after learning about lisp and some other developments in computing over the years, it is insane how ahead of their time a lot of these nerds were, but sadly whether it was funding, the market or the feasibility of these technologies only a few of them actually survived or evolved to where they are today. its mindblowing to me to think that all these new shiny developments with AI and the 2020s is really just a reinvention or reintroduction of a wheel that someone else did 70-80 years ago, but couldn't get off the ground
The Microsoft ( pentagon - this is the major source of their current funding ) will most likely kill Linux like they did with Nokia and their phones. Microsoft is a member of the great big tech family like Apple and they all play in one and the same big tech team. What they want and need is hidden monopoly.
Yep, as soon as that happened I knew Linux would either stay on the fringes or become just another Microsoft. The Apple doesn't fall far from the tree either.
Linux and open-source software largely being in the hands of... problem people is very concerning. There are only so many places you can run before you're out of OS/software options.
The craziest and worst thing to happen in Linux was a GlANT RAlNBOW CoC being shoved down all the Open Source dev's and user's throats in 2019. The second craziest was the first-degree incident with Hanzo Reizori in 2008.
People used to say "Contribute to free and open source projects to keep them going". However, it seems that most of that money goes into other stuff. The problem seems to be that big tech is robbing the poor donations that we give to FOSS projects.
I mean you need the money you need the capital to develop and pay people which Red hat seems to do as well as canonical the big players I mean for community that works either on donations for commissions it just not sustainable issues also with hardware I'm trying to build all this stuff from scratch without having to deal with Intel or AMD
Ha, finally the big one (adobe) has screwed up enough that people are willing to switch to something else. Sadly, Affinity is also not available for Linux.
The difference is that their generation had the support, as someone that tried to work on OSS software for the past 10 years it simply doesn't work. It doesn't matter what you do, the foundation wont give you funding, anything OSS related loops back to the foundation when you try to target that because that's how search engines work. So in the end your left with a software that works but has no users doomed to fail. The problem is not the funding it's the reach you simply can't get people to hear about whatever you're working on, they aren't doing their part in pushing OSS software out there, the only thing that they work on is personal and personally related projects whitelist ignoring everything else that doesn't make them money. I used to really pro free software but then i realized it's actually easier to sell something than to convince people to use it for free.
Well, when people start cloning SuSE and undercutting their engineering costs then SuSE can start playing games with their source code too. It isn’t Red Hat’s fault that so many in the community bite the hand that feeds them.
1. The Linux foundation makes me angry to an extent that I cannot express in writing. 2. Snap is basically the only Ubuntu thing I don't like (and then how Ubuntu Server seems to be the Fisher Price toy of the server space), but all of the other experiments were cool and interesting. 3. I love what System76 is doing, I hope they succeed. 4. IBM sucks and I don't know why FOSS companies have started selling to people like Oracle and IBM if they started by being super into open source. Greed trumps all. 5. Apparently someone uses SUSE. 6. Debian has been Debian for decades, and I have great faith that it will continue to be Debian in the future. Debian is eternally fine and immune to hip trends.
Are the Central Planners, planning to shut down OpenSources ? Forcing people to use MacOS, WinOS, ChromoOS ? Otherwise, the Central Planners wont be able to implement total " Spyware" in our computer.
@@luizmonad777You realise Microsoft is on the board *and* the train there's no community representative right? Everywhere decisions are made that undercut desktop Linux you'll find them. Except Shake, because that was apple buying out a small company (NothingReal) providing a product that didn't even have a Mac version just to crush it.
Gentoo, didn't become a binary distro, it alwaays had support for binary packages, and now upstream has build jobs to precreate these binary packages. That's the _only_ thing that changed: we host more prebuilt binaries now.
To be fair to most of the reporters of Linux stuff, the big thing is the Steam Deck, plasma 6.x and they did all shout out how evil Redhat closing up source was... but I definitely think more should talk about the racist red hat lawsuit.
I think we need to move away from moralizing about the sustainability of software projects. They were kind to make it free for the time they did. Now that they are in a desperate position, they should be able to try and monetize it properly. It is the height of arrogance to be an entitled beggar.
Amazing overview of Linux news I mostly never heard anywhere else. Instantly subscribed! I wonder if many of these developments are intended to undermine Linux as we know it, like Microsoft is known to have done with: “Embrace, extend, and extinguish" (EEE)
I really do see something like that happening once Linus is out of the picture. You think Linux has too many distros now just wait till it's too many Kernels.
Forking the Kernel is not the issue, the issue is getting the funding to continue the development, also marketing to reach people, and lawyers to fight legal issues. It's a failed mission, it will only be downhill from here on.
I don't understand why the LINUX foundation is funding AI, that seems dishonest. If I as a donor wanted to contribute to AI development, I would donate to a foundation that has developed some noteworthy AI tools or research publications. The people who donate to the Linux Foundation are doing it because they care about LINUX.
All Linux updates (including the Kernel updates, Linus) went wonkey this past year. Red Hat is completely lost. What happened??! To be fair though, Apple and Microsoft are going the same way. Let's don't even talk about Android. Instead, lets talk about what started this mess in the first place (, maybe it's the post Pandemic lockdown blues closely followed by Uncle AI?) It's more about losing sight of what open source means. Instead of "What can I contribute", it's more about "What can I take". When there's no more learning, I suppose we have AI.
we live in a world where machine learning specialists worth multiple millions of dollars or year involved with actual haute rocket technologies can barely figure out how to make TWITTER work without too much incident as they're being farmed out by their schizjob boss
The Mac OS kernel has source code from the freeBSD project. Private enterprise has been stealing code from the open source movement from the very start. Any donation to an open source project is basically a free contribution to all of it's private competition as well.
I have homework to do and a network that I could be expanding, but instead I'm going to watch an hour-long video about why the operating system I sometimes use via WSL sucks. My life is such a joke.
The main problem is that tech folks get paid too much to work for free. Why would I turn down 500k/yr to start relying on donations from random crazy people on the internet? And how can a company justify spending engineer hours on it without monetization? While the idea is nice, these are highly skilled, highly desireable professionals. They are expensive. And the ones willing to throw that away for free software tend to be crazy. Once you start relying on donations, you turn into those graft-ridden non-profits who spend more on PR and advertising and marketing than their "core" mission. Because their sustainability, their monetization, is begging for money, not solving the problems they say they are solving.
The sad truth is that its a classic "3 values, choose 2", a la " quick, fast, and easy" - skill, time, and personality. Skilled, have time, but still choose to work on FOSS? You're an ideological zealot of the type that ruins management, credulous to contemporary "progressivism". Skilled, good personality? Lack the time. Too busy making money in real business. Good personality, have the time? Means you didn't have the skill to make money! And so on.
