As just only year or so Linux user.... I always recommend Linux to my friends, Who now started using to get into "way more cooler thing " called hacking ... I am sure all of them gonna hack FBI some day😂
@@heldereduardopintosousavid7474 You can't say macos X is a "elite" (you can't say any OS,' it is elite' anyway) you pretty much have no control on your system. Kernel is opensourced yes, but it is just kernel not GUI which is really bad cuz they can do whatever they want in this case
I always make everyone tell me the number of packages they have installed, and if it's too high, I point at them and yell "SOY" really loud. I learned all of this from you, Luke.
When I switched from Ubuntu to Arch the first time, like 10 years ago, the Arch forum was as welcoming as the Ubuntu one. Which really was amazing. The German Debian forum was a shithole full of toxic elitist neckbeards back then.
I use TempleOS with a capless keyboard and write graphics drivers on my 768 core Zen CXX using a 1nm architecture. In my spare time I solved the meaning of life. Ubuntu you say, that's cool.
You're right, Arch Linux is to mainstream and noob friendly, I should be using Gentoo now. Then I can really dab on all those losers for there personal life choices.
I've met my fair share of Linux users when I was an undergrad in computer science. They were all pretty nice, I even met another arch guy. However, I will say I've met a so called "soy dev" once and he was very sensitive and emotional when I was trying explain why I liked C, bash, and posix compliment over python. I wasn't even saying they were "better", just that I prefered them.
You my friend are the kind of person I can respect. What peasant uses Python anyway? :P Btw did you mean compliant? No but seriously, I like speed over ease as well. There is a reason both C and Python exist, but some people don't get it.
@@svhuwagv2965 Yes I meant compliant not complement. This guy became very defensive when I was explaining why I prefered other scripting languages to python. It actually took me off guard. I feel like ease is a relative term, it might take a little bit more time to learn how to use it, but what you get back in efficiency (speed and compatability across platforms) will more than make up for it.
@@jonasrivers3675 it still is better because of the global use flags which are different for every computer! it make programs more optimized for your system!
5:03 I did identify with Common Lisp some time ago. The first programming language, I really got into, and used for a few years almost exclusively. But it had too many problems, and now there are only two languages, I don't hate as much: Rust and Scopes
In any field of endeavor, there are those who seek to improve themselves in order to prove their worth, and those who demand approval merely for participating as they already are. To the former group, practically no-one is an elitist, whereas to the latter group, practically everyone is.
Yeah, if I was a teacher and I had a conversation with another teacher about boards, theirs was a sharpie board and I said mine was a smart board, I wouldn’t be flexing on them, they both have the same function essentially, of course I know nothing about computers but still
The reason I use Ubuntu is to dab on a particular AUR user who says he runs Arch when he's really using Manjaro. He wants to make others feel how he did when I told him I run Arch so I install Ubuntu.
@@emmanuelgxlden7170 It's not Arch, it's not very good either but that's just my opinon. It's not the distros fault, but I have noticed a great deal of people who've picked up on how the Arch/AUR echo system relates to derivatives and are running Manjaro to say they use Arch just to make people feel inadequate. It's a problem with the user not the operating system. Don't listen to the devs about partial upgrades either(-Sy without the u to make -Syu), they've never gotten it to work exactly like upstream Arch told them.
My first Distro: arch Why, because I thought it looked cool. Starting with arch gives you such a boost in experience. Although some things about my system are kind of misconfigured to this day, because I didn't know what I was doing.
With that boost in experience it's very true because Arch forces you to use a command line to install Arch in the first place. After successful installation you know (or at least have a notes) about many things ,how to partition ,format ,use chroot ,ssh and many other commands/functions/components/structures in Linux which are not only an Arch thing btw.
