





Where is this? Asking for a friend.
(Actually, though, where is it?)


I was watching Jam the other day, and that honestly seemed better and more rational than reality. South Park has been a documentary for a long time.
Nope! There used to be a login screen available for BeOS, but Haiku doesn’t have this. As for disk encryption, I imagine it’ll be a long time before someone ports cryptsetup or anything like that.
Well, it requires that my machines have disk encryption and a password, for one thing.
Whoa, that looks lovely!
I can’t wait for the day when Haiku is secure enough for my threat model. It seems so calm and old-school, and yet both powerful and modern.


The cost of the ingredients. Nothing more. I would be doing this for fun, after all.


I would do this fr
You know what? Just because of this, I’m going to switch back to DuckDuckGo.
Every 4get instance uses it as a backend anyway.



A similar story from 2021: https://www.businessinsider.com/uk-man-wwii-shell-lodged-in-rectum-bomb-squad-called-2021-12
Yeetus foetus


Are we? Why was I not informed‽
(In all seriousness, this sounds excellent; but at the same time, it’s news to me. For context, I am Gen Z.)
I needed to hear this. Thank you!
GuixSD wasn’t an option on Tiermaker, but I have used it. I personally found it hardier than NixOS, but the libre-only package selection was quite restrictive and the lack of the non-free iwlwifi driver prevented me from installing it on any of my boxes other than my 2007 MacBook. I know this is the point, but it’s still annoying.
Like 9front and Haiku, I hope to daily-drive it someday; but at the moment it is sadly quite unsuitable for my hardware, workflow, and use-case.
For me, it’s the combination of its American base, its lack of disk encryption in the installer, the fact that I’ve never managed to get a usable installation, and the fact that Mageia (another Mandriva derivative) and Salix (a Slackware-based distro with a similar UX) are objectively better.
If you are happy with PCLOS, however, godspeed.
I used to run it on my Raspberry Pi 5 without complaint.
Some stuff did take a while to compile, but the trick is to do other things — like make some tea, go for a walk, or watch TV — instead of staring at the terminal the whole time (I am 100% serious; this is not sarcasm).