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SimCity for Unix
My friend got a surprise when he uninstalled a package from a Linux system and it took something that he wanted with it, so I've been explaining how package managers deal with dependencies.
If you're coming from Windows, be very aware of what you're uninstalling, what it depends on, and most importantly, what depends on it. That list of changes before you say yes matters, so take the time to look though it, and know what you're actually changing.
Software on Unix-like systems doesn't come in bloated, fully contained, self-managed units, like on Windows (with some exceptions). They link to one another, and create entire chains of dependencies, so be aware of what you're changing when playing with packages.
Have you heard the new audio source? It's on ALSA. It's literally on OSS. It's on pipewire with video. It's literally on GStreamer. You can probably find it on JACK. Dude it's on Esound. It's an sndio original. It's on PulseAudio. You can hear it on Pulse. You can go to Pulse and hear it. Configure PulseALSA right now. Go to Pulse. Dive into Pulse. You can Pulse it. It's on Pulse. Pulse has it for you. Pulse has it for you.

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Born too late for Y2K
Born to early for 64-bit Unix time overflow
Born just in time for Y2K38
Commodore Amiga 3000UX
The Amiga 3000UX is a variant of the Amiga 3000 that Commodore positioned specifically for UNIX-oriented use. The “UX” designation does not refer to user experience; it indicates that the machine was offered together with Commodore Amiga UNIX, known as AMIX. AMIX was an Amiga port of AT&T UNIX System V Release 4 (SVR4), intended to bring the A3000 closer to the workstation-style requirements of its era.
In hardware terms, the 3000UX is largely based on the standard Amiga 3000 platform, so it is not a completely separate class of machine. The differences were mainly in the package, the bundled software, and especially the AMIX-related Kickstart 1.4 ROM. The goal was to make the system usable not only in the AmigaOS/Workbench environment, but also for UNIX-based workflows, including graphical setups such as an X Window environment.
Because it remains fundamentally an Amiga 3000, the 3000UX is often regarded as one of the more “professional” Amiga models. At the time, its built-in SCSI and expandability—particularly through the Zorro III bus—made it attractive for work, development, desktop publishing, and graphics and video production.