch mental outlaw!
Chicks love a man who drives a two door with a powerful engine. Except if it's an old pickup.
DELETE ME DELETE ME
To Set and Forget is a way of life.
So IMO anyone saying 'Linux' when they talk about anything but the kernel is lost.
I have about 30 tabs open at all time. "/ Doesn't matter if it's Linux or Windows, it's something I always kind of do. I also have about 10 tabs open and pinned as a standard.
Appreciate you not skipping the sponsor segment. Too many people will just watch someone's elses video and not give them the basic decency of showing their sponsor
If there's no entertainment value in it then there's no point, they got the cash already.
@@fus132 Except that the performance of that sponsor spot is directly tied to whether or not the RUclipsr will get another deal, and the amount they'll get paid for it.
No company is going to sponsor another video that gets them 0 new customers, but they will if they get 100+.
Cheers from Brazil 😁
Linux has come a long long way and I have used a ton of distros but for me, it's a tool that I just want to use that enables me to do the things I actually want to do. I'm not really into OS dev, so every time an OS gets in the way, I consider it a failure of the OS. I got tired of having to deal with quirks and being needed to compile basic tool... I settled for Ubuntu because they are financially incentivized toward ease of use and stability and for basic things like Bluetooth, I don't have to go down weekend benders to troubleshoot why it won't see my damn keyboard suddenly, etc.
This is not too dissimilar to why I've stuck with VS Code... every vimmer will freely admit, that they are never done, always tweaking their config, and always learning new tricks and it's a constant thing they are thinking about. I don't want that. I want to pretty confidently be complete in my knowledge of my editor and the stop thinking about it and focus on the thing I'm editing.
"Everyone knows you cross your zees, you cross your sevens. OK?"
-Prime
7:52 who's that at the very left? not ringing any bells
I felt real smart for installing Fedora 40 as my main... but then accidentally wiped it when I reinstalled Windows.
Fedora works pretty decent on my old crappy laptop
Lex Fridman is a judo black belt (like assumedly all Russians) and has been into bjj for a while (I suppose because the US is the only country in the world where it's difficult to practice judo). He sparred a bit with olympic medalist Travis Stevens and he's had interviews with stars in the judo world, people like Neil Adams, Jimmy Pedro and Travis Stevens.
Funnily enough the guy who spammed cyrillics said something like "hello from Ukraine". But spamming in language people can't understand is still spamming in language people can't understand.
21:19 Wow! A tag-team meta integrated ad...
I'm an arch linux user who doesn't fall into any of the categories mentioned.
...I was a member of a Star Trek fan club for many years though, so I guess it counts.
Arch is the most stable distro I've ever used.
The Ubuntu-based distros were broking on every major system upgrade. Some dependency issues.
Arch broke grub in my test vm just after a few weeks. I aint dealing with that.
@@ahpadt , never happened to me.
It is something you did.
@@victornikolov537 do i need to type pacman -Syu with more love?
@@ahpadtWeirdly enough arch in a VM caused me far more issues than arch in bare metal. Also, after weeks, why not use the aur?
I also don't like 3rd party repos, but they reason they exist is because its too hard/too much friction with the maintainers of the distro to update packages. You don't see them as much with distros like void and nix that host their package building files on github so it's easy to contribute.
if you can't have more than 4 tabs open on chrome why not change it?
I've literally had more than 4000+ tabs open on Vivaldi (I'm serious, it was months of work) with no issue other than running slower than normal