

Also useful for scripts to be executed inside containers. Alpine doesn’t have Python installed by default.


Also useful for scripts to be executed inside containers. Alpine doesn’t have Python installed by default.


Been there, done that lol. Nowadays, if I think that some script is getting too long, I just rewrite it in Go. It’s faster to write than Rust (in fact, I find it almost as easy as Python), and performant enough for replacing scripts.


I have no experience in sysadmin work, but have some understanding of the Linux tools used. Can you eli5 what exactly is it that AD does? (Feel free not to, I just couldn’t find a good article, so decided to ask.)


Omg please kill me 😭


KDE is great but do give some “better” distros like Fedora, or EndeavourOS (basically Arch) a try. Canonical, the company in control of Ubuntu, is a little bit shady.


I have a Framework 13 with the super button instead of Windows button, but I’ve set it up similarly to how the Windows buttons works in Windows. Pressing it by itself opens the KDE app menu, super+D goes to desktop, super+L locks screen, super+[ or ] moves around virtual desktops, super+W shows overview, supe+T shows tiles config, super+arrows do snapping, super+PgUp/PgDn/X for maximize/minimize/close etc.


And they have a great community too. I especially like their off-topic threads e.g. the photography and music ones.


I like EndeavourOS because it’s pretty much vanilla Arch, just with a nice installer. (Although we do now have the archinstall script.) After installation, there’s pretty much no difference. Also, I like the logo. I only installed Arch once for the bragging rights lol.
Oh, definitely. Its syntax is so simple, you can basically learn the basics over an afternoon. Outside of applications where consistent low latency is critical, if I can spare some extra RAM and CPU, I prefer Go to Rust.