Yeah the only backports I use on my jessie installation is the mozila firefox-esr one. Since if I can get the latest release of an ESR stable firefox, why not?@ruffwoof
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deb http://mozilla.debian.net/ jessie-backports firefox-esr
Yeah the only backports I use on my jessie installation is the mozila firefox-esr one. Since if I can get the latest release of an ESR stable firefox, why not?@ruffwoof
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deb http://mozilla.debian.net/ jessie-backports firefox-esr
Yep, Debian is more DIY, but it's worth it, the 'buntus are more like training wheels, and they have been known to add 'tweaks' (especially in browsers, this is why I switched to Pale Moon) to generate revenue, Canonical is a corporation, corporations love money. I occasionally make donations to FOSS projects that deserve it.
heh, really nice background images.sjukfan wrote:Openbox, tint2... yeah... that's it. Usually filled with tons and tons of windows. The grey area is outside monitor area, the right screen is flipped so it's 1024x1280, great for emails or reading pdfs or whatsnot.
http://i.imgur.com/KUix4wa.jpg
On the left we have Zee Captain from the web comic Romantically Apocalyptic. It's... a bit weird. But hey, so am I It's important to read all the way down to the comments on every page or you'll miss a lot. Later on the comments of other readers can be pretty useful because there might be things you've missed.debiman wrote: heh, really nice background images.
unfortunately i'm not so good with pop icons; care to explain a little?
Debian Jessie standard liveCD (console only), added xorg and openbox and it was quite nice. Added tint and tweaked around a bit and it was nicer. Started adding more (Libre, Skype, Kodi, Openbox ...etc) and overall very quick operationally, especially when booted as a single filesystem.squashfs (frugally)
You just made me time mine! From POST, 19 seconds to login screen on 8.7. Not bad!ruffwoof wrote: Debian Jessie standard liveCD (console only), added xorg and openbox and it was quite nice. Added tint and tweaked around a bit and it was nicer. Started adding more (Libre, Skype, Kodi, Openbox ...etc) and overall very quick operationally, especially when booted as a single filesystem.squashfs (frugally)
Less than 15 second bootup on my old hardware ... very nice!
Love your wallpaper of Half Dome, Yosemite National Park (California) (searched using Tiny Eye reverse image search)Lysander wrote:You just made me time mine! From POST, 19 seconds to login screen on 8.7. Not bad!
14.9 sec. Debian Jessie standard, xorg, openbox, stalonetray (openbox tray dock that I have set to be in the top left corner and auto-hides, but mouse into that corner and you get to see/use the Skype, wicd ...etc tray icons), brightside (so corners can be set as hot corners) that has the bottom left set to activate (non Debian) skippy-xd ... so mouse into the bottom left and it presents a tiled set of current active/minimised windows for you to select which one to activate/switch-to.None1975 wrote:Minimal Debian 8.7 install. I added xorg and i3wm. 14 sec. to login screen.
Thanks for the confirmation of location! I had no idea where it was but suspected it was somewhere in the US. What a beautiful location.ruffwoof wrote:Love your wallpaper of Half Dome, Yosemite National Park (California) (searched using Tiny Eye reverse image search)Lysander wrote:You just made me time mine! From POST, 19 seconds to login screen on 8.7. Not bad!
systemd-analyze plot >s.svg and then viewing the (large) svg file shows that wicd (network) is the bottleneck for me. Without that would be a second or two faster. My setup gets to the login prompt and networking messages are still showing as I've entered the userid and password, so perhaps the timing might be several seconds less if I swapped wicd out ... but I like it personally.
I have seen others with newer kit down at 5 seconds
systemd-analyze time I guess. If you count from when turning the PC on ... well mine takes ages to run through BIOS and then waits a while for me to maybe press DEL or a Fn key ... before finally getting to the grub menu That alone is around a 30 second wait on mine. Then more usually another 30 seconds to get to the Debian login prompt.Lysander wrote:Are we counting from switching on the computer or from when GRUB loads the OS? If it's the latter I'm sure for me it's about 7-8 seconds or so till the login screen.ruffwoof wrote:I have seen others with newer kit down at 5 seconds
EDIT: Just timed it, 7 seconds.
7.Stay on topic. Sometimes threads morph into something completely off topic, this is unavoidable when a bunch of people communicate. However, try to limit the off topic discussions to the off topic category. Long off topic discussions in other categories might get moved or locked.
Discussions in "Off topic" should still be in the spirit of this board, that is related to Linux/ Computers/ Software etc. Political, religious or racial discussions do not belong on this board.
Avoid 'thread hijacking'. Unless your question is directly related to the thread's topic, start a new one.
The shot of Half Dome may have come from this webcam: http://www.sierracamnetwork.com/viewcam ... te-valley/ or have been taken from the same location. It generates a lot of beautiful wallpaper candidates.Lysander wrote:Thanks for the confirmation of location! I had no idea where it was but suspected it was somewhere in the US. What a beautiful location.ruffwoof wrote:Love your wallpaper of Half Dome, Yosemite National Park (California) (searched using Tiny Eye reverse image search)Lysander wrote:You just made me time mine! From POST, 19 seconds to login screen on 8.7. Not bad!
systemd-analyze plot >s.svg and then viewing the (large) svg file shows that wicd (network) is the bottleneck for me. Without that would be a second or two faster. My setup gets to the login prompt and networking messages are still showing as I've entered the userid and password, so perhaps the timing might be several seconds less if I swapped wicd out ... but I like it personally.
I have seen others with newer kit down at 5 seconds
Are we counting from switching on the computer or from when GRUB loads the OS? If it's the latter I'm sure for me it's about 7-8 seconds or so till the login screen.
EDIT: Just timed it, 7 seconds.
Indeed, thanks for the link. Very interesting to see the same location in different state during the day.stevepusser wrote:
The shot of Half Dome may have come from this webcam: http://www.sierracamnetwork.com/viewcam ... te-valley/ or have been taken from the same location. It generates a lot of beautiful wallpaper candidates.