Did you tried Bunsenlabs, it is an updated Crunchbang, although you may find it a little "bloated" compared to the original.
I ran Bunsenlabs personally for a couple months. I still support it on a couple machines at work. I am not sure why, but I did not like BL as much. I did some distro-hopping. I ended up running Debian and Ubuntu net-installs for a while. I recently setup a OpenVPN server (cli only) on a FreeBSD VPS. I had a great time doing it, and it reminded of me of my experiences before goofing with systemd. That is how I arrived here.
]]>thierrybo wrote:
With some extra work, you can install Bunsenlabs on Devuan, although I gave up on that.
That is an idea, going from Wheezy to Jessie was quite easy and worked perfectly, guess have to approach putting Devuan ASCII on BunsenLabs with Stretch would be a little more involved.
BunsenLabs certainly kept the awesome crunchiness attributes of CB with their first release and has very much evolved the distribution since with the help of a great forum community and developers. Think they are doing quite well with their BL project!
Don't know if anyone has tried putting Devuan on a Ubuntu distribution, I'd be scratching my head asking why?
cheers
zephyr
]]>With some extra work, you can install Bunsenlabs on Devuan, although I gave up on that.
]]>ozi
]]>ChuangTzu wrote:
Does it also go crunch bang like the original?
Since Debian Wheezy and Devuan Jessie were both essentially systemd-free the upgrade went quite smoothly, error free. Made sure to collect everything like grub images, slim, and a few other items like skel to add back once updated.
Would say yes to your question!
Just an experiment, hated to see CB go as well! Super excellent distribution!
cheers
zephyr
]]>Jordan_Waughtal wrote:
Did anyone else come from #!?Imagine there are quite a few who used CrunchBang, came across it in 2011 and actually have it still on an HDD somewhere with Devuan.
STAR and CROWZ ob are similar to #!, use some configs also built with live-build.
I thought the cb-welcome script was rad. If you came from #! what was your favorite feature? If not what was your favorite feature of another disto?
Some distros use a similar welcome script but coded differently as STAR and CROWZ. Would have to say the menu was very nice although personally not dependent on pipemenus. Learned a lot from #! early on and also VSIDO a sid distribution, fluxbox and some attributes from perhaps from #!.
Great, have a screenshot in scrot.moe. Devuan 3,16 CrunchBang
https://cdn.scrot.moe/images/2017/05/03/Shot-280217-012951.th.png
cheers
zephyr
Does it also go crunch bang like the original?
PS: I played with #! from time to time, was sad to see it go, not so much for the loss of the project but the larger view tendency for great projects to fold from apathy, lack of support, finances, etc... And no I do not consider the spinoffs as replacements for #!. Crunch died, the others are just standing over the grave.
]]>Jordan_Waughtal wrote:
Did anyone else come from #!?
Imagine there are quite a few who used CrunchBang, came across it in 2011 and actually have it still on an HDD somewhere with Devuan.
STAR and CROWZ ob are similar to #!, use some configs also built with live-build.
I thought the cb-welcome script was rad. If you came from #! what was your favorite feature? If not what was your favorite feature of another disto?
Some distros use a similar welcome script but coded differently as STAR and CROWZ. Would have to say the menu was very nice although personally not dependent on pipemenus. Learned a lot from #! early on and also VSIDO a sid distribution, fluxbox and some attributes from perhaps from #!.
Great, have a screenshot in scrot.moe. Devuan 3,16 CrunchBang
cheers
zephyr
]]>Heading towards gentoo.
Moooooom???
Will I have an intelligent reply on this when I grow older?
I thought the cb-welcome script was rad. If you came from #! what was your favorite feature? If not what was your favorite feature of another disto?