Your hardware and software tools are probably fine.

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 22. 05. 2024
  • They probably are. :)
    We do this nasty thing in tech sometimes where we really rip into each other for our hardware and software choices. We "content creators" also have a bad habit of using very aggressive language to get attention. And I don't like it! Hrmph!
    In today's "opinion-piece" episode of Veronica Explains, I share my take on this phenomenon, and why I think it's not a great thing. Maybe I'll change your mind, and maybe I won't. That's how it works!
    And big shoutout to @gardiner_bryant for the voiceover at the beginning! Go check out his channel!
    Links referenced in today's video:
    đŸ“± An article on Android Authority which outlines the various manufacturers and their update policies: www.androidauthority.com/phon...
    🐧 Jay's (@LearnLinuxTV) awesome video about "The Year of the Linux Desktop": ‱ The Year of the Linux ...
    Links to support Veronica Explains:
    đŸ…żïž Patreon: / veronicaexplains
    👚 Merch: vkc.sh/merch
    🔮 "Trackball Person" shirt from the video: vkc.sh/product-tag/trackball-...
    Chapters:
    00:00 Rated YT-14 for Opinions
    01:36 "You haven't convinced me"
    03:10 Linux Mom uses an iPad
    05:44 Tribalism is Ridiculous
    07:36 Ask Veronica ("user" vs "you ess are")
    #linux #opinions #software
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáƙe • 730

  • @JohnFrancisShade
    @JohnFrancisShade Pƙed rokem +526

    You haven't convinced me to accept the broad range of human preferences in the world and get on with my life.

    • @podes2204
      @podes2204 Pƙed rokem +8

      That's actually funny 😆 ... and witty !

    • @deniz9415
      @deniz9415 Pƙed rokem +11

      Switching off.

    • @davidnotonstinnett
      @davidnotonstinnett Pƙed rokem +1

      I’m out off by your lack of acceptance. I refuse to tolerate your opinion.

    • @aquinamedia4508
      @aquinamedia4508 Pƙed rokem +1

      ONE SIZE FITS ALL! 😆

  • @robbylock1741
    @robbylock1741 Pƙed rokem +269

    OMG a breath of fresh air! I'm a hard core Fedora user, but the best tool is always the one that works for you.

    • @reed6514
      @reed6514 Pƙed rokem +6

      I agree. I used to stress a lot about whether i was on the best distro. At some point i ended up on Fedora. I like it. I'm not sure its better than any other distro but it's just the one i know how to use and configure and am comfortable with.

    • @gnulinuxoffline
      @gnulinuxoffline Pƙed rokem +2

      Totalmente de acuerdo. Sin embargo algunas personas parecen mĂĄs usuario de "sistemas operativos" que de "aplicaciones" (lo cual es raro). Saludos!

    • @tetos04
      @tetos04 Pƙed rokem

      You're so fu... right

    • @snarlyone8419
      @snarlyone8419 Pƙed rokem +2

      Great Video and well said, currently i use endeavourOS but also loved POP OS, Fedora, Open Suse and numerous other Distro's, long live linux :)

    • @davidnotonstinnett
      @davidnotonstinnett Pƙed rokem

      I currently use Fedora but I have a big soft spot for Ubuntu, in spite of how angry everyone seems at them.

  • @markbenedict1295
    @markbenedict1295 Pƙed rokem +156

    As the old saying goes, "As long as you know which end of the screwdriver to hammer on, you'll be fine."

    • @Tall_Order
      @Tall_Order Pƙed rokem +5

      Then theres that other saying; To a hammer everything is a nail.

    • @lethargogpeterson4083
      @lethargogpeterson4083 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

      I am personally partial to the saying "When you have a hammer, every problem starts to look like a screw."

  • @aedinius
    @aedinius Pƙed rokem +14

    My sister-in-law is getting into IT and Linux (mostly to get into IT) and she was looking at me like a psychopath because of my workflow. I tried to make it clear that it was that way because... that's what I knew and I liked. Doesn't mean it has to be yours (with some exceptions, she'll have to become friendly with the terminal in IT).
    Thanks for this video, and now that I think about it I'm going to send some of your other videos to her. Thanks for doing what you do!

  • @edgar12334
    @edgar12334 Pƙed rokem +24

    You bring an interesting new flavor of videos in this tech-y linux area of youtube, and I much appreciate your work! Getting some merch eventually

  • @KrashyKharma
    @KrashyKharma Pƙed rokem +3

    I was walking around picking up my living room and literally stopped in my tracks and turned to the screen, mouth agape, when you got to iPad over Android tablet.
    You're really putting yourself out there with that one... I applaud your bravery.
    Also, I miss netbooks so bad 😭

  • @airspeedmph
    @airspeedmph Pƙed rokem +8

    When you said that you prefer systemd over init, I felt a disturbance in the force, like a dozen of people all screamed at once.

  • @alexwhite3271
    @alexwhite3271 Pƙed rokem +22

    Great opening! I'm still not moved over to Linux. Always had hardware compatibility issues in the past that frustrated me. Learning from channels like Learn Linux TV, Yours, and others has helped me revive some old hardware, Complete SBC projects, & tinker with donated equipment. It's been a lot more fun as well, and that has encouraged me to transition more into the Linux ecosystem. Couldn't agree more with you!

