So far all I see is a readme.md.... And it has 11 forks & 441 stars!This is why I'm really interested in the Gershwin project.
So far all I see is a readme.md.... And it has 11 forks & 441 stars!This is why I'm really interested in the Gershwin project.
that readme has links to gershwin-build which is what actually builds and installs the baseSo far all I see is a readme.md.... And it has 11 forks & 441 stars!
So far all I see is a readme.md.... And it has 11 forks & 441 stars!
And no matter where you go, there you are.The past is past, the future is now.
Man, that reminds me. I need to re-calibrate my Oscillation Overthruster.And no matter where you go, there you are.
Some more encouraging communication channels would be an improvement.
We distinguish by the use of the same operating system...
So you only need one communication channel.We distinguish by the use of the same operating system...
Category tree, option for private link, key exchange system, encryption layers, groups, invitation-based entry. User validation or rejection could be a democratic system to rule out abuse.So you only need one communication channel.
Actually, more than one. One for kernel developers, one for port developers, one for users and that might be it. The rest are just idle chit chat and time wasters--like reddit.
I beg to disagree. This reminds me the typical "use systemd or else...", which is the one and only "argument" systemd lovers have. It basically says use systemd or get a PDP-11.We are the borg of systemd. Resistance i futile.
No it is not. It was just a "new" thing that still can't prove itself, even 17 years later.Wayland is the future.
FreeBSD hasn't adopted X for that matter. It's an option, not a requirement. Wayland would be the same way. An option, not a requirement.the day FreeBSD adopts anything resembling systemd or Wayland will be the last day I used FreeBSD.
Well, systemd already made Gnome (49+) mostly no-go on systemd-free distros/OSes.I beg to disagree. This reminds me the typical "use systemd or else...", which is the one and only "argument" systemd lovers have. It basically says use systemd or get a PDP-11.
Even though systemd plagued the Linux world, there are systemd-free options even on Linux. And you don't sacrifice anything taking such an option.
No it is not. It was just a "new" thing that still can't prove itself, even 17 years later.
As long KDE remains an option, I couldn't care less. I will just never use it. Not only it flirts with systemd infection, it also devours resources for nothing - not even visuals. But the day FreeBSD adopts anything resembling systemd or Wayland will be the last day I used FreeBSD. I just think that day will never come.
Can't see the logic of that. Which of those Gnome components need what files or devices to exist?Well, systemd already made Gnome (49+) mostly no-go on systemd-free distros/OSes.
There are ways around it, but it's clear the writing is on the wall. If you want gnome you better have a systemd capable distro/OS.
Neither. Its not a distribution but an entire OS. It holds all the cards and can't be pulled around by all the little projects that make it up.and, will freebsd be slackware or debian?
These distros will go around it until they don't. We are talking about distros which are made by people on their free time. If the personal cost of maintenance becomes too high my bet is that the maintainers will stop working on that. If enough maintainers leave a distro, it's dead.I'm running , FreeBSD (rc) , Redcore-linux (openrc), Artix-linux (openrc).
All are more or less the same "init" starts very simple "rc" scripts.
Systemd is a compeletely very different beasts. It integrated with everything, requires libsystemd. Restart services automatic.
Future, the kde login manager will require systemd (not kde itself).
Even virtual terminals on linux will require systemd.
But FreeBSD, distro's like MX-Linux ,Artix-Linux, Redcore-Linux will go around it.
Neither. Its not a distribution but an entire OS. It holds all the cards and can't be pulled around by all the little projects that make it up.
However, smaller distributions (like GhostBSD) can certainly be made from it.