>> Already did it a long ago, but got no response, see bug#50477.
>
> Thank you. This bug report doesn’t seem to be about Guix System being
> “unstable” with the Hurd. It is just about ping not working inside
> qemu, which is a frequently encountered problem. See also the Hurd
> wiki:
>
> […
Akib Azmain Turja writes:
> [[PGP Signed Part:Undecided]]
> Ricardo Wurmus writes:
>
>> Akib Azmain Turja writes:
>>
> Yeah, Hurd is much stable. But Guix GNU/Hurd isn't :(
>
That's kind of sad. I wonder what makes GNU/Hurd Guix System not so
stable. Is debian GNU/Hu
Ricardo Wurmus writes:
> Akib Azmain Turja writes:
>
Yeah, Hurd is much stable. But Guix GNU/Hurd isn't :(
>>>
>>> That's kind of sad. I wonder what makes GNU/Hurd Guix System not so
>>> stable. Is debian GNU/Hurd with the guix package manager running on
>>> top of it stable?
>>
>>
Akib Azmain Turja writes:
>>> Yeah, Hurd is much stable. But Guix GNU/Hurd isn't :(
>>>
>>
>> That's kind of sad. I wonder what makes GNU/Hurd Guix System not so
>> stable. Is debian GNU/Hurd with the guix package manager running on
>> top of it stable?
>
> I think, but not sure. Looks like
Joshua Branson writes:
> Akib Azmain Turja writes:
>
>> Joshua Branson writes:
>>
>>> Hey friends,
>>>
>>> I recently uploaded a video that walks you through how to use the Hurd
>>> in a vm and read mailing lists in Emacs. I was actually really
>>> surprized at how shockingly stable the system
Akib Azmain Turja writes:
> Joshua Branson writes:
>
>> Hey friends,
>>
>> I recently uploaded a video that walks you through how to use the Hurd
>> in a vm and read mailing lists in Emacs. I was actually really
>> surprized at how shockingly stable the system is! It's amazing!
>>
>> Thanks fo