• 9 Posts
  • 802 Comments
Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • Your Freudian slip is right, LOL.

    Tap for spoiler

    it’s a sold OS

    Anyway, sure, Gentoo is a good choice to build on, but picking an evil thing as the example doesn’t exactly endear one to your POV, emotionally speaking. Besides, SteamOS is based on Arch, so the notion that Gentoo is strictly “better” (not equal) to Arch on the basis of being used to make distros for commercial products isn’t very persuasive.

    I’m not saying you’re wrong about Gentoo being good. I’m just saying the supporting argument is a weak one, and doubling down by saying that sort of thing is “only possible” with Gentoo is even weaker.













  • The other day, the extent of my investigation was to find this forum thread, dismiss it as “kernel too old” (even though the thread was from 2023, LOL), and move on to Kubuntu. Looking more carefully, it seems like my Debian 13.3.0 image (debian-live-13.3.0-amd64-kde.iso) should’ve shipped with a kernel new enough to include it (6.12, compared to “6.1 or 6.2” which is when the Intel employee in the forum thread said it was added), so now I’m not so sure what the real problem was.

    It also just occurred to me that I should’ve jumped up to Debian Testing before resorting to Ubuntu (I wasn’t thinking too hard about it and just used the same flash drive as I had recently used to install it on my parents’ PC, which I really did want to be on Debian Stable). Oh well.

    Regardless though, I think the main fix is “ship a newer kernel in the next version of the distro” and it’ll take care of itself over time.







  • They would also be .deb files. If you wanted to install package A.deb that depended on B.deb and C.deb, with C.deb itself depending on D.deb and E.deb, you would work down the dependency tree to figure that out, obtaining the .deb file for each package as you went (presumably manually downloading from each project website itself, since we’re doing this in hard mode), then run dpkg install E.deb, dpkg install D.deb, dpkg install C.deb, dpkg install B.deb, and finally dpkg install A.deb in that order. You also have to make sure each of those packages is the correct version compatible with the others, BTW.

    This is what apt is designed to do for you, automatically. This is why you use it instead of dpkg.

    (Side note: I sure would love to find out how to control syntax highlighting in Lemmy inline code markup.)