Bunsenlabs is the successor to crunchbang.
Bunsenlabs is the successor to crunchbang.
Crunchbang was amazing, but it’s sadly no more. Development stopped on it some time in 2015 I think.
Bunsenlabs is a direct successor to it, and should be good on OP’s system.
And why does where you swipe down on the notification bar change what’s shown?!
I have to use an iPhone for work and I don’t understand a vast amount of the UI choices - and that’s before data fuckery.
Oh yeah, we’re gonna bring in some entry-level graduates, farm some work out to Singapore, that’s the usual deal.
So, it’s criminal to fire an individual after they join a union, but shutting a site is coincidence. Gotcha.
Is unionising not protected in Canada?
It smacks of elitism, that’s all.
The OS is simply a means to an end. If Linux offers a way to do what they want in a way that is less hassle, and it meets their needs, then that’s a good thing.
customizable and configurable
Whatever you think of OPs proposed use case is definitely falls under the above.
It’s this kind of 1337 h@xor approach to the OS that makes people feel like it’s unapproachable when that’s so far from the reality these days.
Not really - there’s plenty of use cases where running memory intensive stuff like that isn’t an issue and running a small footprint distro makes more sense than, say, a maximalist, fully featured desktop distro.
I’m not trying to run a media centre or play games on my 11 year old MacBook!
Point taken!
I don’t think the lite distros are to blame for performance drops in that case, are they? Unless it’s down to a lack of system optimisation.
Fair enough!
I’ve done some blindingly stupid things with my installs in the past, and I’m not angling to try any in the near future - I guess I’ll just embrace the reinstallation game!
That’s a blast from the past! I used to run #! On my 701…
So if there’s additional repositories does that mean that there is likely to be core functionality which would be broken if it stops being maintained?
Ditto, I used it on my eepc 701 way back when. I miss that sort of computing experience!