Hi luke im a gentoo user binary packages arent mandatory i still compile everything from source. The decision for adding binary packages if i recall was to give users more choice and that was reiterated on the news item about the binary packages PS: some big programs like firefox, the kernel or libreoffice already had binary versions rather than compiling from source, i personally used the binary for libreoffice and yes you can mix binary programs and source compiled programs portage is a really great package manager. Its also really good if ur installing gentoo on an old laptop you dont have to compile certain large packages. Now ofc the use flags dont work for bin pkgs which it makes sense as a maintainer you dont want to compile 5 different versions of vlc one with opus one without opus one with opus and flac one with flac but no opus
Suddenly my friend who has separated his networks at home where his trusted machines cannot talk to ubuntu or windows and has blocked access to a ton of sites (microsoft, ubuntu etc), does not seem as crazy as 6 months ago.
My Free Desktop keeps sucking year in and year out. Once in a while I have to interact with Windows or OSX and am immediately reminded of the truth of the Linus Torvalds comment that all operating systems suck, Linux just sucks less. Theo deRaadt would probably correct that with: all operating systems suck...except OpenBSD
OBSD iS genuinely my favorite system to run as a cli Unix workflow, but it is not easy to get up and running on. NixOS is legitimately unsuckful, definitely the doesn't suck experience for a Linux distro.
@@geostokes8573 I find OpenBsd delightful. With i3 wm easy to use, easy to upgrade, and was easy to install. Linux supports more stuff but Theo and the gang do great work, always doing the most with limited resources.
*_"Linux just sucks less"_* Watch "Linus Torvalds on why desktop Linux sucks" Most people want to get work done or just game, in a Linux desktop OS that means troubleshooting countless times every week... no thanks.
maybe i'm just dumb but i always wondered why linux users use a site owned by microsoft to essentially host the code of all their programs. people (rightfully) distrust microsoft because of stuff like recall, is there anything to stop them hosting and serving such malware from github?
I may have missed the point of your last statement... But if you don't trust your host, give them only the chest to host, without the key to open it. Don't store clear data to cloud, store only encrypted files and don't trust their own mechanisms.
Github is used by developers so malware that is not marked as such will be and has been a cause of controversy about the site, no code hosting site can be free of malware because it can also be used for educational purposes
MS didn't create github, they bought it. There was some migration when the sale happened but github is the central place where code dev happens so unless you're a big project or are happy with nearly no eyeballs on your code github is the defacto only option. If you remember years ago Lunduke left youtube because it wasn;t open source or whatever, he's back now because guess what he needs viewers and the viewers are here.
@@joshallen128 Licenses are the biggest scam created, if something is free, why do we even need a license for it? Simple so we can have few people in America that profit from it.
If you don't have management, then you're going to have incomprehensible designs and zero interoperability. Management is necessary. As is planning. And design. And discussing with other interested parties. If a random dev starts writing code, they can very easily cause problems. And the foundation is necessary as a legal entity to prevent a single person from owning the code and closing it up whenever they want to. Or selling to some Chinese malware company. You don't understand the role the foundation or management plays. Perhaps learn why they are there first before asking for their removal, or chafing at their upkeep.
From Linux Foundation Annual Report 2023: > Linux kernel support 2% ($7,804,150) > In 2023 the Linux Foundation is forecasting to spend over $269.02M supporting our mission. 7.80M/269.02M = 2.9% They did a weird rounding in their report. While there is a drop in the Linux kernel funding, it isn't that huge. What's even more depressing is that the absolute numbers have also decreased.
@@alomac8976 That slow startup times, last time I watched a video about it, was largely been addressed. Also, if waiting literally 2 extra seconds when you open a program is that much of a concern.... then I feel sorry. The running performance was already on par with flatpaks, IIRC. The other side that xritics briefly mentioned, is that you can have anything as a snap, including daemons, system tools and I think, even libraries. That is, some things you can have them as snaps, but not flatpaks. From what I remember, a good example of that is Nextcloud, the cloud server software - which can be installed trivially as a snap.
@@alomac8976 It depend. I use it with Chomium, Brave, Firefox, Joplin and others. Firefox is a bit slow to start sometimes (max 1 sec). Brave and Chromium start instantly. In use, i don't have any issue. Steam with snap is fast but some games don't start. I use Steam with flatpak, it's really slow compares to snap package but all of my games work with.
I will NOT rest until Red Hat Linux is run, managed and developed by a powerful inspirational Woman of Color called Shaniqua. We need to recognise than binary distributions are HIGHLY discriminatory against non-binary distributions and other highly regarded neurodivergent distributions.
Undergoing most serious impacts of any distro from Neofetch going unmaintained :smile: Similar to Debian because where Debian has non-sucky central organisation, Arch is minimalist about centralizing at all. RTFM ethos is perhaps colliding with rising popularity.
It's 2024, and Linux is still a server OS. It's perfect on server, and a headache on everything else. As an embedded dev I have a special hatred for USB in Linux (don't get me started), and a more general but somewhat less fiery hatred for System D (you've added services, but have you ever tried _removing_ them.. and have you ever been a sandboxed root, bro? it's a special experience).
If racism is wrong (and it is) then it's wrong _no matter who the target is._ And if it's "not racism" _depending on which race it's aimed at?_ Then that only compounds racism with _cowardice._
Yeah, but there was no racism here. DEI initiatives are common and exist specifically to combat racism. If you google up any article about the red hat racism claims you will see how one-sided this coverage was. A racebaiting jerk was being racist and fired for it, then claimed "they fired me because I am white" when in actuality nearly all of IBM and Redhat was white so of course most of the layed off/fired people were white.
Dont even bother bringing this up, most of these activists are racists themselves. So mentioning anything similar to what you've just said, or how this kind of reverse racism creates racial segregation, will get you labeled as a bigot and banned from many places.
Gentoo is not a binary distro, it offers the ability to download binary packages (good for old laptops with slow CPU's), but it is definitely not mandatory and compiling from source is still the recommended way.
Okay, so, I’m no Linux expert. But this video was recorded almost a year ago, and I went to the Linux kernel website and I still saw fresh releases of LTS branches. Am I missing something?
Where can i find the list of what the LF does and is involved in with? I went to their webseite and did not really find alot of what was put on the list here. Maybe some points have been paraphrased? Someone can help put pls?
After watching all this part of me just wants to uninstall Linux sell my computer and go live in a cave. I guess it's all which devil is worse and right now Microsoft and Apple are far worse. You can start to see them sink their claws into Linux and using it for their whims in the Linux Foundation. Maybe BSD might be a viable alternative in the future but in the Open Source spirit if you don't like how something is done just Fork IT!
i am 3 months late. But i still gotta post it here since i've not seen it in the comments: "Every OS/Software sucks, but we gotta decide which one sucks less"
*_"Can we talk about how the sound system on my Window 10 install craps out twice a month"_* Can we talk about your lack of basic Windows (or hardware) skills to solve your issue? I've been using Windows 7 and 10 for 15 years, never came across sound issues on any system I owned or built. What makes you even think it's Windows related noob?
i would love to know where you got the numbers for the spending on ai, i didn't find that on their annual report. i also checked the 3 sections i found that were to do with ai and didn't see the number. i checked LFN and AI, LF AI & DATA and Generative AI: a legal risk or open collaboration opportunity?
