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MiyoLinux wrote:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PSEsWLRpPp4 LOLOLOL!!!
People may not realize that despite his lack of curly locks, Miyo still has one of the prettiest wives in all of Linux land: https://yewtu.be/watch?v=OYgZib8z6uY
Thanks andy!
...she married me when I still had hair...
Hahahaha!
I have been Devuanated, and my practice in the art of Devuanism shall continue until my Devuanization is complete. Until then, I will strive to continue in my understanding of Devuanchology, Devuanprocity, and Devuanivity.
Veni, vidi, vici vdevuaned. I came, I saw, I Devuaned.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PSEsWLRpPp4 LOLOLOL!!!
Beards are bloat !!!
grep "Beard" | cut -b 1000000
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Beards are bloat !!!
grep "Beard" | cut -b 1000000
Hahaha!
#!/bin/sh
if [ beard is bloat ];
then
echo "NO"
else
echo "Gotta have hair somewhere"
fi
I have been Devuanated, and my practice in the art of Devuanism shall continue until my Devuanization is complete. Until then, I will strive to continue in my understanding of Devuanchology, Devuanprocity, and Devuanivity.
Veni, vidi, vici vdevuaned. I came, I saw, I Devuaned.
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Do not use bloated music players. Just use sox.
Do not use bash. It is bloated. Just use ash. Or in the worst case use tcsh.
Last edited by Ogis1975 (2021-04-13 13:09:32)
What economists call over-production is but a production that is above the purchasing power of the worker, who is reduced to poverty by capital and state.
----+- Peter Kropotkin -+----
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Actually, moc seems to be the lightest way to play audio that I know of.
No. Lightest way to play audio is sox.
What economists call over-production is but a production that is above the purchasing power of the worker, who is reduced to poverty by capital and state.
----+- Peter Kropotkin -+----
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what does your .ashrc look like?
Here:
https://salsa.debian.org/debian/dash/-/ … ash.config
But you probably know that ash is superseded by Dash in Debian since DebianSarge....for interactive shell i use tcsh...
What economists call over-production is but a production that is above the purchasing power of the worker, who is reduced to poverty by capital and state.
----+- Peter Kropotkin -+----
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Do not use bloated window managers. Just use dwm
What economists call over-production is but a production that is above the purchasing power of the worker, who is reduced to poverty by capital and state.
----+- Peter Kropotkin -+----
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dice wrote:what does your .ashrc look like?
Here:
https://salsa.debian.org/debian/dash/-/ … ash.configBut you probably know that ash is superseded by Dash in Debian since DebianSarge....for interactive shell i use tcsh...
I learnt a few pointers from kisslinux (now defunct i think) about how to go about using ash as main shell. I tried it awhile ago and it works ok.
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ash is superseded by Dash in Debian since DebianSarge
You can still use ash in De??an:
# apt install busybox
# ln -s /bin/busybox /bin/ash
# echo '/bin/ash' >> /etc/shells
Alpine Linux uses busybox's ash as their default shell and it's very nice.
EDIT: actually I think that's the same as dash: https://www.in-ulm.de/~mascheck/various/ash/#busybox
Last edited by Head_on_a_Stick (2021-04-13 14:39:11)
Brianna Ghey — Rest In Power
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I went on a retreat to the Linux minimalism monastery, thinking I would be sleeping in a simple but comfortable bedroom, only to discover a spartan cell, offering nothing but a bed of nails.
(Inspired by https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/spartan.)
I mean, if you like pain, suit yourself. A reasonable notion of minimalism looks quite different than just about everything that has been posted in this thread, though, if you ask me.
For example, I'd like to have a well-thought-out GUI with an Apply button for configuring urxvt, especially the appearance part, because that would spare me the mental overhead and frustration involved in editing ~/.Xresources and then reloading the settings manually. In fact, I'd very much prefer such a GUI for configuring all of my desktop environment to having to deal with configuration files in three different standard locations using five different formats.
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the mental overhead and frustration involved in editing ~/.Xresources and then reloading the settings manually
Urxvt will read ~/.Xdefaults automatically (if no X resources are already set) with no need to reload with xrdb.
GUIs are horrible — why would I want to waste my life scrolling through endless reels of menu options when I can just edit a file directly in a fraction of the time?
Last edited by Head_on_a_Stick (2021-04-13 15:24:56)
Brianna Ghey — Rest In Power
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I went on a retreat to the Linux minimalism monastery, thinking I would be sleeping in a simple but comfortable bedroom, only to discover a spartan cell, offering nothing but a bed of nails.
(Inspired by https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/spartan.)
I mean, if you like pain, suit yourself. A reasonable notion of minimalism looks quite different than just about everything that has been posted in this thread, though, if you ask me.
