• 3 Posts
  • 22 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 24th, 2023

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  • ash@lemmy.fmhy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlChimera Linux
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    1 year ago

    Just use Alpine. Chimera uses Alpine’s package manager anyway. The only reason you havent heard about Alpine in this context is because they do not claim they are doing anything revolutionary, they just strive to make a great distro.





  • Think of AppImage like a standalone executable on windows, you download it, it just works and thats good. But it doesnt get automatic updates and to get a new feature you need to download it again. Flatpaks and Snaps don’t have this issue and are more like traditional package managers.



  • OpenSUSE

    inb4 but thats a corporate distro, it is just sponsored by SUSE but is community maintained

    I agree that there are not many distros that are both user friendly and not forks of something else, but I don’t see it as an issue, imo there is nothing wrong with forks.



  • ash@lemmy.fmhy.mlOPtoUnixporn@lemmy.ml[Sway] Purple tiles
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    1 year ago

    I only ever used systemd for services and did not use any of the other features. Openrc does that and it works so nothing to handle.

    I use seatd and I do not use polkit. The only thing that caught me off guard was that the default login binary does not support PAM so I had to install shadow-login.

    I do use flatpak for lutris, web browser and few other things, but I prefer native packages. If the package isn’t in the repos I package it myself, the package format is almost identical to the one Arch has so a lot of times its enough to just edit the dependencies and build.













  • ash@lemmy.fmhy.mlOPtoUnixporn@lemmy.ml[Sway] Purple tiles
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    1 year ago

    I have no complaints about the OS itself and I really like the package manager. The wiki is lacking tho, which is not an issue 99% of the time cause I can still check archwiki, but its something to keep in mind.

    Post-install was similar to Arch and fairly straightforward, except for having to set up logind

    As far as wayland goes it works the same as on any other distro, nothing Alpine specific that you should look out for.