jorty (deprecated aspect) is a user on octodon.social. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse. If you don't, you can sign up here.
jorty (deprecated aspect) @jordyd

@starbreaker I'm jealous. (I turned to a life of sin ~4-5 years ago when I got a Mac)

· Web · 0 · 1

@jordyd Maybe it's time to upgrade? A used ThinkPad T-series laptop should be all the power you need. Or, if you don't want to buy hardware, you could always try OpenBSD a virtual machine or try NetBSD with a free shell account on sdf.org.

@starbreaker I don't know. One of the reasons I switched to Mac was that I was spending all my time customizing my Linux installation. With Mac, I don't have to worry about it, as there are no settings to customize :)

@starbreaker The options are 1) dock on the bottom, as Steve Jobs intended, or 2) dock on the side, as grandpappy NeXT used to do

@jordyd I had that problem with Linux, too, but not with OpenBSD. Even though both systems have X11 and most WMs and DEs are available, I haven't bothered to do much tinkering after I got cwm and conky working the way I wanted them to.

@starbreaker How is the battery life? When I used Linux it was always a gamble.

@jordyd The machine shown is a desktop (used ThinkCentre M92p), but I've gotten 3 hours on a used ThinkPad T430s with a worn-out battery.

@starbreaker One thing about Apple is they only have to support one set of hardware, so getting good battery life isn't very difficult. (Consider: Linux 3.13 was ~12 million lines of code, but ~7mil of it was drivers, ~2mil was support for different architectures, and ~139k for the kernel proper.)

@starbreaker I wonder if I'd have any luck with one of those tiny ARM computers

@starbreaker I wonder how long it would take to compile GCC on one of those :P (LLVM takes ~1hr on my iMac, which has a 3.2 GHz i5)

@jordyd OpenBSD on arm64 is a bit complicated, especially for newbies.

undeadly.org/cgi?action=articl

It should work OK on a MacBook Pro.

@starbreaker Well, I hardly use my MacBook as it is, so it can't hurt to give it a shot!