For day-to-day (email, web, blah blah) I keep a relatively current MacOS
box. In addition I keep a ‘toy data center’ - a set of four NUC machines
running Ubuntu on which I keep my various system management projects and
development projects. They are all headless, so I have a small hdmi
display I plug in when I need to do release upgrades and other tasks that
require a ‘console’.
=====
nygeek.net
mindthegapdialogs.com/home <https://www.mindthegapdialogs.com/home>
On Thu, Mar 7, 2024 at 4:10 AM <arnold(a)skeeve.com> wrote:
"Jeffry R. Abramson"
<jeffryrabramson(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Thinking of looking for something simpler and was
just wondering what
do other old timers use for their primary home computing needs?
I run Ubuntu Mate. All the nice features of Ubuntu, plus a more
normal UI and everything just works. In particular it handles
current hardware (laptops, wifi, etc) fine, as well as knowing about
network printers, generally without problems. I work with a bunch
of terminal windows with Bash and gvim for editing, evince for viewing
PDFs and a web browser.
If you want a more do-it-yourself kind of feel, you might try some
variant of Plan 9; the 9front fork is the most actively developed.
Plan 9 has ben on my to-do list for a few decades now; maybe once
I retire I'll actually get to it. :-) Be forewarned that there's
a learning curve there, Plan 9 is most definitely NOT Unix.
HTH,
Arnold