[email protected] wrote:
This is a subjective comment. People at work have Macs, my wife has

Agreed. Usability is subjective. My experience with the various Linux desktops, from the Caldera Network Desktop to the present, is that they've been getting worse, not better.


Its funny, backup seems easiest on Linux. The trick is not to use tape or
traditional backups. You snapshot the LVM volume, and dedup the device to
a backup. Its better than Apple's time machine and really fast.

And useless for long-term archival storage.


This has, in fact, not been an issue for almost 10 years. Both disk
devices and ethernet devices are persistently configured based on unique
criteria. Disk volumes use labels or UUID values and ethernet adapters are
configured by MAC address.

All of these are hacks to work around the Linux kernel's dynamic enumeration. They wouldn't be necessary if device enumeration were consistent.

It the time it was a problem in Linux, it was also an issue on Windows,
Mac, and some BSD variants. All these platforms fixed this issue.

All of these use what the BIOS or EFI reports. So does GRUB for that matter. Linux is the odd duck here, ignoring the system hardware to do its own thing.

--
Rich P.
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