linux

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DandomRude, in Some of y'all need to see this and drop the superiority complex...
@DandomRude@lemmy.world avatar

Seriously?!?

drislands,

No, this is clearly a joke.

sebsch,

I mean Mac users also believe their OS for being privacy focused… so it’s not quite sure this couldn’t make sense in a brain thinking this way.

DandomRude,
@DandomRude@lemmy.world avatar

I hope so.

Petter1, in What's your current favorite distro that isn't Arch, Debian or Fedora?

OpenSuse tumbleweed

dino, in Some of y'all need to see this and drop the superiority complex...

This is how mac user do statistics?

JackRiddle,

This is how people make jokes

dino,

its not even funny?

Kit, in When Windows 10 dies, I am going to jump ship over to Linux. Which version would you recommend for someone with zero prior experience with Linux? **Edit: Linux Mint it shall be.**

Linux Mint

Zorcron,

I recently jumped to mint, and I have to say I’m very happy with it. I struggled with like two things but the OS is popular enough that there are walkthroughs for nearly everything. And I was able to get Linux-based or browser-based software for everything I did on my windows computer

Mikina,

How does Mint compares to Fedora? I decided to finally switch almost a month ago, and went with Fedora because it seemed like the best solution for general development, and I really like their Toolbox. However, I’ve been running into some issues mostly regarding gaming and NVIDIA drivers, and in general getting some applications to work on Fedora was more painful than apparently in most of the other systems.

So, should I switch, or will the Wine/Steam/Lutris experience be mostly the same on Mint as it is on Fedora?

icydefiance, (edited )

Most problems I’ve seen between Nvidia and Linux were caused by Wayland. If you’re using Fedora with Gnome (the default) then you can try hitting the gear icon when logging in and choosing “gnome on xorg” (screenshot). That might help with the drivers.

For any other issues, Mint might be easier just because it’s based on Debian, which is immensely popular. It’s more of a well beaten path, and there’s probably more help online for any issues you run into.

NotATurtle,

It’s great for beginners and has many guides online.

helenslunch,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

Debian Edition*

mex,

What are its advantages compared to the regular one? Genuinely interested

helenslunch,
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

Lack of corporate cronyism

RmDebArc_5,
@RmDebArc_5@lemmy.ml avatar

Debian is Debian based and regular Mint is Ubuntu LTS based and use theirs respective repos (not a big difference for the average user). While currently the non Debian version is the main and recommended version, due some controversial changes in Ubuntu people want to move away from Ubuntu and the devs have considered making the Debian edition the main one.

Eldritch,

Ubuntu is Debian based as well. But yes, it’s 100% about avoiding the shoehorned in canonical shenanigans.

jsh,

To each their own, but Ubuntu’s repos are a bit fuller than Debian’s.

superweeniehutjrs,

Mint is great. It also works well out of the box in virtual machines. I like the MATE versions for my older machines.

There is a major shift happening right now, and mint is slower than many to adopt changes. I’d argue that’s good for mint users, but it may be bad for you personally if you plan to learn about modern linux. Idgaf personally about X11 vs Wayland, because I just need to be able to use my programs.

ekky,

+1

I personally started by playing around with Ubuntu, but it just didn’t feel intuitive coming from windows.

Went over to Mint, and was very happy,especially with drivers and gaming. I even fully removed my windows installation during this period. Having gained a better understanding of Linux, I have now moved on again.

The only real drawback of Mint is not natively supporting KDE Plasma (as they did before). And yes, you can just install it yourself, but I wouldn’t recommend a beginner who barely knows how to install Linux to attempt such an endevour.

One word of advice to OP: don’t wait till you can’t use Windows anymore. Start by dual booting and getting a hang of Linux, but with windows at the ready for any tasks you cannot yet do/feel comfortable doing on Linux. As you get a better hold of Linux, you should naturally begin to use Windows less.

The worst thing someone can do, is to jump OS without any backup or safety net. Learning to use Windows took a long time, getting a hang of new concepts and getting used to an alien environment. Now, already having a hang of “computers” (Windows), we have digital needs and expectations (E-Mail, gaming, etc.) which will need fulfilling, but many seem to forget that a different OS means different ways of doing our daily tasks and different challenges to handle.

