WebOS powers TVs now and, from the article, Amazon intends this replacement to cover their Fire tablet line. WebOS ticks all their boxes, especially since apps in Amazon’s new flavor are intended to be delivered as React Native web apps.
WebOS powers TVs now and, from the article, Amazon intends this replacement to cover their Fire tablet line. WebOS ticks all their boxes, especially since apps in Amazon’s new flavor are intended to be delivered as React Native web apps.
I’m devastated they didn’t choose to pick up webOS for this.
I try to write about it as much as I can here! There’s also !guix@lemmy.ml
Hmm, well Fedora on its own (so no Silverblue) is very much your classic way of shipping a distro. That tends to mean that, over time, “cruft” accumulates as you upgrade your system, uninstall/reinstall packages, etc. They leave bits of themselves behind that can cause unwanted behavior.
Fedora Silverblue, that Bluefin is based on, treats the entire system layer as “immutable”. Basically, it ensures consistency so that upgrades and package upgrades don’t leave the system in an inconsistent state.
What Bluefin adds on top of this is a set of opinionated, pre-configured layers suited for getting particular groups of tasks done. Those layers are also immutable and tested as a whole, which makes shipping those layers at velocity easy (faster upgrades, less wonky behavior on upgrade) and easy to swap between, so you can go from gaming to developer mode without worrying about an accumulation of cruft.
Is that helpful at all? There’s also this announcement blog post, which I found very helpful in understanding the value proposition.
Because it uses OCI images, it auto-updates like a Chromebook, and you can switch between modes, like say a gaming mode that’s a full SteamOS replacement, to a mode that gives you an entire development environment without needing to install and configure these layers or stacks of capabilities yourself.
That’s very powerful. For cloud native developers like myself who are used to working with container images as the deliverable artifact, this makes that workflow very easy. Podman is included. You can create entire development environments at will that are totally “pure”: no side effects because everything you need is in the container. That’s a Dev Container.
The old homegrown Pardus was really something special with its Kaptan system configuration tool and PiSi package manager.
I use Guix Home too and love it! Never been able to figure out how to get git-annex to work, especially on an Android device.
I used to use this but nowadays I prefer the single, declarative file approach of Guix Home and Home Manager.
Can’t believe I’m the first one to come in with Guix System!! I like it because, just like NixOS, it’s immutable, declarative and pure. I also dig that everything is written in Guile Scheme, a full-fat programming language. You don’t need to know the language exhaustively to get started. There’s some wonderful folks in the community though it’s a bit spread out since not everyone wants to chat on IRC and mailing lists.
The Guix sublemmy.
I believe Logseq also has this built-in via Tldraw integration and it’s fully FOSS which I dig.
Hey I live in Denmark! How unexpected it is to hear Linux runs in some municipalities: in my sector you only hear of Microsoft running on most of the public infra but my knowledge is limited to Copenhagen.
Come over to team Guix System, we have cookies 🍪
I use Linux on my home desktop and my work desktop but I also keep a Windows install on my work machine when I need to test Windows things there. On Windows, I haven’t found a better Git GUI than fork.dev. It’s not open-source but it is what one of my favorite creators calls “organic software”: Ukrainian husband and wife duo that warms my heart. The evaluation period is unlimited without nags. I’ve found it to be the perfect Git teaching tool and the best merge conflict resolver I’ve ever seen.
The Intel discrete cards are fantastic value for money. There’s plenty of folks on the internet who can attest to this. Intel’s support story in general (so not just graphics cards) on Linux has been nothing less than sterling. If you’re using any Linux kernel you can expect Intel stuff to just work. It’s been this way for at least a decade.