Isn’t Bazzite an immutable OS with very limited package availability outside of gaming?
Nope. It’s basically Fedora Atomic with a lot of special sauce to make onboarding as pleasant as possible. Especially if you want to use it for gaming; be it as a HTPC/console or on desktop. Thus, like Fedora Atomic, you’ve got access to many different package managers to get your needs covered. Heck, Bazzite and its uBlue siblings actually improve upon Fedora Atomic in this regard (at least by default). Refer to this entry in its documentation for the finer details.
but I’m not sure it would be a good experience for someone just getting into Linux, since most of the help he will get online
We’ve all been faulty of this (read: searching on the internet), but we should instead consolidate Bazzite’s documentation first. Only after it isn’t found there, should one consider going to their discussion platforms; be it their own forums or their Discord server. Searching on the internet is IMO a no-go, especially if one isn’t well-versed yet.
will direct him to edit config files which would get overwritten on update.
This doesn’t apply to Fedora Atomic. Perhaps you’re conflating this with SteamOS.
Actually, it wasn’t me that said that 😅. I do find it in jrgd’s reply, though.
For the record, I also didn’t downvote your comment 😜. Though, looking at how well-received my previous reply has been, I can’t ignore the possibility that peeps that agreed with what I said also chose to downvote your comment.
Sorry, I don’t think I completely understood you here.
I absolutely agree with you that Fedora and Red Hat are very effective agents of change. So yes, if they would get behind an alternative for systemd, then that would definitely get traction.
Has something like this ever happened in the past? I can’t recollect a collaboration of sorts between these two entities. If anything, they seem to be at odds with eachother: Mir vs Wayland, Snap vs Flatpak and even Upstart vs systemd. Though, at least so far, Red Hat holds an impressive winning track record.
Absolutely. But, and this is my inner-systemd-skeptic talking, systemd is ridiculously intertwined with the current Linux landscape and often times new updates even show a glimpse of how much more intermingling we’ll get in the future. I hope we’ll eventually get something to systemd like what PipeWire has been to PulseAudio. That’s why development into alternatives like dinit and s6 is of utmost importance.
Suckless it is 😜. It’s a fine definition. Thank you for that. But, I got to ask, where is the line drawn? Like, the Linux kernel, by virtue of being monolithic, has to be bloated as well. Right? So, if that’s the case, is somehow the kernel’s bloat okay while bloat is unaccepted for the system and service manager? If so, why? I’m genuinely curious.
Sure~ish. Deep discussion. I’m fine with giving this to ya.
I suppose some peeps will enjoy themselves with what’s out there. Do you happen to use an alternative on a daily-basis?
Wholeheartedly agree 😊.