I've been using linux since '98 and tried lots of distros. In the end, you just have to use the one you're comfortable with. I agree with Luke's rant, but around minute 4, I just started watching the background and thinking "wow, this guy moved to a beautiful place"
"The term community is such cringe" "I am not a motivational speaker" *It's not like I care about you, baka* "Just focus on yourself!" At this point I am convinced Luke is a tsundere
I've been using Linux since 2009. And using Linux exclusively from 2014. I've always ran noob distros - Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Manjaro. I've never had someone make fun of or talk down to me.
I remember those CDs where Ubuntu was distributed first to give technically less empowered people a free AND understandable OS. That was literally printed there.
I personally use pure Debian with KDE when I’m using Linux, and I’m perfectly happy with it. I do distro hop, too, but only because I want to learn about all these distros and just generally explore the world of Linux. I’m still a happy Apple user, but I like to use Linux as my alternative desktop operating system, mostly if I just wanna mess around in Linux.
Great video, man Make more dumb questions videos. Even if "everybody" already knows the answer, there will be randos or peripheral people finding the video and getting more into Linux Edit: Heck, I'm not that knowledgeable myself
Some people like pretty picture to run their computer environments, some don't. Go with what makes you happy. RHEL user. CLI and not a GUI user. For 14 years. Which make ME happy....
Did Canonical ever stop putting a bunch of creepy crap into Ubuntu? This disdain was magnified when they abused copyright law to attack the sites that were critial of their creepiness. That's why I got far away from them and never looked back. My only real problem with them as someone who doesn't use Ubuntu is that half the time when I find a Linux package for closed source software I need to break down an Ubuntu package, often compiled with off-the-wall versions of libraries no stable distro uses, in order to get a working copy for Devuan. Yes, Deuvan, the Debian fork that eschews systemd :)
This was back in 2012/13, by the way, so maybe they've straightened up since then, but once the company abused our trust like that I find anything they're associated with to be suspect.
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX. Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called "Linux", and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project. There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called "Linux" distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux.
I've never personally had this issue when I find another Linux user it's we just start talking about all the stuff that annoys us example not much mainstream support for video games
I started my linux journey with Ubuntu. I wanted something more. Tried Manjaro, wanted more. Then I found your channel and now I have Arch and love it. It's so fun to use and I love learning along the way. And holy shit I think it's been a year since I installed :O. So yeah, the door is open, people just need to walk through it.
I've been using various distros since 1999. I would say the environment has changed in regards to what distro you used, the Arch users I met in real life were egotistical. People would also get upset if you used Nano over other editors lol. I would also say any distro you use now is considered friendly compared to the early 2000s.
I mean, a bare-bones Debian install is as "raw" as Arch, just takes you 15 mins less to install. Gentoo might take a little longer than Arch but some autist somewhere got a little smirk after following the guide on their phone. idk, at 27 all that matters to me is that it works *sip* That beard looking thicc too Luke hope you're well, good to see you :D
There is nothing wrong with using ubuntu or any other distro. I use Pop in work and its nice. I prefer the way arch based stuff works, but i am just a bit lazy. I use majaro at home. I mean i am not a huge fan of the way debian based stuff works in the background but the fount end and user experience work well.
Have you tried artix Linux with Open RC ? .Maybe you enjoy the community edition with KDE/LXQT (artix-plasma-lxqt-openrc-community-20190609-x86_64.iso) . It came with a lot of programns out of the box. Aritx linux is based on Arch linux, but with others init system, Open RC or runit. It is the continuation of the Manjaro Open RC project. artixlinux.org/download.php
Awe Luke ! Glad you are back all the other Linux people keep going on and on about marketing in free fucking software (because this is totally a good idea and definitely not what we all ran away from.) Nice to see /ourunaboomer/ is doing well.
I installed Arch to aim for better FPS on old games with crap hardware. It was satisfactory when I had no extra processes running. Have since conquered my video game addiction, now I have a terminal addiction smh.
