I tried ~10 distros and then did a prolonged test of about 2 months for each of the 2 distros that were the closest to being perfect out of the box
Oh wow, that’s some serious dedication. Have you ever written out your experience?
I tried ~10 distros and then did a prolonged test of about 2 months for each of the 2 distros that were the closest to being perfect out of the box
Oh wow, that’s some serious dedication. Have you ever written out your experience?


Sorry to say, but there’s a lot questionable stuff found within your comment. But I will try to limit the discussion around some of the more egriogous ones.
Hate to keep litigating this around here, but the shift alone is enough. Explaining to people WTF an immutable filesystem is, is a sure way to frustrate them into giving up, despite whatever comms finesse you might THINK you have.
I don’t understand what’s so hard to understand about (some) core system files being read-only, i.e. you can’t change/modify it. Can you help me understand why that would cause so much frustration?
Counterpoint: STOP SUGGESTING IMMUTABLE DISTROS TO NEW USERS
Countering the counterpoint with an anecdote: I cold turkey switched from Windows to Fedora Silverblue almost 4 years ago. Bazzite (or other uBlue images) weren’t even around back then. And, somehow, I managed. And there are many other testimonials that point out something similar. Are you ignoring this empirical evidence? If so, on what basis?
there is ZERO benefit
Come on, you know that’s not true. Perhaps the following formulation could be true: “I suppose there is ZERO benefit to me (and others like me)”.
I agree with this in general. But, I’d like to add that well-supported hardware (like a ThinkPad) may do equally well on Linux and perhaps even better.
what software do people pirate in linux?
It’s a great piece of software. As such, I wouldn’t want to harm them. Hence, I won’t give you any pointers. Sorry not sorry.
I’m obviously not an expert. But, from what I can tell, the scene seems quite healthy. And I don’t see a reason why it wouldn’t thrive further. Especially as the Linux market share is in the lift. Anti-cheat shenanigans are a lot more concerning. Though, I’m optimistic that Valve is actively making progress on that front.
Btw, just as an FYI: I know people that were more interested in software piracy. But I digress…
Vague statement. Please, fam; either be more explicit from the get-go. Or, engage with the comment section.
I suppose you meant the piracy that involves games and/or software. FWIW, I’d be more than happy to specify if you could clarify/elaborate.
programs
Consider being more explicit about what you want/need. Some programs work great with wine and others have never.


Thanks for the quick rely!
That is very tangible, indeed. And kudos for providing the only browser that aced the ‘test’!
Also, pull requests attempting to improve the documentation are very much welcome. Would be great to get more contributors involved and one doesn’t have to be deeply technical to write good docs.
Hehe 😜. I do admire your work, but don’t get your hopes up 😅.
Anyhow, I will add it to the list of Firefox(-based) browsers worth looking into. To be clear, I’m not a primary consumer of the product category. FWIW, I would install it on my system if I were*.


In the now up-to-date README.md we find the following line:
A couple of privacy-related patches not built elsewhere
Cool. But…, could you name those explicitly?
Mullvad Browser is also based on Firefox ESR and is the product of a joint development involving both Mullvad and the Tor Project. Could you please explain why anyone should consider Konform Browser over it?
I was actually seriously considering to just write “Freedom” and call it a day. Apologies for making it more wordy than it has to be.


Domain-Specific Language. In the context of NixOS, that would be the Nix language.
Freedom, it’s that simple. Any other reason is a derivative of said freedom.


The article unfortunately does a horrendous job at highlighting AerynOS’ unique features by only giving vague descriptions without going into any technicality that matters.
FWIW, my two cents on AerynOS:


Not the one you asked, but here’s my two cents.
Arch, by virtue of its DIY nature, has little to no defaults. As such, common security measures are not pre-configured either. Thankfully, it makes up for that with its excellent wiki entry on security. Unfortunately, I don’t think most users ever seriously implement what’s found within.
As for Debian, it actually does come with plenty of relatively sane defaults, including security. And Debian has shown to take security rather seriously. However, (most) Debian repositories are not great at providing up-to-date versions of the software they package:


There are already many good answers in the comments, so I don’t feel the need to add much to it. But perhaps the following is worth mentioning:
bootc. And while Fedora has done a decent job with Fedora Atomic, it certainly does not enjoy the resources and commitment it deserves; a pretty bad regression for (at least one of) the Fedora Atomic images was not considered a blocker for one of the more recent major release updates. Heck, it has become so bad that even the likes of both CentOS Stream and GNOME OS have shown to be more receptive when it comes to addressing problems and whatnot.Glad to help out 😊!
Thankfully the model forces upon the system to keep a pristine copy around. Which enabled us to fix this rather easy :P .
Did you try rpm-ostree reset ?
EDIT: The solution provided above ‘could’ perhaps work, but perhaps it’s way too radical of a solution 😅 …, so I understand if you don’t wanna go down that route. Instead, consider
sudo cp -a /usr/etc/containers/policy.json /etc/containers
as per this comment on github.
Even if it’s subjective and reliant on the used hardware, if we had enough of these reports, they would become very valuable as patterns would inevitably show up.
But, I’m afraid we’re past the point in which you can reliably and vividly recollect the whole experience 😅.