I'm not saying you don't have choice. But if you do change things, things could break.golinux wrote:And here I thought Linux was about modularity and choice and doing things YOUR way. When did that change into 'do it our way if you want it to work'? Monolithic and zero choice comes to mind . . .phenest wrote:After all, if you not satisfied with keeping Debian as the Debian devs intended, then you're asking for trouble.
If he wasn't asking for help, then why did you accuse me of not being helpful?M51 wrote:He wasn't really asking for help. Assuming everyone who has trouble with systemd must be wrong is stupid.phenest wrote:What printer problem? That "guy" didn't specify. That "guy" just blamed systemd. How can someone give help when they don't specify what the problem is.M51 wrote:Also, claiming "works for me" doesn't help the guy with the printer problem, seeing as phenest doesn't even know if it is the same model, interface, etc.
But calling it a "100% shitty-ass design" is technical, is it?M51 wrote:If you really think that, then you probably ought not to comment on technical issues.phenest wrote:If systemd is that bad "100% shitty-ass design", should everyone be affected?M51 wrote:That is simply 100% shitty-ass design. No reasonable developer can debate that and systemd is chock full of examples of exactly that kind of behavior. Reading the systemd changelog is some scary crap.
Is that the best comment you can make? I haven't seen any evidence of you putting up a technical argument. Perhaps you could give me an example of how systemd can break, along with methodology to achieve it. If I don't see it for myself, then I can't sympathise.M51 wrote:LOL, that's the stupidest and funniest thing I've heard all day. Thanks!phenest wrote: After all, if you not satisfied with keeping Debian as the Debian devs intended, then you're asking for trouble.
I don't have a problem with systemd, because I haven't done anything to break it. That doesn't mean I haven't changed anything about my setup, it's just that so far, nothing has broken due to what I've done. The default Debian installation works for me too.
Again, help me out. What do I do to make systemd "destructive"?