Alt text: A line plot with 2 axis (confidence vs competence) referencing the Dunning-Kruger effect with various distro logos placed at different points on the line. Starts with mint/ubuntu near (0,0) and progressing through multiple distros to end up with opensuse/fedora at what it calls “the plateau of sustainability”

  • cally [he/they]@pawb.social
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    23 天前

    i’m on NixOS

    …and I’ve been on NixOS for mount stupid, valley of despair and, perhaps, the plateau of sustainability

    • talou@jlai.lu
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      23 天前

      Agreed, NixOS is all states in once all along. Don’t look inside the box to maintain incertitude.

    • redsand@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      22 天前

      Truely don’t understand how this one became popular. But I’m sure it will fade like Crunchbang or a dozen others before it.

      • spikespaz@programming.dev
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        22 天前

        It’s the most unique distro to date, and has all the strengths the others. Because it’s not a tool for building distros, and NixOS is just the posterboy.

          • spikespaz@programming.dev
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            22 天前

            Silver blue is just an OSTree implementation. NixOS is deterministic. Think of it as, the distributable for silverblue is an immutable system image. Whereas, the distributable for Nix(OS) is a blueprint for anything, including immutable system images, or something more customized. You’re also exempt from the downsides of OSTree.

      • unrealMinotaur@sh.itjust.works
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        8 天前

        NixOS came out in 2003, crunchbang came out in 2008. As someone who swapped to NixOS after reaching the “plateau of stability” and realizing I needed more power, while the distro is a clusterfuck that shouldn’t be as popular as it is. It has some very clear and defined use cases, so I don’t see it dying any time soon.