penguins based on linux distros

seen from Austria
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seen from Austria
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penguins based on linux distros
Linux Distros in five words or less
Arch: Surprisingly easy, not for beginners.
Alpine: Known for the Copypasta
Bazzite: Fedora for Gamers.
Debian: This will survive the Apocalypse
Deepin: Hello Chairman Xi!
ElementaryOS: Linux for Recovering Mac Users.
EndeavourOS: Arch with Graphical Install.
Fedora: Boring, but Torvalds uses this.
Gentoo: Touch Grass while you compile.
Linux Mint: Linux for everyone! Very good!
Manjaro: Endeavour but somehow worse.
NixOS: "Please ignore our Military links".
Nobara: Fedora for Gamers and content creators.
OpenSUSE: Fedora, aber deutsch.
Pop!_OS: Linux for Tech Bros.
Puppy Linux: I can Revive old hardware.
Slackware: "I was there Gandalf."
Tails: Linux for the Paranoid.
Trisquel: Hi Richard Stallman you nonce!
Ubuntu: "What happened to you, man?"
Void: Installed on a Wii, once!
Zorin: Linux for former Windows Fanboys.
Linux From Scratch: You are a literal Wizard.
i may have run out of fun slackware posts
How much RAM in your Linux PC?
512MB
<1GB
1GB
2GB
4GB
8GB
16GB
32GB
64GB
96GB
128GB
Drawing I made referencing all the most important operating systems available at the time of drawing this.
Cyberpunk Cockpit 101
Your desk has stopped being a desk. It’s a cockpit now — a patchwork command deck built from scripts, dongles, and hardware hacks. Forget minimalism. This is maximal utility, welded into style.
The Knob Every cockpit needs a control dial, and nothing beats a physical rotary knob for volume. Twist left and the noise dies. Twist right and the walls shake. It’s tactile, primal, and feels like it belongs on a submarine console. Forget virtual sliders — the knob is king.
The Pause Bar Sitting top-right of the screen is a tiny black strip of buttons: pause, play, stop, next, previous. No title bar, no borders, no fluff. A resurrection of the media keys your 90s keyboard never had. Always visible, always on top, it gives you total control over sound with one click.
The Signal Ticker RSS feeds crawl across your desktop like a pirate radio transmission. News, notes, or fragments of lore — whatever you drop into the list rolls by in real time. It’s half stock ticker, half underground broadcast. A constant reminder that information is the bloodstream of the cockpit... and The Internet.
The LED Truth Dongle Sometimes hardware reveals its secrets by accident. A humble USB media controller flashes its LED when the internet drops. Suddenly, a simple forward/back button becomes a network status monitor. When your cockpit blinks at you, you know the connection is gone before the OS even notices.
The Ghost Net Pulse Software complements hardware with a tiny widget that glows green when the internet is alive and red when it isn’t. Always on top, always visible, it’s the heart monitor of your connection. One glance tells you if the outside world is still there — or if you’ve been cut off.
The Scratchpad Ghost Imagine a frameless text box hovering on your screen. Anything you type into it is instantly saved to a plain .txt file. It’s perfect for fragments of thought, half-formed ideas, or quick notes. Point it at a synced folder and it becomes cloud-ready too. Unlike sticky notes, it’s pure text — editable, searchable, and eternal. Bonus points of you create a local html file which is designed to load and search such files then display keyword matches on a page.
Hardware Additions: The Cockpit Meatspace Rig
The Knob → As mentioned, the physical volume dial. Simple, fast, irreplaceable.
The Dongle → Forward/back media control, with LEDs that double as connection status indicators.
The Big Red NOPE → A hardware killswitch for your cat5/6 cable. One satisfying slap and you’re offline. It looks like a missile silo abort button and feels just as final.
Final Word A cockpit isn’t designed. It evolves. Each new widget, each hardware hack, was bolted on to solve a problem: pausing music, tracking your connection, logging thoughts. Over time, these fragments grow into something more — a living interface, part machine, part myth. Forget tiny keyboards, and LARPing Pi laptops that are impractical... this is how a cyberdeck is made.
the X series takes one whole fucking year seriously (i usually go with full, i never actually read what the other ones said)