That includes both the 'classic' party, and the 'modern' party. Both are noisy, lack good music, have lots of people competing over food/drink and take forever to wrap up.
Oh yes, this was a womens tea party, one of the worst kinds; held right outside my window too just to make things worse. Us men suddenly had other things to do, elsewhere ('Split up, surround the site and NUKE IT FROM ORBIT!' was the plan, but Metal Gear was destroyed again…)Anyway, boring description of Saturday aside, I got nothing done on Saturday, even after they cleared up.Here's why…Screwing around with LinuxOn Saturday, near midnight, I formatted my Sabayon partition, and decided to try out Fedora 13 (After backing up my documents first, of course).At nearly the stroke of midnight, much to my delight (I had to refrain from laughing evilly, because we had guests in the next room), the installation was completed and I booted into the OS.First annoyance: No Nvidia drivers. OK fine. What wine version does it have?Aww crap. No wine. I need wine… OK, not really, but it means much less swapping into Windows, I can tell you.It was then and there that I decided that I was going to switch back to Sabayon as soon as I got the disc back from a friend, but also to try something I'd attempted before (With much failure): Installing Wine manually.You see, I was offline (My PC isn't connected to the net, which makes using Linux a pain in the ass when it comes to getting software for it). But I had a Wine package on one of my discs; after digging it up, I started my two hour long battle with not only the kernel, but Bash and SELinux.Ten minutes in I tossed SELinux out the tenth-floor window. I don't need that sort of security. Another ten minutes in and I'd gotten Wine working, but only with the su command, as root. Now I'm not one to go and rm -fr / myself, but I don't like hanging around as root for too long regardless, much less run bumbling Windows programs while wielding that sort of power…Anyway, turns out that the solution to my problem was simple. The problem itself was too. It turned out to be a case of ownership. I had to use sudo to copy the Wine libraries and binaries into the /usr/* folders, and of course, doing so meant that the files and folders I had just copied belonged to root, not me. Of course, it took me ages to trip over the most obvious command that I had just used that morning while still in Sabayon: chown. Damn I hate it when that happens, but weird shit happens at ~2AM.Oh, and then Wine worked fine. Except that because of the lack of "restricted" drivers for my GeForce… everything lagged. Even simple programs like TileStudio. Now I'm stuck waiting for my Sabayon disc to be returned…Anyway… on to SundayWhich was today, approximately 10 minutes ago. It's midnight again.Well, after getting to bed at who-the-heck-knows-when, and sleeping until nearly midday and still feeling like I hadn't slept at all, I did nothing besides contemplate why the hell I'd removed Sabayon the night before and why it took me so long to install wine. Until the evening, where I kicked my creative powers into gear again and continued my favorite little project: Ascendancy. Guess what? I made another video :3 In addition to that, I made another chiptune:Code BlueSo my weekend wasn't completely fruitless.My RPG4D plansMy design document follows:
*blank*
now add some monsters to slice up! >=D
i hate parties too =PI don't like parties either because I can't dance and I have to choose between making myself look stupid or sitting alone in a corner with nothing to do. I usually pick the second choice though, or I just go home early. And sorry for being a noob, but what exactly is a LAN party?
I totally wish I could join, but honestly, why come together if you can just connect from all over the world?
Use Debian if you like stable, but /very/ infrequent releases.
Use Mint if you like Debian and up-to-date software. (Also, newbie-friendly! This is what Ubuntu used to be)Use Arch if you like Linux and just need a good package-management solution :)Use Gentoo if you're hardcore and want extremely fine-grained control.As far as I'm concerned, those 4 are the only serious contenders for Linux distributions. I've never liked RPM-based distros, Slackware is a little /too/ vanilla, and Sabayon doesn't make much sense to me (at that point, why not use Arch?)Ubuntu is on its own tier. Very user-friendly, not so power-user-friendly…Arch is a distro I haven't tried in a long while; thanks for reminding me of it :P
Mint isn't my favorite; too simple. I'm a power-user (I configure GRUB manually, configure XORG manually, etc.), so most of those are out. Sabayon Gaming Edition has one minor advantage over the other distros though: Out of the box Restricted drivers, Multimedia codecs and Wine.