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Hello,

Seperating /usr and thus having /bin und /usr/bin is a remnant from
years ago. Especially on desktop systems, it makes sense to have a
three partitions - /home, / and swap.

Personally, I prefer to keep / and /usr on separate partitions. /usr is where all of your software packages are installed, and therefore is one of the partitions that's most likely to get messed up.

When that happens, it's awfully nice to still be able to boot, and then simply restore /usr from backup.

Not only that, when you have a hardware failure and want to restore to another computer, it's nice to be able to just restore /usr with all of the applications without needing to also restore / (which has all of the system-specific configurations on it, such as which hardware drivers are enabled, what your network settings are, etc.)

That's just been my experience.

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