Does anyone else use Alpine Linux not in any containers?
I use it on my laptop with Sway and it’s set up for my specific usage but it’s where I spend 95% of my time. When I need to do something that just works without any hassle or thinking, I switch to old reliable Linux Mint DE.
I don’t see Alpine in memes very often so I assume most people are sane and not trying to make a workstation out of Alpine.
I’m also considering using PostmarketOS as an alternative to LMDE but I have other projects I want to finish before I want to play around with different distributions.
I’ve always been drawn to minimalism. My happiest moments in life was backpacking with a 34 litre backpack for a number of years. The same concept can be applied to my Operating System. It’s minimal and up to me to build/create the experience I want.
The experience I wanted was to learn Linux at it’s core. There’s nothing wrong with GNU but it felt like a layer of abstraction that made learning Linux seem too distant for my personal liking.
I started using Alpine Linux as my OS for a self hosted server on a Raspberry Pi. I chose Alpine because from a security point of view it made sense. There was less surface area to target or exploit. Whatever I added was intentional, giving me a better understanding of the system I was building and using.
Eventually I decided that I want my desktop and server environment to be the same so that I am consistent in what I am learning. I didn’t want to switch between POSIX compliance/portability and GNU tools.
I don’t think it’s all that weird though. Alpine Linux provides a script that installs a variety of desktop environments. The wiki ([1][2]) also has information on how to set up all the extras like sound or graphics. Yes it’s more involved but it’s not impossible and can be rewarding.
I also found a fun (for me) hobby in writing POSIX portable scripts which is why I can spend so much time in Alpine. In the year I’ve been using Alpine, I’ve learned so much about Linux, how it works and how to work with it.
I’ve always been drawn to minimalism. My happiest moments in life was backpacking
Tried CRUX?
I also found a fun (for me) hobby in writing POSIX portable scripts which is why I can spend so much time in Alpine. In the year I’ve been using Alpine, I’ve learned so much about Linux, how it works and how to work with it.
Does anyone else use Alpine Linux not in any containers?
I use it on my laptop with Sway and it’s set up for my specific usage but it’s where I spend 95% of my time. When I need to do something that just works without any hassle or thinking, I switch to old reliable Linux Mint DE.
I don’t see Alpine in memes very often so I assume most people are sane and not trying to make a workstation out of Alpine.
I’m also considering using PostmarketOS as an alternative to LMDE but I have other projects I want to finish before I want to play around with different distributions.
I sometimes use Alpine. Not in containers. In Bedrock Linux strata.
Why do you do this? Is it faster/more responsive?
Seems weird, like using a Wind River Systems RTOS for desktop
I’ve always been drawn to minimalism. My happiest moments in life was backpacking with a 34 litre backpack for a number of years. The same concept can be applied to my Operating System. It’s minimal and up to me to build/create the experience I want.
The experience I wanted was to learn Linux at it’s core. There’s nothing wrong with GNU but it felt like a layer of abstraction that made learning Linux seem too distant for my personal liking.
I started using Alpine Linux as my OS for a self hosted server on a Raspberry Pi. I chose Alpine because from a security point of view it made sense. There was less surface area to target or exploit. Whatever I added was intentional, giving me a better understanding of the system I was building and using.
Eventually I decided that I want my desktop and server environment to be the same so that I am consistent in what I am learning. I didn’t want to switch between POSIX compliance/portability and GNU tools.
I don’t think it’s all that weird though. Alpine Linux provides a script that installs a variety of desktop environments. The wiki ([1][2]) also has information on how to set up all the extras like sound or graphics. Yes it’s more involved but it’s not impossible and can be rewarding.
I also found a fun (for me) hobby in writing POSIX portable scripts which is why I can spend so much time in Alpine. In the year I’ve been using Alpine, I’ve learned so much about Linux, how it works and how to work with it.
Tried CRUX?
Sounds like you’re now primed for CRUX.