I am too dumb to use Ubuntu!

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Ubuntu is a hipster distribution for people who want to show off my making things difficult for themselves. I prefer Arch/Artix or Gentoo (GNU/)Linux. Ubuntu and Debian and Linux Mint really make basic things too hard for me, a Linux newbie.

OR affiliate links to things l use:
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>No seatbelt
>Using Cellphone while driving
>"I'm too dumb to use ubuntu"
Smort

taquitoburrito
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Kid - "Hey Uncle Luke, can we get ice-cream on the way home?"

Luke - "Here's the thing..."

leoj
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Luke: Containers are for bad distros
Also Luke: *has a container in the middle of nowhere*

awabqureshi
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Luke why don't you ride a horse instead of a car? They are much more configurable to selective breeding and allow the user to have a more personalized experience by bonding with the horse. Unless you want to pay loads of money and waste lots of time, a car is pretty much stuck on its factory settings. Furthermore, a car requires expensive fuel and maintenance, a horse only needs fuel that you could grow yourself, thus saving you money.

geremachek
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Ubuntu have no errors if you turn off the error messages

dusilva
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Is it suckless to drive 12 mins to get a cable from the shed?

galacticusX
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Man, the general stores in rural America look a lot different to how I expected

jordanc.m.
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Luke: sees a random shed in the middle of nowhere
Also Luke: It's free Real Estate

BrianM
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Anyone:
- What do you store in that container, if you need place it in the midle of the forest?
Luke Smith:
- Wired connectors in XEROX boxes

ukrainian
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Boomer blurred 90% of the screen failing to censor the "private road" sign.

enthusiast
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Ubuntu: Snaps for all. Bow to me in all my glory. Thou shalt use snaps no choice.

Debian: Sorry, ignore the bastard child.

leviticus
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Luke giving off serious supreme gentleman vibes

aken
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When you're a SysAdmin and have to chose between making a guide on how to install a whole LAMP/LEMP setup for each engineer, or deploying a Docker image, you understand the real reason why containers exist.

emiliodg
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Imagine using containers on desktop where every single program has its own copy of python and java and node so you never need to worry about dependencies.

Meanwhile your drive space....

NotAFanMan
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YouTube: "recommended for you 'I'm too dumb to use Ubuntu'"

Thanks YouTube

srclevenger
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arch breaks on updates, but only if you have nvidia drivers installed!

mrmugame
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Hannah Montana Linux is superior. Don’t think it receives updates so it is probably darn fucking stable.

kunt
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"....Ubuntu or Debian are stable, and in Arch linux.. oh it just breaks all the time. is not true at all, but i'll talk about that later...."
<-- well about Arch.. it's not stable.. by a long shot. it's bleeding edge in nature.. Stable has a different meaning in IT, than what the common folk think.. it means not changing within its release lifecycle. (aka you can rely on the workings, not sudden upgrades of versions of packages introducing potential problems (except security/bugfixes) in e.g. configurations or compatibility, or deprecation of features etc):
arch does not offer this..
AKA crashing has nothing to do with being stable or not.

mr_don_key
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Here's my process when I installed Arch vs. Installing Debian:

•Arch took me weeks to figure-out what to do and what every command does, but now I can install it in 5-10 minutes (not counting internet speeds)

•Debian has an auto installer, but it couldn't connect to my internet (even after getting the driver for my Wi-Fi card) and is unable to continue with the install.

I don't know what I'm doing wrong, but if an auto-installer is harder to use than manually installing a Distro, then there's definitely something wrong with your Distro.

thepuzzlemaster
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I know where Luke is going from but 4:40 where he talks about the "real" reason for using containers is not quite true. It is not because of "debain" thing. Not all developers use Linux or the same distro's and version of Operating System, thus it becomes quite a challenge to set up the development environment most of the time, also sometimes you might want to stick to the LTS version of some software rather than jumping into the "new version" as in arch. Docker lets you do this, although you can manually set not to upgrade the package, docker is easy.
Different distributions have their own priorities and different reasons for their existence. You cannot claim Arch to be the "perfect" distro. Ubuntu and Arch follow different approaches and have their own principles.

theredcap_yt