@@mythos5202 I watched that and his video on pandoc-flavored markdown. At this point I'm just confusing the two, so some clarification on that would be nice
What I was referring to was more like jerry-rigging your own DIY Mendeley or Zotero solution. I mainly want to educate myself on more common practices people use in this regard. E.g. one guy described how he uses a git repository for his bib and article files
The great thing about Linux is the ability to change distros without losing info. I use kali centos Ubuntu kubuntu whatever who cares. Use partitions kids.. use partitions
I use Fedora because most Linux jobs I come across use CentOS or Redhat. Many companies use Ubuntu as well, so I make sure I am familiar with the Debian-based distros. Learning how to write shell scripts, manage a firewall, configure networking, contributing to the Linux kernel, etc can all be done on pretty much any distro. If you are going for a job, most employers won't give a shit if you run Arch at home.
I made my girlfriend (Product Designer, UX/UI) install Arch in my old laptop (it had Antergos) yesterday. The only thing that bit us was the lack of instructions to use network, while installing packages through wifi. So we cheated on the installer using wifi-menu (netctl) and then pacstrapped it with networkmanager, after reboot we used nmtui to connect. That was the ONLY thing that got in her way and I had to help. But she did it! =D So what I'm doing now is writing a different version of the install page from the wiki, one that takes into account the desktop environment, the desktop manager, the network part from a simple installation point of view. Instead of linking to a wiki page with more info than needed. So I'm taking the everyday desktop user point of view to write it up. Oh, and GRUB, instructions on how to install grub, no small footnote about needing a bootloader and linking to a page with lots of options and no instructions, people like to read a single document and not click through documentation. I don't want to write a bash script for it or a TUI wizard, none of that (for now) but make the wiki install page readable by a normal user.
Thankfully I was surrounded by people that didn't care about the distro... BUT they really cared that I used nano more often than vim. Regardless that I used nano most often to read logs and make simple changes to a host file and ect.
Interesting video, I am very new to linux and in my opinion is use whatever you are comfortable with and what you like.. It is very overwhelming coming from windows as linux kind of has the "scary command line" that most of us noobs worry about. But like anything it just take time. I like lots of distros and they are getting even more tailored to ease of use for "normal users" :)
I am user of archlinux and I am agree with your opinion, but as a newbie user the first thing I think about arch is that the community want you to learn about your system and not just be an user of the system without knowing nothing about how it works, so I think is just a different paradigm for the users.
I think a better question would be "what's your setup", any distro can be customised and it matters more what you do with it than what repos you pull packages from
I use Linux, and i love it, Ubuntu makes your PC run slow as in Windows 10 slow, so that would be the main thing i hate about it. I also hate python for the same reason. Arch was a good experience for me until the dev team stripped the kernel so almost every security solution i developed was rendered useless after the update *cursing* forcing me to use AUR repo and build over 20 packages (including a custum kernel build) from source every time an update was knocking at the door(since security patches and regular updates are one and the same in a rolling distro you are practically forced to update ASAP), that's how 1337 they are... Right now im on the current stable debian and as much as i miss the rolling arch, from the professional standpoint as well as from practical appliance: debian is way more "leet" than arch ever will be if they keep doing what they're doing right now but still i think arch is the best rolling release distribution out there but just doesn't cut it for people expanding in as many directions as i do.
he would've reach Alabama if the video last longer. imagine seeing him in real life
talking about linux with a selfie stick...
Z80 as a 3 year linux user, i don’t talk in real life
@@ayi5845 are you mute?
As a 4 year Linux user, I don't talk about real life. I talk about spiritual life.
As just only year or so Linux user.... I always recommend Linux to my friends,
Who now started using to get into "way more cooler thing " called hacking ...
I am sure all of them gonna hack FBI some day😂
soy stick
Thanks for explaining the memes. I will no longer bully those who use Ubuntu. I will instead bully Mac OS users.
Nah, we can bully people in the cult of Apple.
