PURE COINCIDENCE, GOY
Is it possible these anons are Blackpill Pajeet from shill farm hired by the same people behind the curtain?
GNU/seL4 when?
PURE COINCIDENCE, GOY
Is it possible these anons are Blackpill Pajeet from shill farm hired by the same people behind the curtain?
GNU/seL4 when?
...
Anons anons, it's Google:
sfconservancy.org
Just look (((who))) posted it:
Not quite yet. There's plenty of distros that run without it. Even Ubuntu can be run without it.
Read
Any and all alternatives are fucked by default.
Why do you want to stay on Intel though? If you want to avoid the botnet, Intel has to be abandoned too.
I'm moving to ARM for now, and later whatever comes along that's better. I had already left Linux for OpenBSD some 15 years ago, so none of the recent events (including the systemd shit) affected me, and only proved that I was right to follow my instincts.
Even a fork of linux in the vein of something like ungoogled chromium, where glowing commits are discarded, would make for enough of a viable alternative. I don't really see most of the current devs sacrificing their payroll/careers to protest the coc, but with a working fork distinct enough from the upstream project, there's a better chance the it gets enough attention for developers to bother with the fork.
I was just pointing out that for people on thinkpads and other intel based machines wouldn't have many hardware issues if they migrate. I'm planning on buying a RockPro64 once I'm sure I'm comftorable using OpenBSD as my daily driver. I'm thinking about building it into a C64 style form factor with a Unicomp EnduraPro for maximum clicky and trackpoint, 90 degree riser on the pci-e so it's still usable. Might do something with a small touch screen that would either be hinged, slide out, or a combination of both but I haven't fully worked that out yet, might not if it makes what will be an already bulky design too much worse.
Try to run Ubuntu without SystemD for a couple days, and come back here to report how well it went, retard.
Don't sweat it, the learning curve is such that your first 2 years will teach you much more than the 5 or 10 years after. I have been working with open source for about 12 years now and I learned 90% of what I know in the first 3.
Simple to say so, I was trying to explain that linux is never "gone". Even if devs pulled their code, we can just run and maintain a version before that happened. If trannys fuck up the kernel, we just roll back. If hardware in the future changes to only support windows, we can use the mountain of hardware that we already have. It isn't over until you give up. If history is anything to go by most linux users would view it as a challenge.