    • @lingux_yt
      @lingux_yt Pƙed rokem +5

      not trying to be the average Arch fan, but it was the only one that didn't have any compatibility issues on my laptop

    • @leonidas14775
      @leonidas14775 Pƙed rokem +1

      Nothing wrong with using both. Each OS has its strengths.

  • @LautaroQ2812
    @LautaroQ2812 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +1

    I learnt about this recently trying to look for "browsers" and "Os" and... weighing in all the pros and cons... and learning from other dissenting youtubers with the "typical" opinion, I've come to learn that when something specific is needed, you could use anything at your disposal and NOT make your own life much harder for no reason other than "sticking with your values". This is a great video!
    _This comment was typed on a KB8926 - I game on it too!_

  • @lillesael4332
    @lillesael4332 Pƙed rokem +2

    I just want to say that as a beginner to linux, it's a breath of fresh air finding your videos. I like how you celebrate all the different options rather than claim one distro is superior or that one way of doing things is the best. Thanks!

  • @evanbarnes9984
    @evanbarnes9984 Pƙed rokem +4

    All excellent points! However, I think the most interesting thing you said was that you're a cobol dev! I knew they were out there somewhere in the world maintaining critical legacy systems, but I've never actually encountered one in any way

  • @onelazynoob15
    @onelazynoob15 Pƙed rokem +18

    First time viewer, wonderful video. I'm happy there is someone saying this. There are some objective considerations to make when choosing your tools, but how heavily you weigh those considerations and which ones are even relevant to you change from individual to individual. I recently got my girlfriend into Linux and in my fervor to get her acquainted with all of the tools I've come to know, and my reasons for choosing what I've chosen out of all that, she gets a bit overwhelmed and runs into issues that frustrate her in that she has trouble solving herself. She often feels like an imposter for not knowing everything I know despite that I'm a recent graduate and she's only half-way through her 4-year cs degree. It's good to have someone reinforce that different tools work for different people, and it's fine if she doesn't use everything I do.
    Anyways, great vid, really like your style. Reminds me a lot of Technology Connections, but just more for software stuff.

  • @ringo8410
    @ringo8410 Pƙed rokem +25

    It says a lot about our culture that we make meaningless consumer choices like Windows vs Mac vs Linux into questions of identity. Whatever works for you is what you should use in your daily life; it's as simple as that.
    Also, I've always wondered whether sudo is pronounced "sudu" or "sudo" (I've heard both).

    • @kelvinpina8815
      @kelvinpina8815 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      Some people use linux becsuse of philosophy, that's how it started.

    • @garrettkelly5690
      @garrettkelly5690 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

      I mean - neither is really wrong. However, I prefer "soodoo" because the command is (iirc) a shorthand for "substitute user do" so it makes sense that way to me.

  • @KevinYCurrence2015
    @KevinYCurrence2015 Pƙed rokem +3

    I use whatever tool is needed to get the job done. I have to agree about the tablet space as I'm a iPad user as well because of the support model. Great Video as always. Thanks!

  • @joergnitschke5641
    @joergnitschke5641 Pƙed rokem +5

    I totally agree ... it usually comes down to individual tastes and your proficiency at managing the tools that you prefer/have to work with 👍

  • @anthonygross226
    @anthonygross226 Pƙed rokem

    There's so many different approaches and combinations on how to do just about anything - I love it when others share how they've done it so I can consider what's best for me and my use case. I am disheartened at how quickly knowledge forums compel some to troll. Oh, by the way, THANK YOU for not using click-bait verbage. Keeping the algorithm happy whilst creating content relevant to the title/description is a feat achieved by so few.. I appreciate what you do...

  • @majinshinsa
    @majinshinsa Pƙed rokem

    This came up randomly in my feed and I had to sub within 2 minutes. This video speaks to my heart when people ask me for tech suggestions.
    "You use Windows? Does that mean I should swap to Windows when buying my new machine?" No stick with what you like and understand unless you are aiming for changing things up.

  • @ArthurHollingsworth
    @ArthurHollingsworth Pƙed rokem +3

    I'm a nano user, and sometimes even Kate. I've always just used the tool I'm comfortable with and gets the job done, and it's worked out for me so far. I don't care at all what anyone thinks of my choices, and I'm not going to get in an argument over it.
    When I see people ask things like "I'm thinking about switching to X. Should I?", I'm always like "I don't know, man. Only you can answer that. Try it. If you like it, then use it. If you don't like it, then don't."

  • @harrisontu264
    @harrisontu264 Pƙed rokem

    Thank you very much for this video. I’m a technology enthusiast, and I see the same thing going on online, and it drives me bananas. I’m personally a Mac user, but I come on here to learn more about Linux, because you break it down in a really informative and easy to understand way. Because of you, because I want to play with it a little bit, I’ve actually installed in Ubuntu virtual machine so that I can mess with it on the side without screwing up my normal set up.

  • @rwoliver2
    @rwoliver2 Pƙed rokem +33

    It's tool fetishism, and it's generally a waste of time. Thanks for covering this topic!

