this post was submitted on 26 Nov 2024
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libre

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Welcome to libre

A comm dedicated to the fight for free software with an anti-capitalist perspective.

The struggle for libre computing cannot be disentangled from other forms of socialist reform. One must be willing to reject proprietary software as fiercely as they would reject capitalism. Luckily, we are not alone.

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Resources

  1. Free Software, Free Society provides an excellent primer in the origins and theory around free software and the GNU Project, the pioneers of the Free Software Movement.
  2. Switch to GNU/Linux! If you're still using Windows in $CURRENT_YEAR, flock to Linux Mint!; Apple Silicon users will want to check out Asahi Linux.

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  1. Be on topic: Posts should be about free software and other hacktivst struggles. Topics about general tech news should be in the technology comm or programming comm. That doesn't mean all posts have to be serious though, memes are welcome!
  2. Avoid using misleading terms/speading misinformation: Here's a great article about what those words are. In short, try to avoid parroting common Techbro lingo and topics.
  3. Avoid being confrontational: People are in different stages of liberating their computing, focus on informing rather than accusing. Debatebro nonsense is not tolerated.
  4. All site-wide rules still apply

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Guix has a very small but dedicated community, I respect the maintainers not giving nonfree software upstream support since it's hard enough maintaining the free software in the repo anyway.

I'd argue that Debian's slow release cycle is more a liability than a strength nowadays. GNOME+KDE gets a new release every 6 months or so and COSMIC will get one every year, this means that while using Debian you're missing out on a lot of features during those 2 years (Debian is still on Plasma 5.27 while upstream is on 6.2). Wayland+Pipewire+Portals (not as easy to say compared to just "Xorg" lol) is moving really quickly compared to the last decade or so.

If Debian switched to a yearly release cycle then I could see most of these problems be less of an issue but 2 years is an epoch in modern Linux time.