• @dustyData@lemmy.world
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    1302 years ago

    People would read the second message, type the yes prompt, break their system. But still claim that it was linux’s fault, and that the OS doesn’t work.

    • palordrolap
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      2 years ago

      Message two can also be caused by packages (or rather, package creators) with delusions of grandeur that only think that the system will stop working without them, so they rig things to threaten to uninstall the system.

      Or else someone has created too heavy a dependency on something that ought to be removable, but isn’t thanks to malice or incompetence (or both).

      We still mock Microsoft for putting too heavy a dependency (or at least removal FUD) on whatever web browser they bundle with their OSes (first IE, now Edge), and here we might have a package creator trying the same damn thing.

    • z500
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      92 years ago

      Honestly I once did this to my desktop environment because I saw a huge list of packages and ignored it because I thought they were packages that could be upgraded, not that it was going to uninstall my fucking desktop lol

  • @phx@lemmy.ca
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    1222 years ago
    • Login as a user.
    • Delete the user while still logged in
    • Run command

    You should get a message “you don’t exist, go away”

    Not sure if that one is still around but I know one person who ran a script with “deluser $USER” and it ate root resulting in fun messages like that

    • @marcos@lemmy.world
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      242 years ago

      My local deluser checks if the user has any active process. I tried deleting all of the data by hand, but the process is still assigned to a user name and id.

      I’m not sure if this one can error still can be replicated.

    • zazaserty
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      232 years ago

      I noticed this, got so sad. It was one of the funniest ones for me. First time I got it I kinda laughed.

      • @schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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        142 years ago

        At least it answers the question whom it will be reported to. In all likelihood the administrator is me anyway, at least on my personal devices. People won’t worry anymore that it will be reported to the police or, heaven forbid, to Santa Claus.

    • @fishsayhelo@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      EFL is an absolute crime against programmer-kind, even if the errors are, admittedly, hilarious. can assert that they are not so funny when you find them deeeeep in some god-forsaken legacy codebase that’s seen more null *s than git commits lol

  • @Hubi@feddit.de
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    662 years ago

    The third one is new to me. “Congratulations” - that’s fucking hilarious.

      • Natanael
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        2 years ago

        When a software package installer isn’t designed to be reversible

        I recall a bunch of antiviruses being similarly difficult to completely wipe

        • @30p87@feddit.de
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          22 years ago

          It isn’t as hard apparently. The script follows the manual way, just delete the folder it’s in. What is a problem seems to be changing the path - extracting, changing and reapplying the path variable seems to need 90 lines of Powershell alone. That’s just crazy. I’m also wondering how other programs write themselves into path without needing warnings and backups of the path for the user to restore.

    • @Murdoc@sh.itjust.works
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      332 years ago

      “It’s possible I did something wrong.” 🤣
      Like not read the warning that said that he was about to uninstall the desktop? Or to continue only if he knew what he was doing? He also earlier liked to talk about “red flags”, but somehow needing to type in “Yes, do as I say!” wasn’t one to him. I’m supposed to be getting Linux tips from this guy?

      • @narp@feddit.de
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        172 years ago

        I’m supposed to be getting Linux tips from this guy?

        No, this is Linus Sex Tips not Linux Tech Tips!

      • @cesium@sh.itjust.works
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        2 years ago

        What makes you think your average Windows user that is trying out Linux for the first time wouldn’t have faced the same problem? I never understood why people criticized Linus for this video. After all, the video was supposed to see whether Linux is a viable alternative for Windows users (specifically gamers).

        • @TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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          2 years ago

          Yes. People have been trained to ignore warnings like this.

          Android makes you jump through a hoop and tries to scare you when you want to install apps from outside the playstore.

          Windows has some similarly serious-sounding warning messages.

          People have got used to rolling their eyes at warnings when installing software. Like it or not, that’s the way that it is. Users are used to seeing a scary warning when installing, and they’re used to just powering through it without much thought.

          Linus was following a tutorial on the PopOS website, followed the instructions, and borked his install.

          I have problems with LTT in general, but the PopOS thing was entirely understandable, and people pretending that wasn’t a usability problem in PopOS are delusional.

        • Rootiest
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          2 years ago

          I agree with that other reply.

          Linus knew just enough to be dangerous.

          My experience with most Windows users and their first encounter with using a Linux terminal is every single warning/error they see no matter how mundane is a big deal.

          Things like the boot text or a random apt install on Linux will often display various warnings or even “errors” that are really of no concern but ime tend to freak out new users.

          Linus is in that narrow band where he doesn’t really know shit but knows just enough to be falsely confident and ignore all the warnings/errors instead of just the irrelevant ones

        • @Aria@lemmygrad.ml
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          42 years ago

          He’s at the bottom end of ‘knows just enough to be dangerous’, and people make fun of people in that range. The vast majority of gamers and Windows users fall well outside that narrow band. The average Windows user who is scared of the terminal wouldn’t ignore several warnings and type in confirmation phrases. They wouldn’t have even gotten to that point because to get there you need to copy/paste things from a website without understanding what it does.

  • @kuneho@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Your system ate a SPARC! Gah

    What does this mean? Does it has something to do with… I don’t know, the Sun SPARC CPUs?

  • chandz05
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    92 years ago

    I’ve been messing around with Linux VMs and have gotten kernel panic a lot lately. Always gives me a chuckle