I'm forced to use Win 11 at work, for sEcUrItY.But I'm actually working within a full-screen Debian VM on HyperV until someone with authority tells me to knock it off.
as always – it depends on the jurisdiction.But in most cases, they will use a new hyphenated last name that consists of both partners' first last name, with the man's first last name first.
I actually don't have much of a problem with that.If I die tomorrow, I'll have a smile on my face knowing I've lived well.On the other hand I'm still looking forward cause life keeps getting better.
My mantras are:Just do it. 🗸 = stop overanalyzing, start with whatever action you can do right nowAlways eat your dessert first. = start with the most enjoyable or easiest part of the taskBe someone else. = pretend it's not you facing the tough situation but someone else who asked you to get them out of it
In a business environment with 200+ linux boxes, it doesn't matter which Linux distro you like best. Cause you're going to have to run a system with enterprise-level support and wide adoption to cover your ass and find employees who are familiar with it.So that leaves Red Hat, Suse or Ubuntu as your only options.
No, I use it on my personal computer as well as my server and that of my org, with a nextcloud, website and forum.
Do you think that holds up when you are supporting a legacy environment of 200+ VMs and iron with code written by the cheapest consultants for 20+ years?
No. I never claimed rolling release is right for every system.
Actually, I use Arch cause I'm too lazy for other distros (I've tried all the main ones).The simplicity makes it much easier to automate the entire process.I run my update.sh script before I install new packages, or when a news entry pops up in my terminal about a change requiring manual intervention.So about once a month I type in update.sh, monitor the messages for 5 minutes and reboot.
Literally the only issue I had so far was a software from 2021 that didn't compile on the first try cause it expected an older version of Java.Other than that, it's the least buggy distro I know.
Good luck. That's like "reading on how software works".