@@heldereduardopintosousavid7474 freebsd but massively modified so it's not really freebsd*
@@heldereduardopintosousavid7474 You can't say macos X is a "elite" (you can't say any OS,' it is elite' anyway) you pretty much have no control on your system. Kernel is opensourced yes, but it is just kernel not GUI which is really bad cuz they can do whatever they want in this case
MacOS, Solaris, and linux are all amazing OSes, however Apple does a good job of crippling perfectly good open source.
there's literally nothing wrong with bullying mac users.
Luke recorded this while hunting for his Thanksgiving dinner
Luke can take down a turkey using a laptop as a boomerang!
@@J40JesusIsLord Throw a ThinkPad if you want to use it still after hunting for the turkey
Now this is a good laugh
Lol
@@Stobus44 Luke has talked about bugmen before, but he needs to address the danger posed by us Gentoo mantidae.
I always make everyone tell me the number of packages they have installed, and if it's too high, I point at them and yell "SOY" really loud. I learned all of this from you, Luke.
Based
FBPB
1,280
that's right.
That feel when your girlfriend (male) has >990 packages. :(
If you want to compile software then you need a lot of packages installed. Just how it goes.
Arch users do not have an elitist attitude. We welcome all those peasants that use Ubuntu into our community.
😎👌
Hi distro dad !
When I switched from Ubuntu to Arch the first time, like 10 years ago, the Arch forum was as welcoming as the Ubuntu one. Which really was amazing.
The German Debian forum was a shithole full of toxic elitist neckbeards back then.
@@morgulbrut lol I heard about that more than once
Peniz
I always knew Robotnik used Linux. He is walking outside looking for Sonic.
He wants to create a cyborg Sonic using Linux with an -O3 compiled kernel.
@@PixelTrik if sonic is compiled in gcc, does that make him gnu?
I'm pretty sure 95% of all online linux elitism is just larping or memeing.
its larping or meming AND dumb people who misunderstand it and take it to heart.
other %5 are people like egee and liam echoing to each other.
I use TempleOS with a capless keyboard and write graphics drivers on my 768 core Zen CXX using a 1nm architecture. In my spare time I solved the meaning of life. Ubuntu you say, that's cool.
You glow in the dark
@@1pcfred
He actually lives on Mars.
You use prebuild OS? Shut up and talk back once you have coded your own and not stolen somebody else's work.
My entire Arch Linux system is configured to flex.
No OpenBSD?
How hard can you bend it?
@@humm535 he uses linux, hes still a human
@@feetpics4089 Ever used Plan 9, _casual_ ? 🤔😜
@@feetpics4089 can you send me a pic of your feets
Holy shit, two videos, it feels like Christmas! Post more gardening tips!
@Ed Gein Distrotube
heck yeah i need tips!
Man you know man he should upload more videos man
I dunno why people think I'm smart, I just read the freaking manual.
The guy that goes for a walk to talk distro wars.
You're right, Arch Linux is to mainstream and noob friendly, I should be using Gentoo now. Then I can really dab on all those losers for there personal life choices.
LOL you use GNU/Linux. Ptff... I use GNU/Hurd.
You use GNU/Hurd? Pfft! I use Temple OS!
@@3xclu5iveOfficial I yield, you have bested me, sir.
@@3xclu5iveOfficial Just made your own OS, not use someone else did 'u'
@@akira9449 Don't even use an OS, just buy physical versions of your computer applications
some say he's still walking
Some say he is still hunting.
Dear bully,
I use arch btw
"Suck iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit"
Ha, clever use of the .tk
Why not use Gentoo ?
@@bogdanlupu3679 Building Linux from scratch is fun but keeping the system up-to-date and functioning is a different story.
arch is bloated,
i use bully btw
Those Linups guys are really after my Windos 10 machine! Help!
Somehow this is the most wholesome video Luke has ever put out
I liked his rant on upcummies more tbh
lol, Ubuntu is actually hard to use. Imagine things break without a good known reason.
i use arch just for it's package management it's freaking fantastic
Personally I never got how having to reinstall your entire OS every half a year is supposed to be user friendly
@@AtomToast yeah, I hate that about a lot of distros
Windows is by far the hardest to use
@@AtomToast newbs just stay on LTS and powerusers reprovision their system in one command with ansible.
