well, it depends on what you want, but tinycorelinux has worked well for
me, and it fits in about 24M
On Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 6:42 PM Alexis <flexibeast(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Larry McVoy <lm(a)mcvoy.com> writes:
This is all well and good but what I, and I
suspect other
boomers like me,
are looking for, is something like Ubuntu without systemd. I'm
a xubuntu
guy (Ubuntu with a lighter weight desktop), but whatever.
Ubuntu is fine,
everything works there.
So is there an "Everything just works" distro without systemd?
A guy can
hope but I suspect not.
Mm, well, i guess that depends on what one's "everything" is. i
used Ubuntu years ago - having moved from Mandriva - and was
pleased by how everything "just worked". But over time i started
experiencing various issues where things _didn't_ just work (i
can't remember what now; i think printing might have been one
thing), which became increasingly frustrating. So i moved to
Debian, and had a much more "just works" experience. But then
Debian moved to systemd, and i started getting frustrated again in
various ways, and so i moved to Void.
Void's a binary distro, and i don't recall having any more issues
with it than i ended up having with Ubuntu. And for experienced
*n*x users, the installation process is trivial (even if the
installer is text-based, rather than involving snazzy graphics).
I'm not trying to be a pain in the ass but
I'm 62, I prefer to
spend my
effort on fishing on the ocean, I'm not some young guy that
wants to
put in a ton of hours on my Linux install
Fwiw, i'm a 50-year-old woman. :-) My first distro was RedHat 5.2,
around the end of '97.
To me, this is a "bubbles in wallpaper" thing. i've spent the time
setting up Gentoo because i'm now at the point where i'm clear on
what i do and don't need/want (in general), and i'm trying to
minimise the extent to which i'm beholden to having to deal with
breaking changes to subsystems / libraries / software that i don't
need/want, or with breakages i don't know how to immediately fix
or workaround. Because i have _many_ other life commitments
myself, and i've never distro-hopped just for the fun of it; i've
always been driven to do so, for various reasons. My distro is
merely a means to an end, not the end in itself.
(i've taken on s6 documentation stuff because although there's no
shortage of people wanting alternatives to systemd, there are far
fewer people volunteering to do even small amounts of the work
necessary for that.)
Alexis.