I've been considering moving over to Linux, I suppose it's odd asking this under a video called "Linux Sucks" but is it still worth it to make a move from windows?
@@asumazilla Browsing, gaming, digital art (3D and 2D Illustration), potentially audio but that's a low priority. I'm not the most technical person but microsoft's direction with things like co-pilot/recall, along with everything constantly running in the background is slowly getting on my nerves.
@demondeity9816 I would say if you have an old machine you can try a distro on it. Or if you are happy to swap the drive do a fresh linux on a drive. You could also try a live cd to get familiar. For games I heard some people run steam. Browsing and games should be OK, for others you might need to learn new software or how to run current software on Linux.
@@demondeity9816 browsing is perfectly fine. Gaming on linux is also pretty straight forward these days, most games on steam just work. Digital art might be a problem, afaik there are only a few decent FOSS programs and professional program support is rather poor (no Adobe).
A decent distro I've been running is Chimera linux. It uses a freebsd user land on top of the linux kernel. It's been one of the most stable distros I've ever used.
I began learning Linux Mint in a virtual machine last week, and I'm already enjoying it. I plan to spend more time mastering the basics before fully transitioning.❤
It's really hard not to notice how more and more and more people in positions of power in these foundations made to support open source development are completely non-technical... What a horrible time to be alive. We should have gatekept harder.
I can only trust the opinions of Linux users when they're willing to say Linux sucks. And yes, this dead horse NEEDS to be beaten. If Linux is ever going to thrive or take over, things need to change. Evidently, what the community is doing now is not working. Especially the endless forking I keep hearing about. I love and resonate with your joke using a Firefox update as an example. I swear, most change notes are just an included package upgrading to a new minor version for minor bug fixes that aren't really felt by the end user. It's like "libwhoknows updated to version 0.1.1" and "libwhocares updated to version 0.9.1" or even "random-name text editor updated to 5.101.6 - recolors syntax for java syntax mode". Linux community gets way too excited about minor updates that don't get us anywhere turning Linux journalism into a desperate straw-grasping industry. It's hard to believe open-source is democratized by nature. I highly doubt a shaman would have been installed as ceo by vote from the community of the project they oversee. I remember the shift from MacOS 9 to OS X. It was bright, it was new, it was sexy, and it was awesome that it was willing to leave code behind and told developers to update their stuff or get left behind.
I can't get my AverMedia Live Gamer 2.1 capture card under Linux if I want to do 4k 60hz streaming because it can't handshake at 10Gbps under USE3.2 Gen2 for some reason... no work around found yet, hoping to develop a custom manual usb speed check patch sometime but I'm no kernel programmer.
From my testing it seems to be very common for USB 10Gbps and above devices not able to connect at these speeds under Linux. Nobody appears to be resolving this.
I feel like the question shouldn't be "What happens when Linus retires?" but rather "What happens when Linus keels over from someone trying to get an exceptionally stupid commit into the kernel?" Like is there a clear line of succession in place in case of stress-induced death when someone tries to rewrite code to be more efficient but does it all in c#?
I think the point was less that they were spending a smaller percentage on the kernel, more that an insane majority of their spending doesn't go into anything even related to Linux.
The craziest and worst thing to happen in Linux was a GlANT RAlNBOW CoC being shoved down all the Open Source dev's and user's throats in 2019. The second craziest was the first-degree incident with Hanzo Reizori in 2008.
The biggest issue I had with Linux is that I was running a few programs under a VM and Windows will fight you every step of the way with W10 and W11 in a VM vs an older version like W7 or W8.1. And I'm just running them out of a VM, why not run them natively? I tried WINE and just hated dealing with it because you have to install all the dependencies, sometimes install DLLs, and it just doesn't work well.
I don't know if I should feel relieved because someone is covering these topics or terrified because the moment we lose you the linux journalism is kaput
Time to move away from Ubuntu for me, and at the same time, make sure not to give money to the Linux Foundation, give the money directly to the developers.
From time to time you get an article like industry x or government agency y still uses Win 95. That is probably why they invest in things like farm management and power grid management. It is a long term money source.
I am not sure if you just described a year in a dysfunctioning insane asylum or a software project. This whole show was basically one hour of "wtf are they doing?"
Open source going closed source is common with open source hardware. Open source is great for the community but hasn't worked that well for the companies that make it. Ideals don't pay bills especially when competitors start taking all your hard work then building more successful products that take all your market share
I am pretty happy with my Ubuntu 24.04. Having said that I had to install "minimal" Ubuntu server, get rid of snap and netplan, and install minimal KDE plasma. took me a weekend. I'd prefer to go with the Debian, but their Nvidia drivers' support lag, to say the least.
I try to avoid both Gnome and Redhat; thanks for making me feel good about that :) Once again, i suspect we all ought to get on board with BSD earlier rather than later
@@AntranigVartanian All true. I have a 3 year old laptop in good shape with an nvidia 3060 and I like plasma 6 as a desktop. That might be a bit of a learning curve. But I already dumped systemD based on systemd devs boasts about taking more and more system functions (and that glitch where it erased /home directories). Guess it's time to start learning on an unused partition that I freed up
Dude there's so much drama in ALL worlds. Somewhere, somehow, someone right now is destroying a kid's lemonade stand because lemons make the air in the neighborhood smell weird
I agree, linux sucks. It will keep sucking until someone can make money from it so they can hire full-time staff to make polished, user-friendly, fool proof software, that just works, and is good enough to attract developers of things people actually want to use. When Linux becomes more like Windows, and MacOS and Android, and less like Linux, it will stop sucking. I don't care how much that hurts anyone's feels. Reality is reality. Linux is great if you're a nerd or you need to run massive corporate server infrastructure. But for ordinary users, it sucks.
Thank you for your well balancianated overview about the situation with Linux in general! It shows that there are sane people out there who can assessionate the matter of things objectovocally. 👌
Bro's beating the dead horse so hard he revived the dead horse just to keep beating on it. In all seriousness though, the amount of stuff Linux survived through is pure insanity just from 2024. I can't possibly imagine what 2023 was going through. That being said, Linux still feels more of a viable option than Windows even after seeing all this simply because of Copilot and Recall.
Binaries for gentoo makes sense, so long as the exact source code from which they were compiled is provided. _That_ is the distinguishing factor: no programs for which the source code is not fully available. The binary provided for a kernel should produce exactly the same program as compiling against that same kernel without any custom flags.
Comment for the algorithm, and to let you know to keep up the fight! You're a hero in my book. I work as a programmer so about 50% my digital life is Linux based (the other 50% is macOS) and I'd never have known about 80% of these things (esp. the Red Hat/IBM and Linux Foundation... worrying, worrying stuff...)
