Where your hard-earned money comes to die. Home.
|
 |
I want to start baking on tezos
| Pearl Spot | 07/24/18 | | Splenetic point hissy fit | 07/24/18 | | Pearl Spot | 07/25/18 | | Splenetic point hissy fit | 07/26/18 | | soul-stirring buff crotch | 07/26/18 | | Splenetic point hissy fit | 07/27/18 | | soul-stirring buff crotch | 07/27/18 | | Splenetic point hissy fit | 07/28/18 | | soul-stirring buff crotch | 07/28/18 | | Pearl Spot | 07/29/18 | | obsidian concupiscible preventive strike theater | 07/25/18 | | filthy lettuce hall | 07/26/18 |
Poast new message in this thread
 |
Date: July 29th, 2018 12:42 PM Author: Pearl Spot
Linux is as hard as you want it to be. You can use something like https://linuxmint.com/ and have an experience pretty similar to windows or mac, but you won't learn much and will be utterly lost when the inevitable problem arises. Or you can try the other extreme and roll your own distro from scratch http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/ (don't do that)
My approach is somewhere in the middle: I have been using Debian ( https://www.debian.org/ ) exclusively as my desktop operating system for approximately six years (although I've been working with debian servers since 2007). By no means is that much time necessary to gain a working knowledge of linux. However, even with such a strong background, I am hesitant to even consider baking on a large scale because of the security concerns.
The short answer is that casual familiarity with linux isn't enough. Of course, if you're just planning to fuck around with the command line tools on a private test network, that's totally fine. Large-scale baking, on the other hand, requires a broad understanding of computer security and blockchain attack vectors and exploits.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4033966&forum_id=7#36516963) |
|
|