Specter
If you know, you know.
- 0 Posts
- 11 Comments
Specter@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•AI overly affirms users asking for personal advice— Not only are AIs far more agreeable than humans when advising on interpersonal matters, but users also prefer the sycophantic models.English
1 dayIt’s okay if your penis is small - in fact I prefer it.
Are you circumcised or uncircumcised? My next prompt depends on your reply.
Specter@piefed.socialto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Warning: (unpaid) ad incoming – I finally found a desktop environment I love!English
1 dayI don’t get it, what about the gitignore reveals he’s vibecoding?
- 2 days
That’s a round about way of saying RTFM, but even less welcoming. Probably not the kind of thing anyone should be told…
- 2 days
Uh… is the NixOS documentation “one of the best around” or have you never checked it? It really can’t be both.
Understand, I’m not trying to criticize NixOS. I use NixOS exclusively and it’s my daily driver. But the documentation really isn’t all there, and it’s not centralized. The best solutions you find across forums, blog posts, random wikis, and by checking other people’s configs like you said.
But yes, the fact you can test things without fear of breaking your system allows you to make hundreds of mistakes stress-free. That’s one of the best features about NixOS.
- 3 days
I am talking from experience here. Some of the documentation is out of date, some is meant for Channel NixOS installs and not so appropriate for Flake-based installs.
Most of the fixes for my issues I find across NixOS discourse forum posts, or in the subreddit of the other platform. The Wiki/official documentation is not enough.
I’m glad you switched to NixOS (welcome!) but this is gap in documentation is something that will become more apparent over time. The NixOS official wiki ironically often links to Arch wiki to explain certain concepts further.
I like this. I think paying people to develop FOSS is fine, we’re also all better off for it.
- 3 days
Not to mention, RTfM is not always possible for some distros like NixOS where the documentation is weaker than for other more mainstream distros.
I was gonna say the same thing.
For most beginners who just want their PC to work, the obvious choice should be Mint for older hardware, and Universal Blue’s Fedora-based images (Bluefin or Aurora depending on the preferred desktop).
Of course, since OP mentioned NixOS that is an option as well. But it should be the stable version, and it is not beginner friendly like the other two.




At this point The Great Firewall is looking more like it’s protecting people from this AI slop. I have no idea how websites are in China, but I think I would be okay with Europe raising a great firewall against US owned companies.
The damage US far-right influencers (along with Russian funding of parties) is doing in Europe cannot be underestimated.