started with ubuntu in 2008, moved to debian a few months into it. Tried other distros at other times, but the stability of debian keeps me coming back to it. Plus I like the fact it's a community distro
you're more likely to find BSD communities on reddit, each projects mailing lists, freebsd forums, and unitedbsd.com (which is a great forum, although not too active).
No, but I think someone made read only support for ZFS available on OpenBSD. Freebsd is obviously the best for ZFS. It works on NetBSD too.
Artsakh is Armenia.
I hope someone can step in and help Armenia from Azeri aggression, but I'm not hopeful
No it's not widely used. But I think it has a small loyal community. Some people really love it. I've only tried it a couple of times, and only on virtual machines. I liked doing admin via text files, and I like that using the "kitchen sink" option you basically have a tool for every task after install. It's linux but sort unixy or bsd-like in how it approaches some things. That works for some and not so much for others. I might try it out again, but most likely I will stick to Debian.
If you want more software it's up to you how to do it. With 3rd party tools like sbopkg it's easier than before, and with tools like flatpak install other software is even easier.
There is also slackware current, and all the other repos, like the work alienbob does to provide plasma desktop etc.
they're pretty great imo
awesome thanks
would have to check on that specifically.
rif was one of the reasons I stuck with android lol.....It was probably my most used app. Probably borderline phone addiction due to it lmao.
I heard about this a little while back. I think it's interesting, and it's nice to see someone try something slightly different. The creator is obviously opinionated about how their distro should work. At least it's not just another debian/ubuntu based distro.
que digo?