this post was submitted on 25 Sep 2023
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    Re-creation of someone else's post because the original was removed and I found it funny when I first saw it

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    [–] stevedidWHAT@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

    “I breed insufferable, socially awkward users who are incapable of understanding subjective like and dislike and constantly feel the need to make fun of other peoples opinions. People who can only respond with the equivalent of ‘u mad bro’ or ‘it’s just a joke I keep repeating over and over; which, only people that hang out with me find funny. Despite very clearly and consistently demonstrating a massive superiority complex’”

    And no I’m not mad, just figured I’d call y’all out for continuing to be the equivalent of that annoying seventh grader who won’t shut the fuck up at the back of the bus. lol

    [–] LemoineFairclough@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

    I'm trying to infect you and everyone you know with the Unix virus. Your perception of me beyond that is of much less importance (though it would be better if you made the process of empowering political leaders less bad or gave me money or something like that).

    [–] stevedidWHAT@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

    I’ve used several distros, including oddballs like crunchbang. I have a secondary system which runs on debian.

    But ok

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    [–] atA@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

    Yeah but who really cares?

    [–] wishthane@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

    Linux, if we're counting the entire userland and typical components rather than just the kernel and its interface, definitely has worse (binary) compatibility than Windows, and potentially even Mac OS. The only saving grace is things like Flatpak which bundle the entire system tree they need with them and therefore have pretty long-lasting binary compatibility. But it's quite normal to have to recompile some old software from scratch when some common system libraries get updated, really only core things like glibc have long-lasting binary compatibility, and you can't even guarantee that compatible system libraries still exist even when compiling from source sometimes, because every project has a different approach to backward compatibility.

    Now, to be honest, things are much better with containerization (like flatpak/snap/docker/etc.), but that doesn't really help you much for software that's older than those unless someone bothers to try to figure out all of the dependencies and package them up and it still works. The only reason why it seems to be okay is that Linux distributions recompile all of the deps for you every time something changes and you get everything all at once, so you rarely see any of that all break. But if you have anything compiled from source, and you didn't statically link the whole thing, you'll see the problem.

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