I read the changes, and it seems to me it was a stupid child. Not even someone malicious, but just a stupid love being edgy.
I would create an LVM and combine the two to get 3TB in one logical disk.
Debian is a great distro itself. I just happen to love Fedora and appreciate their stability (meaning, the software usually works very well)
Let me suggest you to switch to Fedora, Arch or Opensuse. Debian Sid may have problems, and stable is simply too slow for how fast Nvidia is moving. My suggestion is to use Fedora or Arch, or Opensuse, with newer packages. Everything was super smooth on Fedora.
No problems on my laptop. Mi Notebook Pro with that exact same GPU. On Wayland in Fedora since 36 everything’s gone super smooth.
But the profiles are pretty poor and basic AFAIK.
I suggest you check Silverblue + Ansible (or CoreOS/IoT for server stuff).
For sure. I believe Debian’s AppArmor integration is a little bit of an afterthought and there’s lots of patches missing as Canonical likes to keep many improvements downstream.
Nothing will make your system magically more secure, but SELinux is of great help when properly set up (as is in the case of Fedora).
Fedora
Is LMMS really functional? I thought only Ardour could be used for serious audio production on the FOSS world.
Of course there’s still Reaper and Bitwig, but those are not FOSS.
I mean, Linux is not American than Finnish at this point.
But yeah, it still was born in Finland :)
Is NixOS the new Arch?
Such a shame. The best distro out there being hurt by these decisions…
Your talking about “restoring back what was lost” seems to be missing one key point: why was it lost, and why is it good to restore it? It was lost because it meant a company, the company, the one who was investing the most in improving the ecosystem, found out that this model let other companies compete with them by offering support while freeloading on their efforts. That’s stealing in my world. Stealing in a perfectly legal way. That was OK, but was not good. They found out that, with the Stream model (which, BTW, offers more support timeframe than what whatever its competitors did) let them keep having a free solution for some people that might need/want it, while still keeping some of their competitive advantage. And what’s more, they even accepted happily Alma’s decision to work with Stream as their upstream to build their own RHEL clone with the full 10 years of support and pushing for changes/patches that might be needed. Notice I’m not saying if it’s OK to restore it. I’m not, because it’s perfectly legal. But it’s certainly not good. The RHEL ecosystem is in much better shape now, and what Alma did was fantastic and, IMO, the way to go.
Would FreeCAD work?
Then put Linux on it
Yes. For example, by not hiring him