  • @imthestein
    @imthestein Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

    I love this video so much. I often tell my friends that you shouldn’t have to tear something else down in order to prop your thing up and I feel your video is completely in line with that philosophy

  • @moodyjm51
    @moodyjm51 Pƙed rokem

    I use RHEL 6/8 at work. I use iPhone,iPadPro, iPadMini, Raspberry Pi and Linux Mint on my Lenovo 12.5inch laptop, and a M1 Macbook Air. And I’m trying to set up a VM system on it. Love your videos. Especially the ones about older Technology. I remember deploying Wyse 100 terminals with AlphaMicro S-100 systems.

  • @rob.taylor
    @rob.taylor Pƙed rokem +3

    Hey Veronica, I just enjoy watching your videos. We have the same interests and the same model Gibson guitar. i too love looking at old tech and tinkering with it. I have an Apple iPad Pro that I just love. It's probably the best tech ever to have been invented. I'm also a Linux/Windows sys admin, etc., and you video is right on the money. The right tool for the right job I like to say. Thanks for posting the interesting videos!

  • @martinturner5484
    @martinturner5484 Pƙed rokem +2

    Well OK then, because you asked so nicely. I just picked up a 5 year old ThinkPad x260 from ebay for ~$200. Its probably a little bigger than your old netbook but not by much, and Mint 21 worked on it out of the box. The only thing I'm having issues getting working properly (its half working) is the fingerprint reader but who needs those anyway. I've been really quite surprised by how much power this old tiny laptop has which is far more than I needed (and more than the netbook it has replaced).

  • @atreusduvelll600
    @atreusduvelll600 Pƙed rokem +6

    Such a refreshing message. Thanks Veronica!

  • @Prosencrantz
    @Prosencrantz Pƙed rokem +2

    its good and reassuring hear some reason nowadays. Thank you for your content and all the times it helped me get out of a dissociative crisis. It is so prejudicial to someone that is learning to get dragged into these nonsense arguments.

  • @christianhunt7382
    @christianhunt7382 Pƙed rokem +2

    I used my discretion and honestly your opinions are totally forward moving and hold true to a lot of things more than just linux. first time viewer and out of my regular streams of content, but ima subscribe to see what else you got

  •  Pƙed rokem +1

    I have never heard so much good sense coming from one person in youtube. You got a new subscriber. Great video.

  • @jscollett
    @jscollett Pƙed rokem +3

    100% spot on! This needed to be said. In the linux community especially we can be our own worst enemy. Thank you for making this!

  • @dcc1165
    @dcc1165 Pƙed rokem +8

    This is just an awesome video! WELL DONE! As they say, "haters gonna hate". It's so nice and refreshing to see people rise up above the nonsense. Too many people like to hide behind their keyboard so they can say whatever they want. I implore anyone like that to say these things to someone's face -- chances are they won't. FTR, I"m a long-time Unix admin/architect, totally stoked when I downloaded the first Linux "distro" from Usenet, so I guess I'm a long-time Linux user (U.S.R?) as well. However, I am currently working on the latest (to me) of many iPads, iPhones, Macs galore and the Apple watch. Like you said, it's what works for me. Opinions are fine, but we all know the old saying :).

  • @tvsmed
    @tvsmed Pƙed rokem

    Always enjoy your videos. Good points on preferences.

  • @SuprousOxide
    @SuprousOxide Pƙed rokem

    It's good to look around and see what other options are out there. You may love "Superedit", but it's possible you would love "Editotron" even more. It might be worth having a look at it, trying it out and seeing how it fits with your workload.
    But learning a new tool takes time, and unless it's strictly a superset of a tool you're already using, will probably mean you'll be slower at some tasks than you were before at first. Be open to new tools, but often good enough really is good enough.

  • @juliocesarvelascomarin8266
    @juliocesarvelascomarin8266 Pƙed rokem +1

    Creo que este es un hermoso video y realmente refrescante. Excelente contenido VerĂłnica! Saludos

  • @bonce
    @bonce Pƙed rokem +1

    Hi Veronica.
    Firstly, I totally agree with your keyboard choice, a minimal keyboard WITH the function and arrow keys is ABSOLUTELY the superior choice... for me... but not for everyone.... and that's fine :D
    Secondly, outro music is amazeballs.
    Obligatory personal distro and why I must be right generalisations:
    I use Manjaro with XFCE because of two main reasons, 1 - I like to rice my distro but I'm lazy, 2 - it was the first I tried after moving from Ubuntu after being burned by a big breaking (and broken) version change and it worked and as I said, I'm lazy...
    I've had a couple of people ask me what I use and would I recommend it and frankly I wouldn't recommend anything I do long term. Linux (for me) is about having a bit more control over your environment, so sure, play around and break it, but learn how you want your OS to work for you and try stuff till you work out how to get it to do that. Then come and tell me because I'm lazy and if I can have a low hanging fruit I'll take it. :D

  • @tieghbenod7870
    @tieghbenod7870 Pƙed rokem

    You rock! Thank you so much for sharing your contents. It's very informative.

