this post was submitted on 11 Jul 2023
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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by bdonvr@thelemmy.club to c/linux@lemmy.ml
 

After a couple years on Fedora I decided to do one more Distro hop- to one I have little experience with, openSUSE.

But it seems the everything from the installer, philosophy, package manager, configs, and general way of working is just very different than every Distro I've tried before (Debian/*Buntu, Fedora, Arch, Gentoo)

Like what's up with YaST? It's like a system-wide settings/configs program unique to openSUSE?

And to update grub it seems the best command is "update-bootloader" - for example. This isn't standard on anything else afaik. Is there anywhere other than practice I can learn all of these quirks?

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[–] gh0stcassette@lemmy.blahaj.zone 34 points 1 year ago (7 children)

Slackware's package manager doesn't even do dependency resolution. I respect the fact that it's managed to keep existing this long and that so much of what it did inspired other distros, but I honestly have no idea why anyone would use it in 2023. Imo dependency resolution is the main reason to even have a package manager, without that I might as well install everything by cloning random git repos. If you want packages compiled from source, why not just use Gentoo (or Source Mage? Idk much about it, but I read through their website and it seems neat).

That being said, if anyone uses Slackware, I'd love to know why. It's survived this long, surely it must be doing something right.

[–] xp19375@sh.itjust.works 16 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I use Slackware because, in my opinion, it is simple, easy to understand, doesn't get in your way, and strikes a good balance between being up to date, stable, and bug free. I also have it set up how I like it and don't feel like installing something else. Honestly, the lack of dependency resolution has really not been a problem. By default, Slackware comes with a lot of libraries, and sbopkg (which builds SlackBuilds from slackbuilds.org) can do dependency resolution, as can some third party package managers. And with appimages and flatpacks, this is less and less of a problem.

That said, I use Manjaro on my Pinebook and am perfectly happy with it, and I've used Debian in the past too.

[–] pensivepangolin@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Off topic, but how do you like the pine book? I have been on the fence for a while now!

[–] xp19375@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago

Overall, pretty good considering it's low price. It is a bit quirky, kind of like running Linux on a laptop 15+ years ago. Hardware support is somewhat lacking because it's all pretty new. That said, the default Manjaro that ships with it works pretty well out of the box. It struggles a bit with video conferencing, in my case, roll20. It can play Minetest and Supertuxkart on minimum settings.

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