On 2023-03-13 05:30, Mario Marietto wrote:
Hello/Ciao.

Luca Manganelli,you come from Italy,right ? just like me. I'm happy to
find,sometimes,a compatriot on the Linux / FreeBSD forums and ML that
I attend. So. The answer is that I don't like, I don't find it
comfortable, to continuously open and close the vnc client every time

X11 can seamlessly have all the windows you want of say LibreOffice on Ubuntu, Firefox on CentOS via SSH and X11 forwarding.. This email client is run this way, as many other things I do.....Only difference is I use one distro *buntus...You can switch from what ever window you want with ALT-TAB simple as that.. You can probably assign some keybindings via X11 to do that too..

I want to use a specific distribution. Instead I find it more
comfortable to centralize as much as possible more distributions in a
single interface and terminal. I

Why??? Differing distros with differing package management for one ie: Debian/*buntu based with apt-get and then RH based with yum, etc... that adds to issues and problems.. and less centralization...


list of smart aliases to handle all the commands and to launch the
applications I want in the distribution I want.

Reading the other reply.. in re the specialty distros that are mixing and matching differing distros into one..
I still can't wrap my head around it..

Umm... Why do this????

Why would you want to run say LibreOffice on Ubuntu and Firefox on CentOS as an example????

As to having issues where maybe you make a change and that causes the OS to break or the program to break, then using virtualization options is probably the option.. You can have a BASE VM image, clone it, start it up in your VM software of choice, and play, then if it breaks.. you can go back to the base, clone, and rebuild.. learning how to fix or what not to do? :) ;) I do this... tons of VMs and carcasses from the things going awry when something may not work out...

Right now, I am testing a new version of a *buntu..I've created a base VM image... I can now test out some things.. like LightDM replacing SDDM or what ever the DM is.. as I need XDMCP and LightDM provides that.. ... but it can be dangerous to play with the DM leading to no GUI (X11 desktop) etc.. same with XPRA... I am going to test installing XPRA to this distro.. so if things go awry, I can go back to my base image and try again.. Same with some other software which needs to be compiled in a certain environment... and can go very very awry... hence play in the VM(s) and take notes.. Once I have the notes I what I did.. I make a NEW BASE image to work from... and apply that to physical installs as well.

not only a question of comfort, but also of optimizing workspaces.
After all, if the controls of an airplane have been centralized in a
single dashboard, there must be a reason, right ?

I don't think that is a good analogy, as they are not operating under differing OS's.. At least in my mind this is de-optimizing things with using multiple distors versus a single distro or at least the same vein of distro ie: Debian based be it Ubuntu, Mint, etc.. I have the same base distro I use.

So I guess I am lost on how this multiple distros has a benefit....
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