Thinkpad again ============== Let's start with the bad: Since saturday, my DevTerm is somewhat dead. It simply refuses to start regardless if its plugged into power, regardless if i enter the Risc-V core or the CM4, its just... dead. I will investigate this further but i needed a working system, so i grabbed my R60 (which i had last used for my FreeDOS experiments), switched out the harddisk (i didn't trust the SSD's i had lying around, so i put a 320 GB HDD with 7200 RPM in it - good old spinning rust!) I could have gone the sane route and put something normal and common like Linux Mint on it... but i am not someone who likes "common" systems following the current "industry standard". I decided to download Devuan 5.0 via my wifes computer, put in on a stick and started the installation. Setting it up is quiet easy if you have been around the Linux sphere for a while and there are no real traps... but you have to read what the menus say and nothing prevents you to shoot yourself in the foot. I liked it from the start. After about 20 minutes the system booted into a Xfce session and i could check if everything worked the way i wanted it to... At this point i - again - could have gone the boring, "productive" route and simply stay at Xfce or istall another common window manager from the repositories, but i wanted to try out something (again) i stumbled upon some time ago: The Trinity Desktop. Trinity is a fork of KDE 3.5 and - as far as i know - only included in the Q4OS distribution. I added the repositories to Devuan and after a quick apt update i was able to install it. It may sound a bit pathetic, but rebooting into the TDE desktop somehow felt like time travel. It felt like coming home to a point in time where things were not necessarily good... but better. The sound of the HDD spinning up, the familiar login / greeting screen similar to the KDE before it turned into plasma... you may perhaps guess it: I was hooked. I set up the system, downloaded and compiled Dillo, set up KSirc for IRC, configured KMail and migrated my newsraft RSS subscriptions over to Akregator. The system feels incredible snappy (i mean, it should: A Core2Duo and 4 GB RAM would still have been quiet a good system around ~2010). Even Mozilla is absolutely useable with multiple open tabs - but this Kaiju of a browser is thankfully a software i tend to use less and less. Now i somehow feel a bit of a regret having tried to replace the Thinkpad as my daily driver - i hope i can keep it in working state and useable for a long time to come. Regarding the DevTerm... well, i hope i can start the troubleshooting around the next weekend.