What alternatives would you suggest then? Genuinely, because I as you have pointed out don’t understand there’s this whole gigantic suite of tools available to me that I haven’t managed to come across in my searching for the things to meet my technological needs thusfar.
It seems to me you live in some kind of fantasy land where people have unlimited time for installing new tools to make sure they have the perfect one for every situation. This is not the case, which is why the *nix folks love to just install our infinitely extendable swiss army knife chassis and go get the precise tools we need. DIY distributions supply you an environment in which to employ whichever tool you deem correct in a given moment, it’s a tool box in a garage, a place to keep tools, not a tool itself.
My initial impression was that you were implying that for general computing there was an option better than nix that may meet my needs, but you’ve responded in a way that tells me that no, nix has been and will continue to be the best general purpose computing environment for my needs.
Before saying that we are limited, you should look at the priorities that have led us to make our choices.
While you see a limited toolset, I see exactly the tools I need, with nothing I don’t. No strings attached, and costs only my time.
What alternatives would you suggest then? Genuinely, because I as you have pointed out don’t understand there’s this whole gigantic suite of tools available to me that I haven’t managed to come across in my searching for the things to meet my technological needs thusfar.
-a 20 year Linux user
Just take a step back and look at how you are deciding what is good before you understand the application the tool is being put to
You’re asking me to suggest alternatives… FOR WHAT? You apply tools to specific problems, you do not pick a tool and then decide it’s the best tool.
It seems to me you live in some kind of fantasy land where people have unlimited time for installing new tools to make sure they have the perfect one for every situation. This is not the case, which is why the *nix folks love to just install our infinitely extendable swiss army knife chassis and go get the precise tools we need. DIY distributions supply you an environment in which to employ whichever tool you deem correct in a given moment, it’s a tool box in a garage, a place to keep tools, not a tool itself.
My initial impression was that you were implying that for general computing there was an option better than nix that may meet my needs, but you’ve responded in a way that tells me that no, nix has been and will continue to be the best general purpose computing environment for my needs.
Before saying that we are limited, you should look at the priorities that have led us to make our choices.
While you see a limited toolset, I see exactly the tools I need, with nothing I don’t. No strings attached, and costs only my time.