For example, I'd like to have a well-thought-out GUI with an Apply button for configuring urxvt, especially the appearance part, because that would spare me the mental overhead and frustration involved in editing ~/.Xresources and then reloading the settings manually. In fact, I'd very much prefer such a GUI for configuring all of my desktop environment to having to deal with configuration files in three different standard locations using five different formats.
You want a button for something that is set and forget, BLOAT.
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Urxvt will read ~/.Xdefaults automatically (if no X resources are already set) with no need to reload with xrdb.
When does that file get read, though? I was talking about being able to change the settings for a running instance of urxvt on the fly in a hassle-free way.
GUIs are horrible…
Quite on the contrary, well-designed GUIs (or beyond-“command line and plain text” interfaces in general) can be extremely empowering and, in fact, provide a way of (more) direct manipulation of data that, arguably, makes editing plain text files in an editor look like possibly not the best approach to quite a few problems. See, for example, Alan Kay's 1987 lecture Doing with Images Makes Symbols: Communicating with Computers or the talk on The Future of Programming that Bret Victor gave in 2013.
Throwing the “command line and plain text” paradigm at everything is indeed an anti-pattern and doesn't really have anything to do with minimalism per se.
[W]hy would I want to waste my life scrolling through endless reels of menu options when I can just edit a file directly in a fraction of the time?
Why, on the other hand, would I want to waste my life scrolling (or pattern-matching) through endless plain text files using arguably obscure data formats – for which I will often have to write an ad-hoc parser to get meaningful results – when I could just point and click at a checkbox and get the desired result immediately?
Last edited by msi (2021-04-13 17:54:31)
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At the risk of looking foolish...which I'm prone to do...
A lot of these minimalistified examples can be made into desktop files or aliases...which is what I do with almost all of mine. That cuts out the need to remember (or record) a ton of different commands.
However...I still like floaty window managers and GUI stuff too.
Last edited by MiyoLinux (2021-04-13 19:02:56)
I have been Devuanated, and my practice in the art of Devuanism shall continue until my Devuanization is complete. Until then, I will strive to continue in my understanding of Devuanchology, Devuanprocity, and Devuanivity.
Veni, vidi, vici vdevuaned. I came, I saw, I Devuaned.
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When does that file get read, though? I was talking about being able to change the settings for a running instance of urxvt on the fly in a hassle-free way.
The file is read on startup. Urxvt doesn't do "on the fly" changes (AFAIK).
Throwing the “command line and plain text” paradigm at everything is indeed an anti-pattern and doesn't really have anything to do with minimalism per se.
I was just stating my preference, that's all.
Brianna Ghey — Rest In Power
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Hahahahaha!
I have been Devuanated, and my practice in the art of Devuanism shall continue until my Devuanization is complete. Until then, I will strive to continue in my understanding of Devuanchology, Devuanprocity, and Devuanivity.
Veni, vidi, vici vdevuaned. I came, I saw, I Devuaned.
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I always to basic math on my portable desktop nokia c2-01 feature phone. Useful for calculating number of 8M blocks needed to backup anything from 1.1 to 7.51 GiB of eee pc drive.
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Do not use bloated gui torrent clients. Just use aria2
What economists call over-production is but a production that is above the purchasing power of the worker, who is reduced to poverty by capital and state.
----+- Peter Kropotkin -+----
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Ogis1975 wrote:ash is superseded by Dash in Debian since DebianSarge
You can still use ash in De??an:
# apt install busybox # ln -s /bin/busybox /bin/ash # echo '/bin/ash' >> /etc/shells
Alpine Linux uses busybox's ash as their default shell and it's very nice.
EDIT: actually I think that's the same as dash: https://www.in-ulm.de/~mascheck/various/ash/#busybox
Thanks for the helpful advice
What economists call over-production is but a production that is above the purchasing power of the worker, who is reduced to poverty by capital and state.
----+- Peter Kropotkin -+----
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Do not use bloated gui web browsers. If you can't do it with elinks or links2, you probably didn't need to do it anyway.
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elinks or links2
Bloat!
https://pkginfo.devuan.org/cgi-bin/poli … q=edbrowse
Oops, I did it again...
Brianna Ghey — Rest In Power
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If you can't do it with elinks or links2, you probably didn't need to do it anyway.
Look at which protocols can be activated at compile time!
Even FSP!
And that is file transfer antibloat! \o/
Let's launch some FSP-Servers again!
––––––––––
Edit: I mean "in Elinks"...
Last edited by yeti (2021-04-14 20:04:21)
*𝚛𝚒𝚋𝚋𝚒𝚝!*
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