Maybe Harmony OS will help.. It's not finished yet but I noticed they were talking about how Linux has had backdoors installed similar to Windoze. Now, Russia uses Linux to get away from that so maybe these can be neutralized. (Astra Linux was developed for use in the military and administration)
Bottom line: You're painting a picture that - the writing is on the wall, and the situation is off the wall - asking the question: is Linux going the way of EXTINCTION!?
We stand on the shoulders of nerds that used model 33 teletypes to write shell utilities.
I laughed way too hard at this
That hit hard 😂
Not wrong
Except that they were not nerds, but academics, true computer scientists.
after learning about lisp and some other developments in computing over the years, it is insane how ahead of their time a lot of these nerds were, but sadly whether it was funding, the market or the feasibility of these technologies only a few of them actually survived or evolved to where they are today. its mindblowing to me to think that all these new shiny developments with AI and the 2020s is really just a reinvention or reintroduction of a wheel that someone else did 70-80 years ago, but couldn't get off the ground
Who knew Microsoft coming into the Linux Foundation and community representation being dropped was a conflict of interest... Anyone paying attention.
I noticed that 6-8 years ago.
The Microsoft ( pentagon - this is the major source of their current funding ) will most likely kill Linux like they did with Nokia and their phones. Microsoft is a member of the great big tech family like Apple and they all play in one and the same big tech team. What they want and need is hidden monopoly.
WSL is the only thing that works on AI PCs
Yep, as soon as that happened I knew Linux would either stay on the fringes or become just another Microsoft.
The Apple doesn't fall far from the tree either.
@@nathanbedford9178 its not and it never will if you know what you're doing you're going to own your computer. Microsoft owns your life if you dont.
Linux and open-source software largely being in the hands of... problem people is very concerning. There are only so many places you can run before you're out of OS/software options.
The craziest and worst thing to happen in Linux was a GlANT RAlNBOW CoC being shoved down all the Open Source dev's and user's throats in 2019. The second craziest was the first-degree incident with Hanzo Reizori in 2008.
@@JPs-q1owhat's your issue with rainbow 😂
@@urooj09Ha, it is less about issues with rainbows and more about the issues of rainbows about certain people.
@@slaapliedje so youre just a snowflake whos offended by rainbow people? yeesh
@@dj-ce9ir "rainbow people" 😂 I'm not saying it's /aliens\ but it's /aliens\
People used to say "Contribute to free and open source projects to keep them going". However, it seems that most of that money goes into other stuff. The problem seems to be that big tech is robbing the poor donations that we give to FOSS projects.
Meanwhile I get less than $2 a month to work on jdupes...so it's not a priority.
Never do donation or charity. All people involved and not at the giving end have only one thing in their minds: greed.
wasnt the Void Linux guy saying he doesnt need money but maintainers or something like that?
Corruption exists everywhere
Siphoning funds for other purposes is as old as time
Looking at you, wikipedia
Seems like it's not Linux that sucks, but the people and companies who were supposed to manage and oversee it that suck.
It's all so tiresome.
This is why I'm not really that angry about GNOME hiring a Shaman, beats hiring tech CEO given how they all behave these days.
I mean you need the money you need the capital to develop and pay people which Red hat seems to do as well as canonical the big players I mean for community that works either on donations for commissions it just not sustainable issues also with hardware I'm trying to build all this stuff from scratch without having to deal with Intel or AMD
@@joshallen128 What do you mean build all this from scratch without AMD/Intel?
@@Assenayo Oh no, I'm scared to ask. Maybe this will be mentioned in the video?
No it still sucks, it remains a half baked Desktop experience. It only got worse with DEI hire.
The Linux pioneers are starting to move on and retire. We'll see if the next generation can sustain the momentum.
You will likely get more social engineering and not software engineering.
Well, judging by the increasing number of airplanes falling out of the sky related to DEI centric companies it's not looking good.
We could see the resurgence of FreeBSD 🤌🏻🤌🏻
Ha, finally the big one (adobe) has screwed up enough that people are willing to switch to something else. Sadly, Affinity is also not available for Linux.
The difference is that their generation had the support, as someone that tried to work on OSS software for the past 10 years it simply doesn't work. It doesn't matter what you do, the foundation wont give you funding, anything OSS related loops back to the foundation when you try to target that because that's how search engines work. So in the end your left with a software that works but has no users doomed to fail.
The problem is not the funding it's the reach you simply can't get people to hear about whatever you're working on, they aren't doing their part in pushing OSS software out there, the only thing that they work on is personal and personally related projects whitelist ignoring everything else that doesn't make them money. I used to really pro free software but then i realized it's actually easier to sell something than to convince people to use it for free.
Red Hat has been playing "hide the ball" with the source code for decades.
the tarball.
Well, when people start cloning SuSE and undercutting their engineering costs then SuSE can start playing games with their source code too. It isn’t Red Hat’s fault that so many in the community bite the hand that feeds them.
@@geekinthefield8958 Red Hat is riding on the GPL. If they don't agree with releasing source code and people copying it, there is always BSD.
@@chrimony If RedHat becomes a BSD variant it's all your fault for giving them the idea 😁
@@JPs-q1oBSD isn't on the DEI train enough for their new overlords.
I see smoke coming from the Library of Alexandria.
Extinguish?
Internet archive
Bingo
Great album title!
Debian could cease to exist and no one would notice until 10 years later when no new stable version is released.
There are plenty of testing/unstable Debian users...
That's all I run.
1. The Linux foundation makes me angry to an extent that I cannot express in writing.
2. Snap is basically the only Ubuntu thing I don't like (and then how Ubuntu Server seems to be the Fisher Price toy of the server space), but all of the other experiments were cool and interesting.
3. I love what System76 is doing, I hope they succeed.
4. IBM sucks and I don't know why FOSS companies have started selling to people like Oracle and IBM if they started by being super into open source. Greed trumps all.
5. Apparently someone uses SUSE.
6. Debian has been Debian for decades, and I have great faith that it will continue to be Debian in the future. Debian is eternally fine and immune to hip trends.
I hate it more than Microsoft now
Are the Central Planners, planning to shut down OpenSources ? Forcing people to use MacOS, WinOS, ChromoOS ?
Otherwise, the Central Planners wont be able to implement total " Spyware" in our computer.
@@luizmonad777 System76's desktop is already pretty usable. It's pretty good: I like it better than Gnome (but I don't really like Gnome lol)
@@luizmonad777You realise Microsoft is on the board *and* the train there's no community representative right? Everywhere decisions are made that undercut desktop Linux you'll find them.
Except Shake, because that was apple buying out a small company (NothingReal) providing a product that didn't even have a Mac version just to crush it.
Re: 1, see above. Re: 5 I was shocked too.
Gentoo, didn't become a binary distro, it alwaays had support for binary packages, and now upstream has build jobs to precreate these binary packages.
That's the _only_ thing that changed: we host more prebuilt binaries now.
You are right, I think he used it like this just for video just for a show, don't think serious
Every OS sucks in 2024
Every THING sucks in 2024
@@neilpatrickhairless certainly every piece of new media sucks! No "modern audience" will be buying that up.
