• Alaknár@lemm.ee
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    7 hours ago

    To me “stable” means: “fire and forget”. Maybe a reboot needed every couple of months because something broke, or having to kill a hung process. That’s my experience with Windows nowadays.

    I’m on Garuda Linux, which is based on Arch Zen, and every now and again something random breaks. Network connection doesn’t stand up after sleep. Steam randomly breaks. Signal refuses to connect. One monitor’s brightness doesn’t go back to default value after the OS dimmed it due to inactivity. Uninstalled application still shows up in Application Launcher’s search results, even though I deleted it from the KDE Menu Editor.

    Lots and lots of little things like that.

    • bss03@infosec.pub
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      58 minutes ago

      That’s not the definition of stable.

      My Linux desktop required about a reboot a week, but I think that’s because I was using a kernel and syatemd from Debian Unstable. When I’m getting both of those from Debian Stable, I only reboot when there’s a security fix in one of those.

      I do have a couple of issues I work around on a daily basis, but they aren’t even bad enough for me to open a Debian bug, so I don’t expect them to change/get fixed.

      Also, I refuse to blame Linux or Debian when I acquire and use software outside of the Debian repositories.

      • Alaknár@lemm.ee
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        29 minutes ago

        How about this - I configured Kate to have full Markdown support, with preview.

        There was an update today. The Document Preview plugin got disabled and once I enabled it, it’s no longer able to display Markdown preview.

        That’s what I call “unstable”. Shit randomly breaking for no reason at all. And I know it’s probably SOME dependency SOMEWHERE that got updated which broke a DIFFERENT dependency, but that’s kind of my point - things like this just don’t happen on Windows (since around Win10).