• davefischer@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been using Unix in one form or another since the mid 80s, so that’s pretty deeply ingrained by now.

    I was strongly biased towards Solaris & OpenBSD for many years (Solaris on nice Sun hardware, OpenBSD on small machines) but both began to annoy me a little bit recently, so I switched to Void linux. (Also, there was ONE feature of Linux that I REALLY wanted - extended attributes (name=val) in the filesystem. Love those.)

    I’m fascinated by Multics & Control Data’s NOS (70s mainframe OS’s), but that’s for historic study, not actual use.

    • LucyLastic@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I still have a copy of Solaris for x86 somewhere, I liked it because it had a nice window manager before Linux and I hold onto the disk out of nostalgia

      • davefischer@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        CDE had the advantage of being useful with a default config, at a time when most window managers required HUGE amounts of fiddling to get a nice environment.

        • LucyLastic@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, the first time I saw CDE was doing AIX for PPC admin and I thought it was nice so went and got the student edition of Solaris for something like €7.50, lol

          IIRC at the time CDE for Linux was available for about €50, which was a lot of money back then!

          Unfortunately I had approximately zero apps for Solaris, so apart from playing with the OS I got no actual use out of it.