On Sun, 12 Feb 2017 19:35:00 +0000, Lyberta wrote:
Eric Duhamel:
Depending on what you mean by "newbies", I don't think they would know if they want any particular image of GNU/Linux except the one that was designed to run on the product by the maker of the product. After all, they don't know the nooks and crannies of GNU/Linux and would just want to receive a product that works.
OK, I'm a software developer, not a system administrator. I have no idea what 90% of packages installed on my system do. I only use terminal to upload my code to the Git repository. But I need g++ 6.
Debian Jessie has g++ 4.9.2 which is extremely old and none of my software will compile there. When I pledged for Debian card, I expected stock Debian with maybe a few custom packages which would be explicitly marked as such. And the first thing I'd do is to upgrade to Testing which as of writing this has g++ 6.3.0.
Now I'm told that issuing "apt-get dist-upgrade" is taking responsibility, etc. So I'm stuck with old and unusable frankendistro and on my own if I want to make it work.
I've chosen GNU/Linux because of its freedom and I've chosen Debian because it doesn't have proprietary software in main. I have no idea of what is going under the hood. I don't care what init system I run as long as it is free software and it boots my PC.
A couple of years ago I needed to buy a laptop. I've looked for one which doesn't come with Windows and I've found one with Ubuntu. Now, I really hate Ubuntu and the first thing I've done was to install Debian in dual boot. For some reason, Debian couldn't power off my laptop so I removed it and I'm still stuck with Ubuntu.
I know what you're going to say: "You should've looked for the solution on the Internet.". Well, sometimes I don't have time and am scared of bricking my hardware. I want things to "just work".
If you can boot your machine from USB, you won't brick it by changing the OS, because you can boot a Debian or Ubuntu installer and reinstall whichever you want. So your laptop is probably safe.
It looks like EOMA68-A20 is not going to just work. I don't want it to end like my laptop.
Will the EOMA68-A20 boot from USB to run an installer?
-- hendrik