A Sharky Anthro

Just a dude on the internet, looking for content and fun! I love Linux, gaming, writing, reading, music, anime, walks, and occasionally movies too. Chronically ill and anxious too, that makes life quite interesting…At times. Also learning about my anthro shark leanings…Thanks furries for providing me with a safe place to explore this part of me!

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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: July 1st, 2025

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  • There are some security issues and poor defaults with FreeBSD, these issues are ultimately what made me swerve left for the time being until these issues are resolved by the FreeBSD security team and devs. It makes me sad, because in my opinion FreeBSD is holistically developed as a unit, so it flows together! It feels coherent and sane, unlike Linux distros which are a disparate parts that are fused into a singular thing. In a way that is pretty fucking metal that all these separate projects are fused into working Linux distros which for the most part are stable…Kinda like a multicellular organism.

    Yeah, honestly, it does sound like you have a good idea of where to start at least in terms of either learning Gentoo or FreeBSD. Purchasing recent/old but capable hardware that won’t put your current hardware at risk of getting borked due to experimentation, is for the best (as long as it won’t hurt the old pocketbook). I wouldn’t choose anything Apple because that hardware can be particularly annoying when it comes to driver support and the like, but if you want to live on the wild side. It’s your life and you can have all that smoke, because I can’t imagine the troubleshooting is going to be much fun.

    For my part, I plan on learning about Gentoo in a sane timeframe because there is literally no hurry, my spare laptop is recent enough that compiling won’t take long and it will be supported by Gentoo. I love the idea of being able to set specific compiler flags within the package manager that automatically compile programs based on those user designated flags. I’ve wanted to test the viability of stripping systemd out of my life for a while now, openrc (which Gentoo uses as an init service) seems pretty cool and simple. The Gentoo Handbook is okay in terms of describing the process of installing Gentoo…So I hope after reading it several times, I will find the courage to actually install it on my spare laptop. ROFL As right now, it has Solus on it and that is a usability dream.


  • It’s just a matter of learning Linux before dealing with the Arch way of doing things, at the end of the day. As there are guides and shit, but it’s a task that someone should only undertake if they feel ready…Prepared with snacks, the Arch Wiki, and good curse words in case of failure. Personally as a graphical install king, I think vanilla Arch is just TOO barebones, but archinstall is just right. Shame it needs internet to install. However, there is nothing inherently wrong with the Arch way, as long as it is recommended to the right people, there is simply no issues with it. As it is for people that are ready for the next step, a fully minimal system that is set-up in the way they like. However, perhaps Gentoo would be better for maximal precision, as there are a lot of ways to shape the system and the applications you install to suit user purposes on Gentoo. Not that I would know how at the moment, perhaps when I have plenty of time to learn.

    I honestly wanted to point out the whole FreeBSD thing in case someone took it at face value. As yah know, sometimes sarcasm doesn’t translate well for people (note that I laughed with a ROFL myself thinking your being silly not serious).


  • ROFL FreeBSD is also kinda normie hostile, as the TUI installer will get you mostly there, but after that there is additional terminal based config that needs to be done. Also, a user just gets dumped in a TTYL window with no WM or DE (that must be installed by the user). For me, it’s a bit better than just straight up Arch because the FreeBSD installer gets you so very close to the finish line. It takes the user (reading the handbook carefully) to get the WM and DE installed and configured correctly for their needs. I could see myself unironically installing that successfully over vanilla Arch which is fucking weird but true.



  • Edit: Added some context to my normie recommend statement, as I was in a rush…my bad, as I wasn’t calling out the person I was replying to…Just saying in general.

    The TUI is still a lot better than having to type in terminal commands in the correct order…The downside is needing an internet connection to get archinstall going in my opinion. CachyOS’s installer has a tendency to fail as well. Which is something that isn’t often talked about. I had so many weird experiences with it, like it failed to install the kernel, boot loader, etc. Garuda Linux is probably the best for those with a desire to tinker to be perfectly honest. A good starting base that doesn’t fail at all.

    Recommending any Arch based distro to a normie is basically a nonstarter and kinda unhinged behavior to be totally frank. I’ve honestly seen this and my gasters were flabbered. I always made sure to always redirect the person getting the recommendation to a saner one. As keeping people learning Linux is a good idea, making them leave because of frustration is…Not good.

    It would be better to direct them to Mint, Fedora, or even Bazzite (depending on their needs). As the graphical installers are pretty good there!





  • The fact this came from hexbear.net immediately raises some mental alarms in my head. So, before forming an opinion on this matter…I read the GNOME blog post and processed the presented information before deciding: hexshitpost or no. I found the blog post to ultimately be built on a strong foundation of knowledge/sources; written in a neutral and non-combative tone that calls out System76 without being incendiary or unnecessarily cruel. The case being lain out about System76’s many incidents of spreading harmful misinformation about GNOME makes me understand why GNOME does have some haters these days in the Linux space…

    It’s curious that instead of polishing COSMIC before pushing it out in the world, they released a broken version of what should’ve been something cool! I agree, perhaps working with GNOME and KDE would’ve been better if System76 wasn’t going to meaningfully invest in COSMIC’s stability before release. I’m sure they’ll fix it in post launch updates. From my brief experience with COSMIC, it did have the bones for a good DE, however, the polish was lacking. It made me sad and switch to Bazzite.