Originally posted by dh04000
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Debian Is Back To Discussing Init Systems, Freedom of Choice
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First good news in months.
It will avoid Debian becoming accidentally locked in to a particular init system (for example, because so much unrelated software has ended up depending on a particular init system that the burden of effort required to change init system becomes too great).
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Really starting to think that Jackson had some kind of mental break and is no longer in touch with reality. Does he think that Gnome will be patched to not need logind? Or maybe he wants it removed all together, even after it just resumed it's position as default?
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Originally posted by Scimmia View PostReally starting to think that Jackson had some kind of mental break and is no longer in touch with reality. Does he think that Gnome will be patched to not need logind?
You may have noticed that GNOME 3.12.2 is now part of Funtoo Linux, and does *not* require systemd. Many thanks to Dantrell B. for spearheading the effort to make this happen! With GNOME 3.12 integrated into our tree, we were able to unfork a lot of ebuilds and align more closely with Gentoo. For...
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Originally posted by schmidtbag View PostIt just really annoys me how debian prides itself in stability, yet my cutting-edge Arch setup has been running stable (on an overclocked system) for roughly 2 years straight with only 1 significant hiccup along the way.
Never understood the whole unstable comments about arch.. 1. They do have a testing repo 2. the packages they use are all stable releases from the package creator for the most part.. People that tend to have problems get packages from the AUR or do something stupid 9/10 times.. Now there are times something just goes weird, not saying your hiccup wasnt that case, but the wiki on arch and their blog with updates really make it one the best distros out there.
Course debian is supposed tobe stable they use packages that are a 1-2 years old
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