  • @ZachStein
    @ZachStein Pƙed rokem +2

    I feel like a lot of people new in the field feel the need to defend their choices competitively, I tell myself a lot of us go through it when we're young or when they don't know enough to realize why others may make other choices. I out grew it a decade ago at this point. Hopefully this video helps more people outgrow the insufferable superiority thing.

  • @hamid.s.zolfagari
    @hamid.s.zolfagari Pƙed rokem +2

    You were a great teacher; I have learned much about Linux from scratch.

  • @AlejodelosReyes
    @AlejodelosReyes Pƙed rokem +1

    Super nice to know that you are a guitar player!
    It's great to hear for once a balanced, less "bro" content about Linux and tech. Your channel is super refreshing
    (BTW -no, don't use arch, Pop OS for the moment I'm a professional guitar player and Foss enthusiast. Would be very interested to know if you work with Foss musical software like Ardour, musescore or similar)
    I take a "lap dock" when touring, it's a great way to use messaging, email, social media and email without the drawbacks of a small tactile screen as the one in a cell phone. Also, via Termux, I could occasionally use Linux command and ssh into my machines. With a capable cell phone and some tweaks you can run some Linux distro on top of android without rooting the device.
    Also, you can use it with several devices ( it can serve as a secondary monitor for a laptop or desktop, for example), and, when you upgrade your phone, so does your "laptop".

  • @Afghah
    @Afghah Pƙed rokem +6

    Takes sometime for people -including myself- to realize the truth about the tools. Thank you for sharing your insights.

  • @scottb4029
    @scottb4029 Pƙed rokem +3

    I agree with all of your comments. I have all of the tablets and computers you have talked about and the best tool is the one that is the most efficient and comfortable for YOU, and not someone else. I started on nano, I Am trying emacs, and have move to vim. I moved when I was comfortable and felt the need for more. Well said Veronica . Linux Mom. My late mother was the Cobol Mom, she would have liked your vids. Thanks a bunch.

  • @eDoc2020
    @eDoc2020 Pƙed rokem

    I have the same netbook as you! It's small and lightweight with pretty great battery life. The downsides are the low-res 576p display mine is optioned with and the slow 32-bit Atom CPU. If you bridge a resistor on the motherboard under the keyboard you can overclock the FSB to run the CPU at 2GHz with no discernible side effects.

  • @Siamhie
    @Siamhie Pƙed rokem

    +1 Kudos for the Vernon vs Roy fight clip. I still remember that like it was yesterday.

  • @mariobrito427
    @mariobrito427 Pƙed rokem +2

    Good video! Not everything needs to be a tribal battle. Tangentially related, I still use my old eeepc 901 from time to time it's a great little machine and it checks all the right boxes for me.

  • @manestrak
    @manestrak Pƙed rokem

    Thank you that was really refreshing! People shame too much others about their personal preferences. At the end of the day, it doesn't really matter.

  • @stefanalecu9532
    @stefanalecu9532 Pƙed rokem

    I am a long time lurker of your channel, but this video somehow motivated me to leave my first comment here. I absolutely love your content and I think you have a channel aesthetic and vibe I haven't seen anywhere else in the Linux sphere, Wolfgang would be the closest equivalent maybe. I like your professionalism and the colors used, they make all of your videos calm, along with your personality and narrating skills.
    If you don't mind, what's the font you're using in your videos?

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Pƙed rokem +1

      Thank you so much! That’s quite the compliment. I’m mostly using Fira Code and Fira Sans Black throughout most of the videos and thumbnails. :)

    • @stefanalecu9532
      @stefanalecu9532 Pƙed rokem

      @@VeronicaExplains hmmm, I haven't seen Fira Sans like that cuz I haven't had a need to make it this bold, but thank you and have a great day! As you always say, Linux is awesome and so are you

  • @warrenhenning8064
    @warrenhenning8064 Pƙed rokem +7

    For the particular case of switching to vim, most editors have decent or excellent vim plugins that give you > 90% of what vim offers without leaving your current editor. This includes Emacs, IntelliJ, Sublime Text, VS Code, and no doubt many others. You can enable the plugin to try it out and disable the plugin if you try it and don't like it.

    • @gregvanpaassen
      @gregvanpaassen Pƙed rokem +1

      The thing is, when you first try vi-style editing, you'll hate it. It's only after a week or so, when you've edited some big hairy text file and realized how much longer what you just did would have taken you "the old way", that you start to appreciate it.
      Lots of people try Vim for a while and give up, going back to their comfort-zone editor. If that "while" using Vim is long enough, at some later time they'll think, "what I want to do would have been straightforward in Vim". A seed is planted in their minds...
      They try Vim again, get frustrated and rage-quit again, but the seed has grown a bit. The cycle continues a few more times until they eventually realise that nothing is perfect, but Vim is overall faster. (The famous StackOverflow reply, "Your Problem With Vim Is That You Don't Grok vi", will help a lot.)
      Why yes, this is from personal experience, how did you know? 🙂

    • @CFWhitman
      @CFWhitman Pƙed rokem +1

      Vim is great when you use it a lot. If your editor use is totally casual, then the acclimation phase may not be worth it. Nano is easy, but not incredibly powerful. Emacs will act pretty much however you like if you can figure out how to set it that way, but it's a bit heftier than the others. Jupp and joe are more powerful than nano, but still pretty easy to figure out.

