Personal blog on a public Internet is kind of an oxymoron.
The blog post is close enough to an article.
Personal blog on a public Internet is kind of an oxymoron.
The blog post is close enough to an article.
Yes, all packages in nixos are available as binaries to download.
The comparison with Arch was just in terms of number of packages. Not the binary availability.
At the bottom of this page, they say that binary cache is currently at 120TB. https://nixos.org/community/index.html
If packages being available as binaries is the main criteria, nix has you covered there.
The biggest issue for most people with Nixos is the learning curve just because it’s so different.
Nixos will use/download cached binaries that are available in its repo. It has one of the biggest repositories of any Linux distro. It’s on par with Arch with around 90 thousand packages.
Unless you are doing something custom or niche, your nixos won’t have to compile anything.
Technically correct, but there are systems that don’t have to rely on maps per say. For example, https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party-list_proportional_representation where representatives are assigned proportionally based on the votes. You don’t have “your own representative”.
Obviously there are downsides to this, but at the same time it requires no districts and manipulation in that regard is not possible.
I was wondering the same thing. But it appears that cost of living adjustment is not considered a pay raise in the context of 27th amendment.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-seventh_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution
MikroTik is super powerful, customizable and affordable.
Factorio and OpenTTD