38 points

It depends. What kind of beer?

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27 points

Haha, local Chicago beer. Maplewood Brewery, Pulaski Pilsner.

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13 points

Lol currently at Maplewood

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8 points

Oh fuck yeah enjiyuyyyy

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12 points

Not sure if it’s sold outside of Ireland but “Murphy’s” is really good, and of course, Guinness (if you’re into stouts)

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2 points

Yes! Murphy’s Stout is also available in the US. Might not be as good as yours tho

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10 points

And how many beers? Lol pretty easy to mess up dd if and of flags, as well and drive names and partition numbers, especially while drinking.

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10 points

No comment 🙃 I have nothing but time today so figured I’d take advantage & partake in my vices 🍺💻👾

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29 points
*

What a coincidence, I’m drinking mead and installing Gentoo. Currently compiling gcc, always takes forever, maybe I should’ve gone with the recompiled binary for that one lol.

No ragrets.

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16 points

You’ll never believe this but I’m chugging absynth and installing Red Star OS.

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6 points

I’ve always wanted to try both of those.

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1 point

Did the absynth goblins visit you yet?

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5 points

mead

Do you really drink a honey based brew?

There is almost certainly a binary version of gcc in Gentoo. I ran Gentoo for 20 odd years and also generally insisted on compiling everything. I recall gcc going from v3 to 4. My laptop ran for over a week on a glass table with a prop to keep the fan vent unobstructed.

I probably should have learned back then that I didn’t really understand exactly how the toolchain worked and how to get from ebuilds to binary code really works. I’m a sysadmin and not a programmer.

With hindsight, I suggest that you pick your fights with care. Use the bin versions of entire packages where available and enjoy the flexibility of USE when it will make a difference.

gcc is not the biggest lump you will compile but it does take a while. It was rather slower 20 years ago.

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4 points

Yep, I drink mead, i.e. honey wine. It’s really good, doesn’t give me as much of a headache as beer these days. Sometimes it’s too sweet, I haven’t found a good dry one around here though.

I played around with Gentoo a few years ago, got it working but then got annoyed with some binaries taking too long. Wanted to build a machine I couldn’t hack though, and now there’s a repo with precompiled bins if you ask portage nicely, so I figured I’d give it a shot again. Maybe it was the mead but I forgot to do that for gcc though. oops

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2 points

Cheers to gentoo

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25 points

TY EVERYINE FOR ALL DA REPLIES DEBIAN IS PRETTY SICK, but not as sick as I’ll be tmrw worth it 😈

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3 points

Are you alive today lol

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3 points

Surprisingly not feeling as bad as I thought I would today 😅 appreciate the check up! && Debian is awesome 😎

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1 point

Lol glad to hear it!

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@c0smokram3r evergreen post

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23 points

You having regrets depends on your expectations. If you want a very stable system with little maintenance then you’ll be happy. Packages will be older but that’s what makes it easy to keep stable.

I’m not personally a fan of vanilla Debian because the stable versions are a bit too outdated for the things I like to work with. I do use Debian derivatives though the LTS versions.

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2 points

You’re a real one ☯️

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1 point

If you’re using Debian as a daily driver you can always use a Flatpak if you need a newer version than what’s available in the repos. The foundation is solid, though, and that’s what matters - it’s one of the things that keeps bringing me back to Debian for office workstation use.

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3 points

You can also use backports for some of the more “system entangled software” that cannot be packaged in a flatpak. Or, you can skip ahead to “Trixie” unstable. It has been great for me for the last several months. It’s arguably more stable than what Ubuntu calls an LTS.

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21 points

Regrets aplenty after some of the things I’ve drank, but none of them are about Debian.

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5 points

I like yr style 🤘🏼

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