  • @daniloaltamirano
    @daniloaltamirano Pƙed rokem

    Totally agree, I a mac user since I have use of reason in having used a computer and I have tried other Flavors of UNIX system based and the truth that I always adapt them to my work environment so any system or app is good as long as it helps to develop a faster or more comfortable task for you

  • @meowcula
    @meowcula Pƙed rokem

    *standing ovation* You're the best, Veronica. Thanks for bringing the sanity. Bringing up the gibson vs. fender non-debate was a perfect analogy and gave me a chuckle.

  • @seedplease
    @seedplease Pƙed rokem

    I am also all in on linux and FOSS software for my desktop (arch btw) and GrapheneOS on my pixel. But I still also use an iPad, it's great as a thin client for remoting into my work machine and using the apple pencil to take notes in meetings and such. I'm the type of person that has to physically write everything in order to retain information and I appreciate to have those handwritten notes stored digitally instead of in a million notebooks that clutter up the limited space I have in my small apartment. I'm a strong advocate for people using whatever works best for their needs!

  • @curtpeterson6612
    @curtpeterson6612 Pƙed rokem

    Great video as always! For a small, light laptop, my favorite new toy is an Acer c720 Chromebook with a 240gb m.2 and running Ubuntu mate. Perfect ssh/web/remote desktop, couch laptop

  • @AbsalomsAxe
    @AbsalomsAxe Pƙed rokem +1

    Recently had a similar thought process of "tablet vs. small laptop" and ended up with a used ASUS E203MA laptop, which runs perfectly for me. It's a 11,6" laptop so maybe not small enough for some usescases but being passively cooled with the N5000 processor and 4gigs of ram it runs super snappy for text and browserbased applications. Interested to see how many years i can use it before webpages are programmed so inefficiently to render it useless ;D
    Other than that, big fan of the "use the tools you have" mindset and a fresh breeze of air in the whole looking-for-theobjectively-best and argueing over it without any reason online "eco"system. Keep it up!

  • @gjermundification
    @gjermundification Pƙed rokem

    2:02 I thought it to be a buffet, it's good I can see you sampling the cold cuts, and then I can have a starting point for my own seek and destroy.

  • @EgoShredder
    @EgoShredder Pƙed rokem +1

    I love the form factor of the Lenovo X61 and wish they would bring that back. 16 years on and it runs Windows 10 32-bit just fine.

  • @certs743
    @certs743 Pƙed rokem

    On the netbook front I use an old Thinkpad X201T. I love that the tablet version doubles as a tablet or a laptop and it is just a hair larger than the netbook. It runs just about any distro I throw on it and there are models that came with mobile support (not sure if it is LTE). You might be able to find a gently used one like I did for cheep.
    And great video. Alot of people get very touchy about their devices myself included sometimes if I am honest. I went from PPC Macs to Thinkpads with Linux for my home computers. I basically got into both because at the time I was spending 8 hours a day fixing hosed Windows machines and just didn't want to have anything to do with Windows and as I stuck with it Linux became more and more usable and there was less reasons to boot up anything else.

  • @oberixGamer
    @oberixGamer Pƙed rokem +4

    I just started using Linux mint and I'm still learning to use it's tools, kinda neat to have options to choose

    • @SuprousOxide
      @SuprousOxide Pƙed rokem

      For some people, learning to use a new tool is fun.
      For others, it's not.
      And sometimes I just need to get the work done with a tool I already know.

  • @SpookyBytes
    @SpookyBytes Pƙed rokem +2

    I totally agree with your point... The perfect OS/software tool/text editor/console... even toilet paper! Is the one that fits and cover the main necessities of the user... I truly speak when I say that I love Unix based systems and my favorite is Ubuntu Linux, but MacOs actually fits better all my necessities in one. Also I'm not a huge fan of Windows but recently due to my work as a software engineer I had to migrate to a Windows PC and it was fine, I ended up getting up to speed so quick and getting the job done.
    So no matter what option is used, the key is how to take advantage of the usage for helping us to get things done easy, confortable and quick.
    I really loved your point. Great video!

  • @xloppyschannel4881
    @xloppyschannel4881 Pƙed rokem +4

    You can always improve, always be better. Don't get complacent just because a random bro on the internet told you so. Always strive for better productivity in yourself and your tools.

  • @neilsmith5464
    @neilsmith5464 Pƙed rokem

    Keep doing what you are doing - LOVE your channel and this is a great episode. We should be happy with our choices, be open to other opinions/options - no need for nastiness :)

  • @VektrumSimulacrum
    @VektrumSimulacrum Pƙed rokem +2

    @Veronica Explains I came back to this video for specifically the ipad/netbook section. Have you considered the Star Labs Starlite? I briefly remember the netbook days (never had one myself) and this is pretty much what I remember them as form factor wise.