I've met my fair share of Linux users when I was an undergrad in computer science. They were all pretty nice, I even met another arch guy. However, I will say I've met a so called "soy dev" once and he was very sensitive and emotional when I was trying explain why I liked C, bash, and posix compliment over python. I wasn't even saying they were "better", just that I prefered them.
You my friend are the kind of person I can respect. What peasant uses Python anyway? :P Btw did you mean compliant?
No but seriously, I like speed over ease as well. There is a reason both C and Python exist, but some people don't get it.
@@svhuwagv2965 Yes I meant compliant not complement. This guy became very defensive when I was explaining why I prefered other scripting languages to python. It actually took me off guard. I feel like ease is a relative term, it might take a little bit more time to learn how to use it, but what you get back in efficiency (speed and compatability across platforms) will more than make up for it.
What is a soy dev?
No matter what hobby or profession you go to there will always be that guy who gets salty if you don't agree with or like the same things lol
I can really relate to the "getting excited when meeting someone that actually uses Linux".
Same! It happened to me in class the other day lol
Don't call yourself linux user if you've never compiled your kernel. This comment was made by gentoo gang
And openwrt gang
Kek compiling every program, even the ones which you arent going to change the default configurations. Wastoid
@@jonasrivers3675 it still is better because of the global use flags which are different for every computer! it make programs more optimized for your system!
I generate my own electricity and manually control my computer with electrical signals bit by bit.
RealLifeProduct I can get on board with the first part
5:03 I did identify with Common Lisp some time ago. The first programming language, I really got into, and used for a few years almost exclusively.
But it had too many problems, and now there are only two languages, I don't hate as much: Rust and Scopes
In any field of endeavor, there are those who seek to improve themselves in order to prove their worth, and those who demand approval merely for participating as they already are. To the former group, practically no-one is an elitist, whereas to the latter group, practically everyone is.
Yeah, if I was a teacher and I had a conversation with another teacher about boards, theirs was a sharpie board and I said mine was a smart board, I wouldn’t be flexing on them, they both have the same function essentially, of course I know nothing about computers but still
The reason I use Ubuntu is to dab on a particular AUR user who says he runs Arch when he's really using Manjaro. He wants to make others feel how he did when I told him I run Arch so I install Ubuntu.
What's wrong with Manjaro is the perfected arch distro between rolling release and fixed release 😂
@@emmanuelgxlden7170 It's not Arch, it's not very good either but that's just my opinon. It's not the distros fault, but I have noticed a great deal of people who've picked up on how the Arch/AUR echo system relates to derivatives and are running Manjaro to say they use Arch just to make people feel inadequate. It's a problem with the user not the operating system. Don't listen to the devs about partial upgrades either(-Sy without the u to make -Syu), they've never gotten it to work exactly like upstream Arch told them.
arch is actually so fkn easy, just read the wiki :)
If you can read, you can Arch.
My first Distro: arch
Why, because I thought it looked cool.
Starting with arch gives you such a boost in experience. Although some things about my system are kind of misconfigured to this day, because I didn't know what I was doing.
With that boost in experience it's very true because Arch forces you to use a command line to install Arch in the first place. After successful installation you know (or at least have a notes) about many things ,how to partition ,format ,use chroot ,ssh and many other commands/functions/components/structures in Linux which are not only an Arch thing btw.
I've been using linux since '98 and tried lots of distros. In the end, you just have to use the one you're comfortable with. I agree with Luke's rant, but around minute 4, I just started watching the background and thinking "wow, this guy moved to a beautiful place"
"The term community is such cringe"
"I am not a motivational speaker" *It's not like I care about you, baka* "Just focus on yourself!"
At this point I am convinced Luke is a tsundere
Luke Smith humblebrags his ability to install Arch for 12mins
Truth is you can really cut corner. 1 partiton ? Fine. US keyboard, defaut time and local. Pacstrap chroot bootloader, done.