Not mine. Continuously working 9 years on same i7 6700, updated yesterday, and not give a reason to change anything in this.
templeos my beloved
@@vit.c.195 That's a CPU, not an OS.
Really wish OS's werent so shit. Is one of the big software black holes.
Back to the Amiga...
Write your own then
@@Ornithopter470 Farm your own food and make your anti biotics. Perform your own surgery.
Your iq big is not. Cant understand normal thinking.
@@Ornithopter470 Working on it.
Choosing an OS: 💩, slightly less 💩
I told everyone (as soon as Microsoft purchased github) to transfer all their files to another website, but as usual no one listens til it's too late.
Same did I, and indeed no one listens.
Wow I didn't know that, what alternative do you utilize?
GitLab, self hosted
To be fair to most of the reporters of Linux stuff, the big thing is the Steam Deck, plasma 6.x and they did all shout out how evil Redhat closing up source was... but I definitely think more should talk about the racist red hat lawsuit.
I think we need to move away from moralizing about the sustainability of software projects.
They were kind to make it free for the time they did. Now that they are in a desperate position, they should be able to try and monetize it properly.
It is the height of arrogance to be an entitled beggar.
@@justhecuketrue!
Amazing overview of Linux news I mostly never heard anywhere else. Instantly subscribed!
I wonder if many of these developments are intended to undermine Linux as we know it, like Microsoft is known to have done with: “Embrace, extend, and extinguish" (EEE)
I know right?
Conspiracy theorists are weird.
I thought that went away with Ballmer
it's Bill effin goats
Time to fork the Kernel? I suggest we call it Lunnix.
I really do see something like that happening once Linus is out of the picture. You think Linux has too many distros now just wait till it's too many Kernels.
@@CCJ1998 I guess i'll just use the default EndevourOS Kernel.
Lundux
Forking the Kernel is not the issue, the issue is getting the funding to continue the development, also marketing to reach people, and lawyers to fight legal issues. It's a failed mission, it will only be downhill from here on.
@@justanaveragebalkan easy, all we need is a script kiddy that will maintain the fork :P
I don't understand why the LINUX foundation is funding AI, that seems dishonest. If I as a donor wanted to contribute to AI development, I would donate to a foundation that has developed some noteworthy AI tools or research publications. The people who donate to the Linux Foundation are doing it because they care about LINUX.
"Debian is fine". Whew, that's a relief.
That's why I keep it as my fallback OS. Interesting how Lunduke didn't say anything about Arch.
XZept in one particular area...
@@CCJ1998No news is good news for Arch.
@@JPs-q1oMy understanding is that was patched rather quickly and only affected Sid/Trixie?
@@Kwijibob lest it end up like manjaro news...
All Linux updates (including the Kernel updates, Linus) went wonkey this past year. Red Hat is completely lost. What happened??! To be fair though, Apple and Microsoft are going the same way. Let's don't even talk about Android. Instead, lets talk about what started this mess in the first place (, maybe it's the post Pandemic lockdown blues closely followed by Uncle AI?) It's more about losing sight of what open source means. Instead of "What can I contribute", it's more about "What can I take". When there's no more learning, I suppose we have AI.
we live in a world where machine learning specialists worth multiple millions of dollars or year involved with actual haute rocket technologies can barely figure out how to make TWITTER work without too much incident as they're being farmed out by their schizjob boss
The Mac OS kernel has source code from the freeBSD project. Private enterprise has been stealing code from the open source movement from the very start. Any donation to an open source project is basically a free contribution to all of it's private competition as well.
Code of conduct. That was the beginning.
I have homework to do and a network that I could be expanding, but instead I'm going to watch an hour-long video about why the operating system I sometimes use via WSL sucks. My life is such a joke.
The main problem is that tech folks get paid too much to work for free. Why would I turn down 500k/yr to start relying on donations from random crazy people on the internet? And how can a company justify spending engineer hours on it without monetization?
While the idea is nice, these are highly skilled, highly desireable professionals. They are expensive. And the ones willing to throw that away for free software tend to be crazy.
Once you start relying on donations, you turn into those graft-ridden non-profits who spend more on PR and advertising and marketing than their "core" mission. Because their sustainability, their monetization, is begging for money, not solving the problems they say they are solving.
The sad truth is that its a classic "3 values, choose 2", a la " quick, fast, and easy" - skill, time, and personality.
Skilled, have time, but still choose to work on FOSS? You're an ideological zealot of the type that ruins management, credulous to contemporary "progressivism".
Skilled, good personality? Lack the time. Too busy making money in real business.
Good personality, have the time? Means you didn't have the skill to make money!
And so on.
Hi luke im a gentoo user binary packages arent mandatory i still compile everything from source. The decision for adding binary packages if i recall was to give users more choice and that was reiterated on the news item about the binary packages
PS: some big programs like firefox, the kernel or libreoffice already had binary versions rather than compiling from source, i personally used the binary for libreoffice and yes you can mix binary programs and source compiled programs portage is a really great package manager. Its also really good if ur installing gentoo on an old laptop you dont have to compile certain large packages. Now ofc the use flags dont work for bin pkgs which it makes sense as a maintainer you dont want to compile 5 different versions of vlc one with opus one without opus one with opus and flac one with flac but no opus
I had no idea what I was getting into with the title, but this turned out to be surprisingly fun and informative.
Same here ✋🏻
Suddenly my friend who has separated his networks at home where his trusted machines cannot talk to ubuntu or windows and has blocked access to a ton of sites (microsoft, ubuntu etc), does not seem as crazy as 6 months ago.
My Free Desktop keeps sucking year in and year out.
Once in a while I have to interact with Windows or OSX and am immediately reminded of the truth of the Linus Torvalds comment that all operating systems suck, Linux just sucks less.
Theo deRaadt would probably correct that with: all operating systems suck...except OpenBSD
OBSD iS genuinely my favorite system to run as a cli Unix workflow, but it is not easy to get up and running on.
NixOS is legitimately unsuckful, definitely the doesn't suck experience for a Linux distro.
@@geostokes8573 I find OpenBsd delightful. With i3 wm easy to use, easy to upgrade, and was easy to install. Linux supports more stuff but Theo and the gang do great work, always doing the most with limited resources.
@@geostokes8573I've seen to Nick sauce have been like a package manager
Free BSD open BSD netbsd ghostbsd
*_"Linux just sucks less"_*
Watch "Linus Torvalds on why desktop Linux sucks"
Most people want to get work done or just game, in a Linux desktop OS that means troubleshooting countless times every week... no thanks.
maybe i'm just dumb but i always wondered why linux users use a site owned by microsoft to essentially host the code of all their programs. people (rightfully) distrust microsoft because of stuff like recall, is there anything to stop them hosting and serving such malware from github?
I may have missed the point of your last statement... But if you don't trust your host, give them only the chest to host, without the key to open it.
Don't store clear data to cloud, store only encrypted files and don't trust their own mechanisms.