  • @HideoV
    @HideoV Pƙed rokem +3

    This is such a pet peeve of mine working in Cs academia. While there are some tools that can significantly streamline work (svn for collaborating on papers is hard to defend when there's git), there is a portion of (usually very young) academics that just can't believe you use x/y/z software, and won't stop telling you about it, even while seeing you succeed using your own tools. I wonder if it's a sense of insecurity in their "Cs credentials" sometimes that compels them, or if it is the relatively common "well, actually" character flaw that's very present in the field

    • @awwtergirl7040
      @awwtergirl7040 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

      Well actually... yes. It's a common character flaw in many of us nerds. We either get over it and wise up or keep doing it into our 30s and have people cringing at us.

  • @rodrovelasquez1634
    @rodrovelasquez1634 Pƙed rokem

    Hey Veronica, about your small device recomendation, there is a small chineese laptop/console manufacturer called GPD, and some of their producs are like old netbooks, they are really powerfull too (as they are made for gamers). Sorry for sounding like an ad, but these devices hit your needs so well, AAAA thank you if you read this :3.

  • @hellomiakoda3782
    @hellomiakoda3782 Pƙed rokem +2

    I'm just really happy to see a trackball person. Mouse people and touchpad people aren't bad - I just hate they're assumed to be the only ones to exist by every work place and laptop maker.
    Which trackball do you like best? I love my Kensington. I dont remember the model name, Ive had it forever. Its about the size of a billiard ball, with 4 buttons, and, my favorite part, the scroll ring!
    I agree on one's preferred distro not being for everyone. I use KDE but Gnome is such a close second for me, and I was on Gnome for a decade.
    A linux option for the ipad - Im personally considering a GPD Pocket 3. No LTE, but itll tether to a phone. I dont have one yet, so no idea if its as good as it looks. Tiny, with keyboard, has tablet mode.

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Pƙed rokem +3

      Right now I’m using the MX Ergo but I also like the large Kensington style trackballs, especially for retro computers!

  • @haroldcrane1595
    @haroldcrane1595 Pƙed rokem +2

    Oh my god!! Why not find this lovely channel earlier!? [SUBSCRIBED]!

  • @jeffhendrix665
    @jeffhendrix665 Pƙed rokem +1

    Wonderful video. I personally use apple as a phone, android as a tablet and windows for pc. I currently use XP 7 and 10. These items work for me not the other way around.

  • @plutoniumshore
    @plutoniumshore Pƙed rokem

    Love your tshirt! I use a Logitech Marble mouse..which sadly after 25+ years of use, they've (from what I can tell) finally discontinued. I usually buy a new one every 1-2 years and nearly fell out of my chair when I went to amazon to pick up what is usually a $20 dollar peripheral and saw it listed for about $65.

  • @hoarfrost1164
    @hoarfrost1164 Pƙed rokem

    iPad is still the best portable computing device to date, particularly coz of the support and the quality of usable apps. not only that, it can SSH or remote into any distro or windows or macs, and can even use tailscale along with 10 or more devices. And do all that about 8 to 10 hours a day. You're so right about being objective with our tools and not get involve in any flame wars. By the way, can you also check on Nobara. It's fedora with rimina and OBS and all that jazz. Is it running on btrfs too? Thanks.

  • @matthewstout7974
    @matthewstout7974 Pƙed rokem +11

    Welcome to a world where people like to conflate opinion and fact! Thank you for the awesome (in my opinion) video:)

  • @mx338
    @mx338 Pƙed rokem +1

    I would really recommend the Thinkpad Yoga series to you, about 3 years old devices can be found for about 500€, it's decently small at 13 inch, they usually come with LTE and while it is certainly not as compact as an iPad it really is a neat portable laptop.

  • @melanierhianna
    @melanierhianna Pƙed rokem +1

    I'm a tech lead and I develop Android, both applications and AOSP. I use an iPad as my personal tablet, and a Mac as my dev computer. Its what I'm happy with. (Don't forget that Linux uses a lot of GNU tools, as does BSD and Mac OS *IS* BSD. I use mac ports and GNU and open source all the time on my Mac.

    • @melanierhianna
      @melanierhianna Pƙed rokem

      Oh yes, I produced one of the earliest ARM Linux distros back in the 90s and I have a Linux dev laptops (both for work and home) but my go to machine is my Mac Book Pro.

  • @martinfurlanic
    @martinfurlanic Pƙed rokem +1

    Perfectly agree, a good tool is the one which suits you and helps you do your work and has a workflow which you like most. And that's it. Many "zealots" don't understand that certain tools exists only on certain platforms and you ought to use them for certain tasks. I love linux based systems, free and open source software, for pragmatic reasons and for privacy reasons, but for my job I need Windows, and no there's no alternative in the free and open source world in my case. And so it is in many others.

  • @thatfitnessguy4718
    @thatfitnessguy4718 Pƙed rokem +11

    I know this is going to be a gross comparison, but we all use different TP. It's whatever works for you. I watch your videos to learn and because I like your videos

    • @cat-le1hf
      @cat-le1hf Pƙed rokem

      TP?