@@jan-fransojklise6877 I'm too busy having far less stressful hobbies to even bother learning what any of that shit means.
@@codexm37 not too busy to waste your time watching and shitposting on multiple videos that are seemingly irrelevant to your interests, however?
@@0sergey1 you underestimate the power of the meme side
Ubuntu = MyFirstLinuxDistro.txt
Kali = watched Mr Robot once
Arch = Supreme chad who can sleep with any women regardless of their marital status
I've been using Linux since 2009. And using Linux exclusively from 2014. I've always ran noob distros - Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Manjaro. I've never had someone make fun of or talk down to me.
I remember those CDs where Ubuntu was distributed first to give technically less empowered people a free AND understandable OS. That was literally printed there.
I just like Arch Linux because it doesn't get in my way
I like these videos where you take us on these little walks and talk about stuff. It's kind of like having a conversation with a friend.
I personally use pure Debian with KDE when I’m using Linux, and I’m perfectly happy with it. I do distro hop, too, but only because I want to learn about all these distros and just generally explore the world of Linux. I’m still a happy Apple user, but I like to use Linux as my alternative desktop operating system, mostly if I just wanna mess around in Linux.
A boomer peeing in the middle of nowhere
Great video, man
Make more dumb questions videos. Even if "everybody" already knows the answer, there will be randos or peripheral people finding the video and getting more into Linux
Edit: Heck, I'm not that knowledgeable myself
you're right Luke .
(PS. I use Arch, btw.)
Those trees are really regularly spaced
Some people like pretty picture to run their computer environments, some don't. Go with what makes you happy. RHEL user. CLI and not a GUI user. For 14 years. Which make ME happy....
Did Canonical ever stop putting a bunch of creepy crap into Ubuntu?
This disdain was magnified when they abused copyright law to attack the sites that were critial of their creepiness.
That's why I got far away from them and never looked back.
My only real problem with them as someone who doesn't use Ubuntu is that half the time when I find a Linux package for closed source software I need to break down an Ubuntu package, often compiled with off-the-wall versions of libraries no stable distro uses, in order to get a working copy for Devuan.
Yes, Deuvan, the Debian fork that eschews systemd :)
This was back in 2012/13, by the way, so maybe they've straightened up since then, but once the company abused our trust like that I find anything they're associated with to be suspect.
I used to compile linux kernel just like you, and then I took a rm -r * in the /
Underrated comment.
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX. Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called "Linux", and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project. There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called "Linux" distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux.
I've never personally had this issue when I find another Linux user it's we just start talking about all the stuff that annoys us example not much mainstream support for video games
I started my linux journey with Ubuntu. I wanted something more. Tried Manjaro, wanted more. Then I found your channel and now I have Arch and love it. It's so fun to use and I love learning along the way. And holy shit I think it's been a year since I installed :O. So yeah, the door is open, people just need to walk through it.
Talking 'bout meme:
BTW I use Arch
I've been using various distros since 1999. I would say the environment has changed in regards to what distro you used, the Arch users I met in real life were egotistical. People would also get upset if you used Nano over other editors lol. I would also say any distro you use now is considered friendly compared to the early 2000s.
About the "Not listening to the "smart" person",
I think some people might have fear to not being able to grasp concepts that the "smart" person have.
people talking down on ubuntu us just in our heads guys! not a single person has ever talked down on a windows/macos/ubuntu users!
Linux is ok ... I moved on to FreeBSD and love it. Not downing GNU/Linux just saying FreeBSD is a really nice OS. Don't flame on me .
FreeBSD is a great OS. I' d like to try NetBSD in deep.
How's it better than Linux?
@@arax20 I think it would be better for you to research and come to your own conclusions. Start with a web search.
@@arax20
It's more obscure.
I like Mint Mate and Trisquel myself-but I don't care what others use as long as they are moving away from WinBlows!
