For the last 15 years, both my hardware and system upgrades always evolved AROUND my work, and not the opposite! The overwhelming majority of configuration files, preferences and application shortcuts survive through both system software and hardware upgrades for decades... when you are running Linux.
Yesterday night my motherboard died without warning (hopefully it is not my high end i7 CPU!). I had work in process to deliver, and some of it was not synchronized with my remote servers yet.
No biggie! I brought my 4-year old old Core2 duo Desktop back from the dust in the garage, I plugged my hard drives into it, and I booted.
Bang, back to work in 5 minutes in the exact same state. Linux is so useful and so efficient!
So why is it so easy to change your computer on Linux without impacting any of your own data and preferences?
Linux is never putting its foot in the door. Focus on your work, it even keeps your preferences and settings. |
No biggie! I brought my 4-year old old Core2 duo Desktop back from the dust in the garage, I plugged my hard drives into it, and I booted.
Bang, back to work in 5 minutes in the exact same state. Linux is so useful and so efficient!
So why is it so easy to change your computer on Linux without impacting any of your own data and preferences?