Sunshine (she/her)@lemmy.ca to linuxmemes@lemmy.worldEnglish · 11 months agoHe wasn't ready for that distrolemmy.caimagemessage-square16linkfedilinkarrow-up11arrow-down10
arrow-up11arrow-down1imageHe wasn't ready for that distrolemmy.caSunshine (she/her)@lemmy.ca to linuxmemes@lemmy.worldEnglish · 11 months agomessage-square16linkfedilink
minus-squareatmur@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·11 months agoWhen CPUs were a lot slower you could genuinely get noticeable performance improvements by compiling packages yourself, but nowadays the overhead from running pre-compiled binaries is negligible. Hell, even Gentoo optionally offers binary packages now.
minus-squareWalnutLum@lemmy.mllinkfedilinkarrow-up1·11 months agoMost of the reason to build your own packages is a form of runtime assurance - to know what your computer is running is 100% what you intend. At least as a guix user that’s what I tell myself.
minus-squareIllecors@lemmy.cafelinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·11 months agoI did jump onto Gentoo ship chasing performance, but stayed because of USE flags.
minus-squarePossibly linux@lemmy.ziplinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up0·11 months agoYou know what was even faster? Switching to something easier like Fedora/Linux mint/Debian
minus-squareDigit@lemmy.wtflinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·9 days ago Fedora/Linux mint/Debian curious phrasing.
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When CPUs were a lot slower you could genuinely get noticeable performance improvements by compiling packages yourself, but nowadays the overhead from running pre-compiled binaries is negligible.
Hell, even Gentoo optionally offers binary packages now.
Most of the reason to build your own packages is a form of runtime assurance - to know what your computer is running is 100% what you intend.
At least as a guix user that’s what I tell myself.
I did jump onto Gentoo ship chasing performance, but stayed because of USE flags.
You know what was even faster? Switching to something easier like Fedora/Linux mint/Debian
curious phrasing.