From b014035136a0b4e95100ea3b905c63c6c7ec2384 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: EuAndreh Date: Sun, 2 Jun 2019 18:14:29 -0300 Subject: Typo: s/and/are/ --- site/posts/2019-06-02-stateless-os.org | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'site') diff --git a/site/posts/2019-06-02-stateless-os.org b/site/posts/2019-06-02-stateless-os.org index 3619287..e5c9c97 100644 --- a/site/posts/2019-06-02-stateless-os.org +++ b/site/posts/2019-06-02-stateless-os.org @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ I haven't checked if I can configure those in NixOS GNOME module, but I guess bo This makes me really happy, actually. More happy than I anticipated. -Having such a powerful declarative OS makes me feel like my data is the really important stuff (as it should be), and I can interact with it on any workstation. All I need is an internet connection and a few hours to download everything. It feels like my physical workstation and the installed OS and serving me and my data, instead of me feeling as hostage to the specific OS configuration at the moment. Having a few backup copies of everything important extends such peacefulness. +Having such a powerful declarative OS makes me feel like my data is the really important stuff (as it should be), and I can interact with it on any workstation. All I need is an internet connection and a few hours to download everything. It feels like my physical workstation and the installed OS are serving me and my data, instead of me feeling as hostage to the specific OS configuration at the moment. Having a few backup copies of everything important extends such peacefulness. After this positive experience with recreating my OS from simple Nix expressions, I started to wonder how far I could go with this, and started considering other areas of improvements: *** First run on a fresh NixOS installation -- cgit v1.2.3