It might be time to learn the story of git and github.
Github is used by developers so malware that is not marked as such will be and has been a cause of controversy about the site, no code hosting site can be free of malware because it can also be used for educational purposes
MS didn't create github, they bought it. There was some migration when the sale happened but github is the central place where code dev happens so unless you're a big project or are happy with nearly no eyeballs on your code github is the defacto only option. If you remember years ago Lunduke left youtube because it wasn;t open source or whatever, he's back now because guess what he needs viewers and the viewers are here.
@@tappy8741 gitlab maybe.
Money should always go to the developers not management, the fact that there is a Linux Foundation means that we already failed our mission.
But the licenses allow it, the gnu gpl is a royalty free license
@@joshallen128 Licenses are the biggest scam created, if something is free, why do we even need a license for it?
Simple so we can have few people in America that profit from it.
If you don't have management, then you're going to have incomprehensible designs and zero interoperability.
Management is necessary. As is planning. And design. And discussing with other interested parties.
If a random dev starts writing code, they can very easily cause problems.
And the foundation is necessary as a legal entity to prevent a single person from owning the code and closing it up whenever they want to. Or selling to some Chinese malware company.
You don't understand the role the foundation or management plays. Perhaps learn why they are there first before asking for their removal, or chafing at their upkeep.
@@justhecukeFor Linux to suck this much for so many years... I would doubt management
@@dadlord689 it's a hard problem, fundamentally speaking. Blaming management for that is just silly
From Linux Foundation Annual Report 2023:
> Linux kernel support 2% ($7,804,150)
> In 2023 the Linux Foundation is forecasting to spend over $269.02M supporting our mission.
7.80M/269.02M = 2.9%
They did a weird rounding in their report. While there is a drop in the Linux kernel funding, it isn't that huge. What's even more depressing is that the absolute numbers have also decreased.
Linux Foundation is a leftist lunatic funding front. Same as GNOME Foundation.
The pandemic tech bubble has burst, remember big tech are the ones funding the Linux foundation
they should give a million+ to the guy who discovered xz backdoor so early, it could've been the end given more time.
IIRC it was in fact a Microsoft engineer
10 more unfound backdoors to go
@@Waffle4569LOL prob true
I can't seem to find the first Linux sucks video. Does anyone have a link to it? I remember seeing it many years ago and would love to see it.
Let's be honest: who would really be upset about ubuntu killing off snap?
Me. Snap works well. It's not perfect but it's the same with flatpak, deb, rpm...etc. A good snap is easy to use better than other package.
@@xritics19 doesn't snap have performance issues?
@@alomac8976 That slow startup times, last time I watched a video about it, was largely been addressed. Also, if waiting literally 2 extra seconds when you open a program is that much of a concern.... then I feel sorry. The running performance was already on par with flatpaks, IIRC.
The other side that xritics briefly mentioned, is that you can have anything as a snap, including daemons, system tools and I think, even libraries. That is, some things you can have them as snaps, but not flatpaks. From what I remember, a good example of that is Nextcloud, the cloud server software - which can be installed trivially as a snap.
@@xritics19snap is spamming the filesystem
@@alomac8976 It depend. I use it with Chomium, Brave, Firefox, Joplin and others. Firefox is a bit slow to start sometimes (max 1 sec). Brave and Chromium start instantly. In use, i don't have any issue. Steam with snap is fast but some games don't start. I use Steam with flatpak, it's really slow compares to snap package but all of my games work with.
I will NOT rest until Red Hat Linux is run, managed and developed by a powerful inspirational Woman of Color called Shaniqua. We need to recognise than binary distributions are HIGHLY discriminatory against non-binary distributions and other highly regarded neurodivergent distributions.
😂😂😂😂😂
u have all the signs of someone who's mind is stuck in middle school
@@necrotafeioah, I see. It's not that you didn't see the video. It's just that you're actually a racist too.
@@necrotafeio and you have all the signs of the teacher's pet.
gnaa made something like that...
Did anything happen on the Arch side of things? I missed them in the 'distros' section.
Undergoing most serious impacts of any distro from Neofetch going unmaintained :smile: Similar to Debian because where Debian has non-sucky central organisation, Arch is minimalist about centralizing at all. RTFM ethos is perhaps colliding with rising popularity.
@@linuxforpunks
arch users just use hyfetch now. we gay furries.
Shoutouts to the Gnome Project Shaman.
Given how experienced tech CEOs have been running Linux into the ground, props for doing something different I guess
Yeah she just dinged lvl 70
I heard that the Shaman stepped down to focus on being a Shaman full time.
It's 2024, and Linux is still a server OS. It's perfect on server, and a headache on everything else. As an embedded dev I have a special hatred for USB in Linux (don't get me started), and a more general but somewhat less fiery hatred for System D (you've added services, but have you ever tried _removing_ them.. and have you ever been a sandboxed root, bro? it's a special experience).
You said it all in three sentences.
I've been running Linux on every laptop and desktop PC I own for the last 10 years. Not going back either.
We are living in an AI hallucination, clearly.
With compounding errors.
Funniest part that AI servers are running on Linux.
It’s not even the fun type of hallucinating
If racism is wrong (and it is) then it's wrong _no matter who the target is._ And if it's "not racism" _depending on which race it's aimed at?_ Then that only compounds racism with _cowardice._
I didn't shun bigotry just to swap bigots.
Yeah, but there was no racism here. DEI initiatives are common and exist specifically to combat racism. If you google up any article about the red hat racism claims you will see how one-sided this coverage was. A racebaiting jerk was being racist and fired for it, then claimed "they fired me because I am white" when in actuality nearly all of IBM and Redhat was white so of course most of the layed off/fired people were white.
Racism isn't wrong. Diversity is a cult based on bad science, superstition, and lies
Do you mind if I quote this? This is a fabulous quote.
Dont even bother bringing this up, most of these activists are racists themselves. So mentioning anything similar to what you've just said, or how this kind of reverse racism creates racial segregation, will get you labeled as a bigot and banned from many places.
I hope KDE hires a Dragonborn Bard, they need all the support they can get these days.
It shows ! They are finaly listening , and putting out release fixed dates just like gnome so lets hope in the future it helps.
Well since I’m white guess ill just never again use red hat products.
And if u are straight you cant use suse either. Lets not even talk about the lgbtq linux foundation.
what
@@necrotafeiogo to one hour into the video. Red hat employees had to literally take an anti white pledge. Absolute insanity.
@@wind2536 literally lies and propaganda
Well you'd better add Debian to that list too..
Gentoo is not a binary distro, it offers the ability to download binary packages (good for old laptops with slow CPU's), but it is definitely not mandatory and compiling from source is still the recommended way.
exactly. now consider what else he swept under the rug because it was inconvenient to his narrative while making this
Gentoo fools always being fools.
@@TheAechBomb what else did he sweep under the rug because it was inconvenient to his narrative while making this?