    • @thatfitnessguy4718
      @thatfitnessguy4718 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@cat-le1hf toilet paper

    • @eveypea
      @eveypea Pƙed rokem

      Not all of us use TP (i do when possible, but I'm sure someone out there doesn't at all), but I agree with the general idea of what you are saying

    • @justanotherpxrson
      @justanotherpxrson Pƙed rokem

      @@eveypea that just further drives the point home honestly

  • @UpLateGeek
    @UpLateGeek Pƙed rokem +2

    LOL yeah Turbo C++ is a totally a viable IDE.
    Seriously though, I was browsing an eBay seller's other listings when I was buying a vintage computer part off them, and saw a copy of 1978's _The C Programming Language_ by Brian W. Kernighan and Dennis M. Ritchie, so I picked it up too on a whim. It's been over a decade since I last did any programming at uni, so I thought it would be an interesting read, and maybe give me the push to get back into programming. So I installed Dosbox-X and Turbo C++ (you know, for the convenience of a modern programming language 😆), and it works just fine for following the examples in the book!
    I know there's more modern environments, certainly many free and/or open source options, but I'm not interested in making programs for modern computers, it would be to run in MS-DOS on vintage computers.
    And you know what? When I mentioned this to my friend who's a programmer, he gave me shit for it. But he just doesn't get that it's not about the end result, it's about the experience. That's really what the vintage computer hobby is about.

  • @disc0very
    @disc0very Pƙed rokem +1

    Totally agree, keep up the quality vids!

  • @glenngenoway7990
    @glenngenoway7990 Pƙed rokem

    I love your perspective, philosophy, attitude, and information!

  • @foobar8894
    @foobar8894 Pƙed rokem

    Software has grown up to the point where I generally expect there to be multiple perfectly fine tools for any given job. The choice then depends on details and personal preference.
    I started a software company with two others. Working with the same code base each of us uses a different OS, different IDE, different git client, etc. And it all works fine.

  • @auroran0
    @auroran0 Pƙed rokem

    Your statements about how to pronounce the /usr directory reminded me about one system I was on that also had a /user directory. That system was, interesting..

  • @sfolive1812
    @sfolive1812 Pƙed rokem +1

    Great episode - someone once told me "the tool that does the job is the right tool for the job."

  • @rationalbushcraft
    @rationalbushcraft Pƙed rokem

    I have recently purchased a L210 Asus that is a 10 inch notebook. It doesn't have touchscreen but it was only $160 and had a spot for an M2 drive for storage beyond the 64G on board storage. I am running Kali on it and with github drivers the wifi even goes into monitor mode. I like it so well and it is so inexpensive I have considered buying a second one so I have it as a spare as I am sure the build quality is not great.

  • @JohnGMeadows
    @JohnGMeadows Pƙed rokem +13

    Spot on! I believe tribalism will keep Linux from growing its share of the desktop space.

    • @unclerubo
      @unclerubo Pƙed rokem +5

      And still, KDE is best.
      (just kidding, everyone should use what works for them)

  • @antiussentiment
    @antiussentiment Pƙed rokem

    Happy to have you kiritasize me Veronica.
    Love the content.

  • @mikehosken4328
    @mikehosken4328 Pƙed rokem

    I agree with your comments fully, for every task there is tool that works solely for you. Others may criticise how you go about things, it’s always good to hear a different point of view and learn how to use a different toolset. You never know when you might need to use them. Some people get very tribal over their OS, I use them all from Apple][, iOS, Mac OS, PaRisc Linux and windows 10 and the amount crap I hear about how bad they all are on a daily basis drives me nuts. I decided to use them all to get the best of everything they do well. Now enough about OS what really matters is what programming language is best, now that does cause some arguments.

  • @colinzeal5816
    @colinzeal5816 Pƙed rokem +2

    you probably already know this but there are multiple linux distros that support 32bit architectures (ive only seen debian-based ones but i imagine you wouldnt have an issue with that), the one i use is antixlinux and im pretty satisfied with it

  • @strange67x
    @strange67x Pƙed rokem

    Thanks for the video.
    You are taking it right into the point.
    Hopefully sometime everybody will understand.
    Sincerely,
    Markus 🙂

  • @BlandManStudios
    @BlandManStudios Pƙed rokem

    This is helpful framing for all of us who make or consume content on software or hardware
    Thanks!

  • @GSBarlev
    @GSBarlev Pƙed rokem

    5:37 Ooh! I have a suggestion! The GPD Win 4:
    - Is *smaller* than a netbook, being explicitly handheld, and is considered pocketable (though your pockets may vary)
    - Has a physical keyboard behind a Sidekick-style slide-out keyboard
    - Runs Linux smoothly (according to The Phawx)
    - Can be had with an LTE module
    - Runs a full fat AMD Zen3+ / RDNA2 APU
    - Is easy to take apart and repair
    - Costs maybe 1.5x the iPad

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Pƙed rokem +1

      I like the idea of a GPD Win. The price is a lot more than I'm willing to spend for a device that's mostly for "oh no" system failures when I'm away from my desk for an extended period of time. The used market might be promising ground though for picking one of these up!

  • @6502Assembler
    @6502Assembler Pƙed rokem +4

    I'm a guy and I like nano. Quick and easy and almost always already installed.

  • @Heffsta02
    @Heffsta02 Pƙed rokem

    This is such a good video. Also jealous you have a Gibson and a fender.