I encountered some Linux Elitists just today! Though, I do not bother with Linux anymore. They were very touchy about it.
I mean, a bare-bones Debian install is as "raw" as Arch, just takes you 15 mins less to install. Gentoo might take a little longer than Arch but some autist somewhere got a little smirk after following the guide on their phone. idk, at 27 all that matters to me is that it works *sip*
That beard looking thicc too Luke hope you're well, good to see you :D
I just upgraded to Buster the other day with no problems what so ever. I use Debian cos I can just forget about it.
I'm still shaking after watching this.
Выживание лысого линуксойда в лесу часть 1
1 (10)
"Лысый наяривает своего питона на природе"
Меньше всего я ожидал увидеть коммент на русском, спасибо
9:00 Am I the only one who is shocked about the forest? SHOCKED
I've used Linux for 25 years, and I don't know anything about it. Seriously. And I don't plan to. I just use it.
Debianwill be voting on a GR about "init diversity" soon... it may become a bit more incovenient to avoid systemd depending on the outcome... :-(
There is nothing wrong with using ubuntu or any other distro. I use Pop in work and its nice. I prefer the way arch based stuff works, but i am just a bit lazy. I use majaro at home.
I mean i am not a huge fan of the way debian based stuff works in the background but the fount end and user experience work well.
Have you tried artix Linux with Open RC ? .Maybe you enjoy the community edition with KDE/LXQT (artix-plasma-lxqt-openrc-community-20190609-x86_64.iso) . It came with a lot of programns out of the box. Aritx linux is based on Arch linux, but with others init system, Open RC or runit. It is the continuation of the Manjaro Open RC project.
artixlinux.org/download.php
in my college, if you take computer information systems (i do) you learn c#. if you take computer science, you take java.
we do have a Unix/Linux class that later goes on into bash scripts now I think now python scripts.
Awe Luke ! Glad you are back all the other Linux people keep going on and on about marketing in free fucking software (because this is totally a good idea and definitely not what we all ran away from.) Nice to see /ourunaboomer/ is doing well.
"there are no dumb people, only people who are not familiar with what you take for granted"
-luke 2019
Elitists exist on the internet that's sure.
There certainly are people who are elitist in real life just like there are people who are arrogant.
Meeting other formula 1 fans in real life. I don’t care which team/driver you go for, I’m so excited to meet another one that’s “one of us”
I installed Arch to aim for better FPS on old games with crap hardware. It was satisfactory when I had no extra processes running. Have since conquered my video game addiction, now I have a terminal addiction smh.
I've been using Linux as a desktop OS for about 10 years.
I can't wait for luke to go full Owen Benjamin. Raised bed, goats, wifu ... and 3 hour livestreams
Did you have a video explaining FOSS ways for bibliography and citation management?
I don't know of a specific video, but check out his stuff on LaTeX.
@@mythos5202 I watched that and his video on pandoc-flavored markdown. At this point I'm just confusing the two, so some clarification on that would be nice
What I was referring to was more like jerry-rigging your own DIY Mendeley or Zotero solution.
I mainly want to educate myself on more common practices people use in this regard. E.g. one guy described how he uses a git repository for his bib and article files
th-cam.com/video/46piog3Fzp4/w-d-xo.html
I heard rumors of Ubuntu spying tho.Good vid. Tanku.
Like Smith gives pencil protectors a swirly.
The great thing about Linux is the ability to change distros without losing info. I use kali centos Ubuntu kubuntu whatever who cares. Use partitions kids.. use partitions
Wait a movement…. is that forest laid out in a grid pattern… WTF!
Chad BSD Boomer vs Kyle Arch Autist vs Ubuntu Normie
The "By the way, I use Arch" meme exists for a reason...
I use Fedora because most Linux jobs I come across use CentOS or Redhat. Many companies use Ubuntu as well, so I make sure I am familiar with the Debian-based distros.
Learning how to write shell scripts, manage a firewall, configure networking, contributing to the Linux kernel, etc can all be done on pretty much any distro. If you are going for a job, most employers won't give a shit if you run Arch at home.