Debian Dan ubuntu yg download dulu2 tiba2 pulok thumb drive rosak. Tiada backup iso. Susahnya nak download balik.
I use Arch. I am glad it wasn't mentioned.
By the way?
Gentoo was also not on the major list...
Because no one really use it in professional environnement, btw.
@camarade42 What does professional mean? I use it for work since a few years now. Not on servers, though.
@@seeibe yes, I talk about servers.
Okay, so, I’m no Linux expert. But this video was recorded almost a year ago, and I went to the Linux kernel website and I still saw fresh releases of LTS branches. Am I missing something?
PLAN9 MENTIONED !! 🗣️🗣️
Great. Still waiting on a shout out to VMS.
@@JPs-q1o lisp machine >>>>>
Where?
@@JPs-q1o I'm gonna sit over here reminding everyone that Extremely Reliable Operating System (EROS) and its successor CapROS are a thing...
Where can i find the list of what the LF does and is involved in with? I went to their webseite and did not really find alot of what was put on the list here. Maybe some points have been paraphrased? Someone can help put pls?
After watching all this part of me just wants to uninstall Linux sell my computer and go live in a cave. I guess it's all which devil is worse and right now Microsoft and Apple are far worse. You can start to see them sink their claws into Linux and using it for their whims in the Linux Foundation. Maybe BSD might be a viable alternative in the future but in the Open Source spirit if you don't like how something is done just Fork IT!
Caves suck too.
We still have Bsd. For now.
Maybe a future which we all use BSD@@ghost-user559
@@asumazillawhat about a person cave
You need money to go independently develop your own version and that's what most people are starting to figure out
I dont want to install a github script to undervolt under linux and I dont know how it works thats the sad part.
i am 3 months late.
But i still gotta post it here since i've not seen it in the comments:
"Every OS/Software sucks, but we gotta decide which one sucks less"
were are all the videos from more than one year ago gone??
Can we talk about how the sound system on my Window 10 install craps out twice a month, but my 22.04 partition "just works"
The sound system on my Windows 11 install works flawlessly, yet my Linux install breaks random things at random times.
*_"Can we talk about how the sound system on my Window 10 install craps out twice a month"_*
Can we talk about your lack of basic Windows (or hardware) skills to solve your issue?
I've been using Windows 7 and 10 for 15 years, never came across sound issues on any system I owned or built. What makes you even think it's Windows related noob?
@@P.Mantis-nw3xi You got a point, I’m also a Windows 7, 10/11 user and I did not have any problems
i would love to know where you got the numbers for the spending on ai, i didn't find that on their annual report. i also checked the 3 sections i found that were to do with ai and didn't see the number. i checked LFN and AI, LF AI & DATA and Generative AI: a legal risk or open collaboration opportunity?
my guess is that the 12% number you got is actually 12% of another section and not 12% of the total budget
The linux foundation has lost the horizon
I think (now) is more like cash gruber for making money to own business
The wonder is gone
I've been considering moving over to Linux, I suppose it's odd asking this under a video called "Linux Sucks" but is it still worth it to make a move from windows?
What do you need to do?
@@asumazilla Browsing, gaming, digital art (3D and 2D Illustration), potentially audio but that's a low priority.
I'm not the most technical person but microsoft's direction with things like co-pilot/recall, along with everything constantly running in the background is slowly getting on my nerves.
@demondeity9816 I would say if you have an old machine you can try a distro on it. Or if you are happy to swap the drive do a fresh linux on a drive. You could also try a live cd to get familiar. For games I heard some people run steam. Browsing and games should be OK, for others you might need to learn new software or how to run current software on Linux.
@@demondeity9816 browsing is perfectly fine. Gaming on linux is also pretty straight forward these days, most games on steam just work. Digital art might be a problem, afaik there are only a few decent FOSS programs and professional program support is rather poor (no Adobe).
@@demondeity9816stick to windows. use windows 10 1809 ltsc.
Windows sucks.
Linux sucks.
Apple sucks.
Always how I pictured it.
agreed, freeBSD, OpenHarmony, Oniro master race
@@livinginharmony360 these... these also suck
I will agree with you, most distro's are close to junk. I need to figure out how to correctly setup freebsd.
A decent distro I've been running is Chimera linux. It uses a freebsd user land on top of the linux kernel. It's been one of the most stable distros I've ever used.
I began learning Linux Mint in a virtual machine last week, and I'm already enjoying it. I plan to spend more time mastering the basics before fully transitioning.❤
LMAO
Linux Mint is awesome. Good choice.
It's really hard not to notice how more and more and more people in positions of power in these foundations made to support open source development are completely non-technical... What a horrible time to be alive. We should have gatekept harder.
I can only trust the opinions of Linux users when they're willing to say Linux sucks. And yes, this dead horse NEEDS to be beaten. If Linux is ever going to thrive or take over, things need to change. Evidently, what the community is doing now is not working. Especially the endless forking I keep hearing about.
I love and resonate with your joke using a Firefox update as an example. I swear, most change notes are just an included package upgrading to a new minor version for minor bug fixes that aren't really felt by the end user. It's like "libwhoknows updated to version 0.1.1" and "libwhocares updated to version 0.9.1" or even "random-name text editor updated to 5.101.6 - recolors syntax for java syntax mode". Linux community gets way too excited about minor updates that don't get us anywhere turning Linux journalism into a desperate straw-grasping industry.
It's hard to believe open-source is democratized by nature. I highly doubt a shaman would have been installed as ceo by vote from the community of the project they oversee.
I remember the shift from MacOS 9 to OS X. It was bright, it was new, it was sexy, and it was awesome that it was willing to leave code behind and told developers to update their stuff or get left behind.
Amazing talk as always, Lunduke. I've watched all of your Linux Sucks talks, and they are the highlight of my year ~~
You know what, Haiku and SerenityOS are looking pretty good right now. Maybe even move to TempleOS.
Haiku I tried feels like classic Mac from my youth
Serenity I haven't tried
Temple os is amazing
@@joshallen128 based.
I can't get my AverMedia Live Gamer 2.1 capture card under Linux if I want to do 4k 60hz streaming because it can't handshake at 10Gbps under USE3.2 Gen2 for some reason... no work around found yet, hoping to develop a custom manual usb speed check patch sometime but I'm no kernel programmer.
From my testing it seems to be very common for USB 10Gbps and above devices not able to connect at these speeds under Linux. Nobody appears to be resolving this.
Unix/Linux is not even built for the present, much less the future. We need to start over and bring back the Lisp Machine.
We should all have adopted Plan 9 from Bell Labs..
@@bogaagames2706wasnt that released freely
what is project support? can u give some examples? are donations just being funneled to friends via nepotism
I feel like the question shouldn't be "What happens when Linus retires?" but rather "What happens when Linus keels over from someone trying to get an exceptionally stupid commit into the kernel?" Like is there a clear line of succession in place in case of stress-induced death when someone tries to rewrite code to be more efficient but does it all in c#?
I miss the times when “Linux Sucks” was performed / recorded in front of a live audience.