  • @TimLauridsen
    @TimLauridsen Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

    Nice video, love the outro song

  • @4cps777
    @4cps777 Pƙed rokem

    iirc /usr was originally meant to be adirectory for user files and its meaning was later changed to unix system resources because user files were now in the /home/ directory instead
    same as with etc (etcetera and later editable text config)

    • @VeronicaExplains
      @VeronicaExplains  Pƙed rokem

      As far as I can see, there are no official UNIX documents indicating that the meaning was **formally** changed, i.e. it's not an acronym for anything (at least not officially). Same with /etc, while the acronym is potentially useful, it's not **official**.
      Language is flexible and I don't get hung up with how people pronounce things, but it's worthwhile to note that these acronyms are not official. I've heard stories of folks failing job interviews over this (i.e. the employer fails a candidate because they say "/usr" isn't an acronym), and that's just absurd. :/

    • @4cps777
      @4cps777 Pƙed rokem

      ​@@VeronicaExplains Yes, both of these new meanings aren't official. However, I kinda like them more because when I started out with Unix systems, I had really no clue about what the directories were supposed to be for and the fact that half of them have pretty nonsensical meanings as of today didn't help either.
      Nevertheless, letting a candidate fail because they don't happen to know the meaning of "/usr" is obviusly stupid, unless they also didn't know what the directory is generall used for. For example, if someone stated that the /var folder was for user-installed binaries.

  • @alerey4363
    @alerey4363 Pƙed rokem

    8:20 I'm old enough to have used dial up modems in the late 90s to connect to BBS'es, so to me usr stands for U.S. Robotics (v.90), db25 serial connector external modem

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics Pƙed rokem +16

    "Only a woman would choose nano"
    If I knew this way back when in 2012, I'd start transitioning much earlier! :D
    Religious wars suck. I didn't care about the whole Vim vs Emacs debacle and used nano, still do! Distro? I used Fedora (that was the workplace policy back then), I use Debian on my personal systems, I also sometimes use Mint and recommend it to regular users.
    Rock on, fellow nerd! :)

    • @aylen7062
      @aylen7062 Pƙed rokem +1

      same, nano was my main editor from 2012 (when I started using linux) until recently (learnt vim because I love efficiency, ironically the year my egg cracked lol).

    • @KeritechElectronics
      @KeritechElectronics Pƙed rokem

      @@aylen7062 ha, another one of the girls like us! :)
      Mine cracked in 2017/18

    • @awwtergirl7040
      @awwtergirl7040 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      I love nano. It works fine for 99% of small edits. VIM is neat but I never use it to it's full extent because...I don't need to? So its like going to the store in an giant off-road truck.

  • @mikeerdely7248
    @mikeerdely7248 Pƙed rokem

    I have an Acer Chromebook C740 that I flashed with UEFI, installed a larger nvme drive, and am using Arch Linux on it natively (not Crostini or Crouton). It's a small (though somewhat heavy) "netbook" that I use for troubleshooting.

  • @reed6514
    @reed6514 Pƙed rokem +2

    A couple years ago i worried a lot about all the newfangled and different tech stuff everyone would post on Twitter, and CZcams. Really stressed me out. It's been SO much better since i said "fuck it i like MY setup." Also i just don't wanna learn new stuff if i don't have an explicit need to.

  • @williamhughes1067
    @williamhughes1067 Pƙed rokem

    Veronica, good on 'ya! I'm a 73-year-old former Windows and MacOS power user, who also enjoys using Linux in various distros and hardware configurations. However, I tend to appreciate them all for different things and would never claim any one of them to be the BEST overall.

  • @send2gl
    @send2gl Pƙed rokem

    Well explained. Re the Netbook. Raspberry Pi OS will support 32 bit for some time yet and they do a version for a PC or Mac. Worth a look, I run it on an old Acer Aspire One, don't use it a lot but useful and responsive for certain tasks.

  • @nextnoir
    @nextnoir Pƙed rokem +2

    GPD WIN Max 2 is the small netbook you dream on. It has LTE and modern CPU. Unfortunately it's a bit expensive. Also there are other models of small notebooks from GPD

  • @zachh1000
    @zachh1000 Pƙed rokem

    Hey, great video, wholeheartedly agree. Out of interest, have you looked at the GPD wee netbookalikes? I’ve not used one myself, but that guy that does Ubuntu mate spin (at least used to) does Ubuntu mate spins for them. Might be a strong contender? Would love to know your thoughts as I too use an iPad for the same reason, but it’s close to going out of support 😱

  • @phyzer1359
    @phyzer1359 Pƙed rokem +3

    Nice video! I've switched to Linux around two weeks ago and totally agree. It's good, but have it's flaws. Just as everything does (btw, I have been using an old netbook - HP 2133 mini)

    • @certs743
      @certs743 Pƙed rokem

      Cool to see someone else still has a Mini Note 2133. I haven't used mine in awhile but I know Debian 10 worked great on it.

  • @rrwoodyt
    @rrwoodyt Pƙed rokem

    I had the same netbook and loved it!!!!!!

  • @ricardocortes6551
    @ricardocortes6551 Pƙed rokem

    I prefer, I prefer, I prefer, your channel :-) Keep going Veronica ! And Salut to all the persons that give something back to others in the Linux World. Greets from Portugal.