With all the refugees from Reddit seeking better places on the internet, I figured I would go ahead and create a community here for Furries who use, or are interested in, Linux to come, hang out, and ask questions.
Whether you are a newbie just starting out, or a seasoned pro who just finished compiling Gentoo, all Linux Furs are welcome here! :)
(I'll come up with some concrete-ish rules later. Just follow the instance rules for now and you'll be fine)
I started on Mint several years ago, and have since settled on Debian for my daily driver, though I'm considering trying other distros like Manjaro or Void for fun. I still use Mint for games (Steam + Proton). Haven't booted Windows for home use in quite some time and I plan to keep it that way.
Nice, yeah I just installed Debian 12 on an older Macbook Pro, and it runs absolutely fantastic. And yeah, same here for WIndows. I did have a Windows partition for a while, but eventually I just deleted it to make more room for Steam games. xD
Though I'm currently using Windows as it works for my workflow atm. I have dabbled in Linux a lot and I really like it, so hopefully one day, I can make thew switch to it fully.
Interesting idea for a community. I don't currently use Linux but I would be for it again if I could figure out how to use it better. Last time I tried Pop OS.
Definitely start off with a more beginner distro like Pop, Zorin, or Mint. Then once you comfortable, you can decide where to move on from there, if at all. I've been on Pop for 4 years now, and still love it. :)
Nice! NixOS is quite fascinating I must say. I don't have a huge use for it per se, but I can see huge potential if I ever wanted to make a custom distro to ship out. The Nix config file thing would be super handy!
Yeah the configuration is just really nice, and with flake you can bring litterally anythink into it. Truely an awesome piece of software.
I think the thing i like with nixos is the atomic upgrades, and the fact that you can rollback to an old system configuration if something is messed up. I tried using btrfs on arch before, but it was really confusing to me and i didn't like the readonly snapshots (i might have done thinks wrong too here lol). It's just better way of doing thinks imo.
(it took me while to wrap my head around the configuration syntax tho xD)
I’ve been using Linux for..not quite 30 years, but getting there, and I’ve been a Linux sysadmin for over 20. I started on Slackware, ran that for about 15 years, went to Fedora, ran that for 12 or so, and I’ve been on Arch since.
Heh, you've been using Linux about as long as I've been alive... xD
Running OG Slackware is pretty cool though! That's one that you don't hear a lot nowadays, but definitely has some giants that built off of it. Given the length of time you've been using Linux for, ever try out Yggdrasill Linux from back in the day?
I vaguely remember Yggdrasil Linux, but I never ran it as it wasn't freely available and I was saving my money for Super Nintendo games, hehe. Slackware was free, though it took a long time to download over a 2400 (maybe 14.4) modem onto a stack of floppies, all while hoping that nothing got corrupted.
Then, the actual installation was quite a learning experience but I managed (somehow, far too long ago to remember exactly how) to get it running. Didn't have a graphics card for XFree86, but having multiple ttys/multitasking available after using DOS for so long felt extraordinary. ^^
Heyo. Linux and furries, the iconic duo. I'm currently an arch user also, but lately have been considering switching to something a tiny bit more stable. Arch used to be great when we needed a lot of experimental software to run games, but I feel like I don't need bleeding edge for anything anymore, and there are enough small bugs coming and going that it's a bit annoying. Maybe considering opensuse tumbleweed or fedora? Anyone else feeling a similar way?
OTOH my arch install is so old I've forgotten everything I ever tweaked about it, so setting up on a new distro from scratch is not going to be fun.
Yeah, I have Arch on a laptop I play around with, and it's cool and all, but ultimately I'd never run it as my main OS on my system. I have played around with OpenSuse Tumbleweed too, and I did quite like that. If I was gonna go for a rolling-release, I'd definitely choose that.
Currently for me, I run Pop!_OS on my main system, have for over 4 years now, and also on my Thinkpad X1 Yoga. Also just installed Debian 12 on an old 2013 Macbook Pro, and Qubes OS on another older Lenovo Ideapad.