It’s an Ubuntu downstream maintained by Linux box maker System76 which is targeted for both general usability and design/media applications. They will soon be debuting their own home-spun desktop environment, Cosmic DE, which is highly anticipated by the Linux community.

How does the community here feel about this distribution and the company that has brought it to us? How do you feel about the projects that they’re working on, and their goals for the distribution moving forward?

  • @bionicjoey
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    3311 days ago

    The correct way of saying it out loud is “pop exclamation point underscore O S”

      • gregorumOP
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        211 days ago

        No, you’re thinking of SUSE, which is German for “boringbutstablelinuxdistribution”.

        Oddly, that short word-long word English/German translation thing works both ways.

          • gregorumOP
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            11 days ago

            Funny, it used to stand for “payfortwentyfloppiesorcompileitfromscratchwedareyou”

            It only took me 28 hours after a seven day download at 28.8 KBPS on my 25MHz 486 Packard Bell POS, but those motherfuckers never got a penny from me!

              • gregorumOP
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                11 days ago

                Don’t you even fucking get me started, I am so serious, lol

                Edit: gentoo was why I said, “fuck this, I’m buying a Mac,” and refused to even think about Linux again for 5-6 years. And I have the OS X/macOS’s being UNIX to thank for that, btw.

                The “shield” Apple puts over its OS can be pierced by powerusers who know how to use the terminal, and there are package managers like Homebrew that allow users to install ports of Linux/UNIX/BSD userland apps. In reality, macOS is an extremely-customized build of BSD that’s locked down in many ways, and runs a proprietary filesystem and on property hardware. (That’s a lot of suck, yes). But, otherwise, it’s still POSIX, and so similar to Linux as to easily facilitate a transition. And, because of it, I drifted back to Linux.

                Not necessarily because of macOS’s shortcomings, but because I like to tinker and fiddle, and Linux scratches that itch.