We all know about Microsoft's latest OS, so I won't rehash. A lot of us intensely dislike it, to put it politely. Those of us who can, use other operating systems. This is Soylent, so let's focus on the one that is the most important to us: Linux.
I have been using Windows as my OS since right after Atari times. A few years ago I bought an ARM (ARMHF/ARMv7) netbook and put Lubuntu on it. I had problems with my first Linux experience, mainly in the area of installing software: missing packages in Synaptic, small dependency hells, installing a package at a time by hand, some broken stuff. I put it down mainly to the architecture I have been using, which can't be supported as well as x86-64.
Now, we all know that no software is perfect, and neither is Linux, even though it is now my main OS. We support it in spirit and financially, but there is always room for improvement.
So, the question is: What are your problems with Linux and how can we fix them? How do we better it? Maybe it's filesystems, maybe it's the famous/infamous systemd. Let's have at it.
(Score: 2) by q.kontinuum on Thursday February 23 2017, @12:07AM
The path length limit can be avoided by prepending \\?\ to the path.
Thanks, we saw that as well. But I don't think Jenkins [jenkins-ci.org] supports this mechanism.
I can't really see the use case for two things with the same name but different capitalization in a folder.
Compatibility to other relevant systems (Android, Linux, iOS, QNX to name some we work with). We use repo with manifest files, teams add their git repositories there, and are not always checking for similar names. Also I just expect software to distinguish different names, it's just common in any programming language I used for the past decade, iirc. So why should bash or bat act differently?
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