He get's bullied for using Arch because Ubuntu is "easier"?
I feel like it's the reverse for most people lmao
I made my girlfriend (Product Designer, UX/UI) install Arch in my old laptop (it had Antergos) yesterday. The only thing that bit us was the lack of instructions to use network, while installing packages through wifi.
So we cheated on the installer using wifi-menu (netctl) and then pacstrapped it with networkmanager, after reboot we used nmtui to connect.
That was the ONLY thing that got in her way and I had to help.
But she did it! =D
So what I'm doing now is writing a different version of the install page from the wiki, one that takes into account the desktop environment, the desktop manager, the network part from a simple installation point of view. Instead of linking to a wiki page with more info than needed. So I'm taking the everyday desktop user point of view to write it up.
Oh, and GRUB, instructions on how to install grub, no small footnote about needing a bootloader and linking to a page with lots of options and no instructions, people like to read a single document and not click through documentation.
I don't want to write a bash script for it or a TUI wizard, none of that (for now) but make the wiki install page readable by a normal user.
Thankfully I was surrounded by people that didn't care about the distro... BUT they really cared that I used nano more often than vim. Regardless that I used nano most often to read logs and make simple changes to a host file and ect.
Had to pee - luke
Interesting video, I am very new to linux and in my opinion is use whatever you are comfortable with and what you like.. It is very overwhelming coming from windows as linux kind of has the "scary command line" that most of us noobs worry about. But like anything it just take time. I like lots of distros and they are getting even more tailored to ease of use for "normal users" :)
2:55 yeah i dont need to think that im better, because im actually better than everyone else!
really glad i found your channel
I am user of archlinux and I am agree with your opinion, but as a newbie user the first thing I think about arch is that the community want you to learn about your system and not just be an user of the system without knowing nothing about how it works, so I think is just a different paradigm for the users.
I love you, Luke. You think so much like me regarding Linux.
I think a better question would be "what's your setup", any distro can be customised and it matters more what you do with it than what repos you pull packages from
Imagine taking a hike in the forest and running into a guy rambling about Linux distros 🤣🤣🤣
I had a good chuckle at "unless they overdosed on memes"
I use Windows Subsystem for Linux btw.
Have you tried contacting the cyber police?
@K19 cyberpolice.com
@K19 www.met.police.uk/tv/true-vision-report-hate-crime/hate-crime-online/
We love you Luke Smith. Do not care about them. Ubuntu users are looses anyway.
I use Linux, and i love it, Ubuntu makes your PC run slow as in Windows 10 slow, so that would be the main thing i hate about it.
I also hate python for the same reason.
Arch was a good experience for me until the dev team stripped the kernel so almost every security solution i developed was rendered useless after the update *cursing* forcing me to use AUR repo and build over 20 packages (including a custum kernel build) from source every time an update was knocking at the door(since security patches and regular updates are one and the same in a rolling distro you are practically forced to update ASAP), that's how 1337 they are...
Right now im on the current stable debian and as much as i miss the rolling arch, from the professional standpoint as well as from practical appliance: debian is way more "leet" than arch ever will be if they keep doing what they're doing right now but still i think arch is the best rolling release distribution out there but just doesn't cut it for people expanding in as many directions as i do.
Haha I have the same position on the word "community".
Holy shit, Luke just walked 5 miles in 12 minutes!!
I script with python, I use ubuntu, I have no shame, my customers are paying me for doing my job.
Is that a tree farm? All the trees are in straight lines.
Boomer incompetently shames non-arch users (with words like "dude, just try it out") while claiming he's not elitist.
"What if I don't tell them I use arch? Then it's like: he wants to keep it elitist."
This has been happening before arch or half of these distros were out I know because it used to be slackware that was the elitist lol
That's great countryside!
Btw I use arch 😆😁😅🤣😂 But you're so damn right, I usually just get excited to talk to them about Linux!