fbsz

@fbsz@lemmy.ml
1 Post – 21 Comments
Joined 11 months ago

yes, it's much needed now as many projects needs contributions and you can create a website and list all of the contributions that is required to make it a real foss alternative

Hey, thanks for the great suggestion. Looked onto it and it's great to build your own linux. I think that's really the essence of linux, the freedom to build it on your own.

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Wow, that's great! That's the idea behind libre software/hardware or the copyleft where you are encourage to fix bugs, develop new ideas and share it with the community! It's great that you've you contributed to public domain! Is there copyleft for except softwares?

Hey, I've tried some distros(fedora, ubuntu, vanilla...), I think it would be better If I learn. What I mean by learn is about understanding the concepts and, as I've been using fedora. I didnt really learn how cd, ls(although I use it a lot) works. So, I think learning through LFS is good and interesting. Do you think that it would be good if I learn from installing gentoo and arch, then go onto LFS

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the whole OS, everything from kernel to installation to philosophy

Understanding is more important than installation! So, arch is a starting point and then gentoo for a little advanced user? Yes, the community and the philosophy behind the GNU/Linux made it a great thing to explore! As it have made me switch from windows to GNU/Linux!

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I plan to try arch and then gentoo, are there any resources which teach the very fundamentals of linux?

Wow, I've planned to learn linux by exploring and doing. Any suggestions on exploration?

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Hey, I will try to ubderstand LFS and build it myself. If it's much harder than I expected it to be, i will install gentoo. What about arch? Why install gentoo instead of arch? The installation process of gentoo will teach me about linux, the same could be said about arch?

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May be, I wasn't all interesting how the things work when you download it! Yeah, learning gradually will not only save time but also make the learning process enjoyable.

To make the learning process much more enjoyable, I'am going to try one of the OS'es either arch or gentoo. Which one will best for as a beginner? As gentoo has much more wiki than arch, which one will best suit for beginners(like me) to trying to understand things? Are there some resources, where I can learn some very basic stuff like about package manager, linux kernel, etc(if there, please share it here) and then it would be good if I go onto the installation and then onto the LFS thing. Learning linux would be a fantastic journey!

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'read and then do'? How is it better than 'learn while you do'? It may save you some time when you read and then do, but I think you can learn more when you do and also learn in the process? Correct me, If I'm wrong. Are there any books or resources which are available for free of cost?

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agree, the software would be good if it's not focused on making money! But it would be good and the software would innovate if it has a viable business model!

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Hey, learning through book is great, but how is it better than installing gentoo, arch or through LFS. What would be the best way to actually understand how linux works

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That;s a considerable against the problem behind it. So, what's the reason for it? Why the average person doesn't give a crap?

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Sure, you dont know what's important, how things work when you start out! But when you randomly explore, you're hit with blocks and in order to pass it you have to analyze, examine it. In the process, you better develop your intuition as you yourself explore it and understand it to the core.

Suppose, your end destination is some place, there is a forest before the place you need to reach. If you know the path(when someone teaches you), you can reach the destination effectively and quickly. But if you explore it yourself, it may take some time but you get to know the forest when you analyze and careful enough that you are not be lost.

I think, the goal that is learning linux has to do with everything that makes the linux, but it is a long and boring process, when one learns without knowing the basics or the philosophy behind it. I think that, I better get to know about forest(basics of linux) and then explore randomly when you know what you're doing.

I find a website, linuxjourney.com. Let me try and understand the basics of linux.

  1. I agree, the philosophy behind open source and free software are created or atleast have a part in it.
  2. sure, most open source softwares aren't written with that intention. But the problem is it would be nice if they have some money to keep on develop without abandoning the project, it would help them to innovate. Although open source companies are innovating, it would push to innovate even to greater extents.

a. a good one, but selling support could only be posible for enterprise or is it actually possible for direct consumers, although that’s possible. I think that would give a bad rep for the company? Is it? b. that would be good, but if the software is propreitory, the would still add up the value of their core business? c. a viable business model idea d&e. still the same problem with donations Correct me, If I'm wrong!

sure, these are examples where open source thrive. It's great to see it be that way. But there are services which are open source, as good as their propreitory alternative but still didn't have proper business model, rely on donations which is unstable. Even in the linux community, there are lot of distros that sustain through donations? If they have as much as money as microsoft, they may develop their distros and innovate. So, I'm asking for ideas, business models, solutions to these problems! Correct me, If I'm wrong!

the software developer who developed the project as a passion project may start developing it full time and we get a good software which is open source!

Although the redhat is approximately valued at 33bn, but does RHEL is truly open source? Can you study, edit, modify the source code, the freedoms a user get when the software is licensed under GPL. Selling support could only be posible for enterprise or is it actually possible for direct consumers, although that's possible. I think that would give a bad rep for the company? Is it? Sponsored development is actually like a donation based model, where you can except new features when you donate some money. Customization for big enterprises is actually a viable business model, only if it generates as much money as the company sustains and can continue to expand? All of the other things you've mentioned goes against the principles of free and open source? Correct me If I'm wrong!

Great, but the companies aren't as mainstream as their propreitory alternatives, what could be reason?

What are the mistakes done by those companies that's resisting them to not as big as their propreitory alternatives?

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