Linux is a headache and doesn't run any apps I need. Wish we had a serious competitor to Windows that wasn't obscenely overpriced (apple)
01:04:44 Yep Debian is fine, actually it's my favorite even Operating System.
Sure, but most of us prefer uneven operating systems.
Does spending on the kernel actually benefit development or is it like throwing so much fertilizer on your crops that it blocks the sun?
good question, I believe so. testing, research could also be done besides normal PRs
I think the point was less that they were spending a smaller percentage on the kernel, more that an insane majority of their spending doesn't go into anything even related to Linux.
big lawsuit hitting ibm and rh. glad you mentioned the stories.
This brought out some serious butt hurt in February. Let's throw some salt on those wounds and aire this again. 🧂
The craziest and worst thing to happen in Linux was a GlANT RAlNBOW CoC being shoved down all the Open Source dev's and user's throats in 2019. The second craziest was the first-degree incident with Hanzo Reizori in 2008.
@@JPs-q1o I decided to go ReiserFS on one of my old Slackware installs but it killed my entire filesystem for some reason.
@@JPs-q1o cant find anything about hanzo reizori. seriously just one link on some dude's foss twitter but can't even find that post. qrd?
The biggest issue I had with Linux is that I was running a few programs under a VM and Windows will fight you every step of the way with W10 and W11 in a VM vs an older version like W7 or W8.1. And I'm just running them out of a VM, why not run them natively? I tried WINE and just hated dealing with it because you have to install all the dependencies, sometimes install DLLs, and it just doesn't work well.
Pretty sure Valve invests more money in Linux by developing SteamOS.
Why not upload the MAc os sucks episode here on you tube. and all the linux sucks series ? :)
Problem is macOS doesn’t really suck lol it would be a video nitpicking with personal opinions.
I don't know if I should feel relieved because someone is covering these topics or terrified because the moment we lose you the linux journalism is kaput
Everyone unalives
03:18 Can I have an overview of what this is about? Maybe this appears later
Time to move away from Ubuntu for me, and at the same time, make sure not to give money to the Linux Foundation, give the money directly to the developers.
I'll bet somewhere you find Blackrock. It's all about money and power.
From time to time you get an article like industry x or government agency y still uses Win 95. That is probably why they invest in things like farm management and power grid management. It is a long term money source.
That would be the only redeeming part there, investing into future revenue streams. But I'm skeptical.
@koffge Gates has been buying farmland... I'm sure there is no connection.
I use Linux Mint XFCE because it runs nearly perfect for me.
I am not sure if you just described a year in a dysfunctioning insane asylum or a software project. This whole show was basically one hour of "wtf are they doing?"
Open source going closed source is common with open source hardware. Open source is great for the community but hasn't worked that well for the companies that make it. Ideals don't pay bills especially when competitors start taking all your hard work then building more successful products that take all your market share
I am pretty happy with my Ubuntu 24.04. Having said that I had to install "minimal" Ubuntu server, get rid of snap and netplan, and install minimal KDE plasma. took me a weekend. I'd prefer to go with the Debian, but their Nvidia drivers' support lag, to say the least.
That's crazy. I can install Windows 11, debloat it, install my apps, and be gaming within the hour. I can do the same on Fedora and EndevourOS too.
When are you going to make Lundux?
I try to avoid both Gnome and Redhat; thanks for making me feel good about that :) Once again, i suspect we all ought to get on board with BSD earlier rather than later
I think, yes. BSD is having a bright signature in my radar too.
we have better LTS, better hypervisor, better containers (Jails), better packaging and better compilers :D we just suck in marketing xD
@@AntranigVartanian All true. I have a 3 year old laptop in good shape with an nvidia 3060 and I like plasma 6 as a desktop. That might be a bit of a learning curve. But I already dumped systemD based on systemd devs boasts about taking more and more system functions (and that glitch where it erased /home directories). Guess it's time to start learning on an unused partition that I freed up
@@andrewfournier8817ghost bsd
I've always liked the FreeBSD mascott, OpenBSD's too...
Is all this true? I just switched from Windoesn't last week and now I'm not sure if that was the right move...
Whatever troubles Linux has they pale in comparison to Microsoft products. You made the right switch.
Use whatever. If you are wondering if it was the right thing both will do for the time being.
Use whatever, but know this: the umbrella size to keep the shitshow away is infinite on windows
Wow, I had no idea there was so much drama in Linux world.
Dude there's so much drama in ALL worlds. Somewhere, somehow, someone right now is destroying a kid's lemonade stand because lemons make the air in the neighborhood smell weird
I agree, linux sucks. It will keep sucking until someone can make money from it so they can hire full-time staff to make polished, user-friendly, fool proof software, that just works, and is good enough to attract developers of things people actually want to use. When Linux becomes more like Windows, and MacOS and Android, and less like Linux, it will stop sucking. I don't care how much that hurts anyone's feels. Reality is reality.
Linux is great if you're a nerd or you need to run massive corporate server infrastructure. But for ordinary users, it sucks.
Theres always Harmony OS from china and its already been launched.
Steam deck might change that
mind giving the whole article from the register? or perhaps a link?
Yeah, that Linus section didn't age really good. Also, with these problems abound, Linux next year has even more grim future.
I feel the linux and VGA output part, so many cringe memories from my college years being the "weird linux guy"
Cringe is not an adjective.
Looks like I'm going to keep sticking with Debian for the foreseeable future. As for Fedora, Conner on guys you knew this was coming.
Linux... finds a way. Debian will be fine.
Thank you for your well balancianated overview about the situation with Linux in general! It shows that there are sane people out there who can assessionate the matter of things objectovocally. 👌
0.5% budget used for linux 2024. I can feel it.... The budget will go towards farm management (W?)
Bro's beating the dead horse so hard he revived the dead horse just to keep beating on it. In all seriousness though, the amount of stuff Linux survived through is pure insanity just from 2024. I can't possibly imagine what 2023 was going through. That being said, Linux still feels more of a viable option than Windows even after seeing all this simply because of Copilot and Recall.
Binaries for gentoo makes sense, so long as the exact source code from which they were compiled is provided. _That_ is the distinguishing factor: no programs for which the source code is not fully available. The binary provided for a kernel should produce exactly the same program as compiling against that same kernel without any custom flags.
Comment for the algorithm, and to let you know to keep up the fight! You're a hero in my book.
I work as a programmer so about 50% my digital life is Linux based (the other 50% is macOS) and I'd never have known about 80% of these things (esp. the Red Hat/IBM and Linux Foundation... worrying, worrying stuff...)
Maybe Harmony OS will help.. It's not finished yet but I noticed they were talking about how Linux has had backdoors installed similar to Windoze. Now, Russia uses Linux to get away from that so maybe these can be neutralized. (Astra Linux was developed for use in the military and administration)
Bottom line:
You're painting a picture that - the writing is on the wall, and the situation is off the wall - asking the question: is Linux going the way of EXTINCTION!?