And yes, “different”, because Windows definitely also comes with it’s own unique challenges, you just don’t see them as much when having gotten used to them.

pfaca,

One word of advice to OP: don’t wait till you can’t use Windows anymore. Start by dual booting and getting a hang of Linux, but with windows at the ready for any tasks you cannot yet do/feel comfortable doing on Linux. As you get a better hold of Linux, you should naturally begin to use Windows less.

Good advice here OP.

QuentinCallaghan, (edited ) in When Windows 10 dies, I am going to jump ship over to Linux. Which version would you recommend for someone with zero prior experience with Linux? **Edit: Linux Mint it shall be.**
@QuentinCallaghan@sopuli.xyz avatar

Pop OS, it’s just brilliant.

Hadriscus,

What about the fact that it’s based on Ubuntu, can you still install programs packaged as flatpaks ?

model_tar_gz,

Pop!_OS uses flatpaks, not snaps. It’s a good thing.

Hadriscus,

oh nice !

Spitzspot, in When Windows 10 dies, I am going to jump ship over to Linux. Which version would you recommend for someone with zero prior experience with Linux? **Edit: Linux Mint it shall be.**
@Spitzspot@lemmings.world avatar

Mandriva

Tippon, in When Windows 10 dies, I am going to jump ship over to Linux. Which version would you recommend for someone with zero prior experience with Linux? **Edit: Linux Mint it shall be.**

I’ll second Mint. It’s got a similar layout to Windows, so eases you in, and everything just works.

ricecake, in When Windows 10 dies, I am going to jump ship over to Linux. Which version would you recommend for someone with zero prior experience with Linux? **Edit: Linux Mint it shall be.**

Ubuntu, mint, fedora, Manjaro are all pretty much in the same class, and it’s largely irrelevant which you pick. They’re all supported, have decent UI for most of what you want to do, and have good documentation for how to do it.

It’s not too difficult to change distros without having to move all your data once you’re switched, so it doesn’t matter too much, and you’ll probably try a couple before finding the one with the best menus for you.

Kongar,

I would recommend endeavor over manjaro. Manjaro has issues with the aur.

And I’d recommended if either of these are your first foray into linux, then dual boot with a windows install still functioning (because a noobie will break arch once or twice)

lemmyvore,

Manjaro has issues with the aur.

Not this again. Please stop parroting this, it’s ridiculous and it only says “I don’t know how AUR works”.

TCB13, in Easy way to try out a bunch of different DEs?
@TCB13@lemmy.world avatar

Maybe it will be best to give up right now and use GNOME. I hate it, but let’s be honest most of the time people are running KDE and others will end up with a bunch of GNOME/GTK/libadwaita components and creating a Frankenstein of a system because some specific App depends on said components.

There’s no point on running anything else if you’ll end up with parts of GNOME and inconsistencies all over the place.

savvywolf, (edited ) in When Windows 10 dies, I am going to jump ship over to Linux. Which version would you recommend for someone with zero prior experience with Linux? **Edit: Linux Mint it shall be.**
@savvywolf@pawb.social avatar

I’d second Mint as well (I’ve used it for many years now). Out of interest, what games are you thinking of? Most of them should work out of the box, but with some there can be issues especially with multiplayer ones.

TCB13, in What's your current favorite distro that isn't Arch, Debian or Fedora?
@TCB13@lemmy.world avatar

Its… Debian.

joyjoy,

Are there even other (good) distros that aren’t based on debian, fedora, or arch?

AceFuzzLord,

Considering pretty much all of the best distros are based on those three, probably the best you’ll get is trying BSD. I can’t think of a single distro not based on one.of the three that is still maintained.

iopq,

NixOS

Frederic, in What's your current favorite distro that isn't Arch, Debian or Fedora?

LMDE, MX, Ubuntu etc are based on Debian. Mint is based on Ubuntu, so Debian. Chimera/Endeavour are based on Arch, etc.

In the linux world, you have a linux kernel, systemd or init, a bunch of gnu utils, a window system like X or Wayland, whatever DE you want (Xfce, gnome, kde, name it) and a packaging system (apt, yum, pacman), but for me, it’s all the same.

If you want something different, try a BSD distro then? FreeBSD, OpenBSD, GhostBSD, etc

NOOBMASTER, (edited ) in When Windows 10 dies, I am going to jump ship over to Linux. Which version would you recommend for someone with zero prior experience with Linux? **Edit: Linux Mint it shall be.**

yeah, I’m just here to shill Zorin OS zorin.com/os/

Dirk, in When Windows 10 dies, I am going to jump ship over to Linux. Which version would you recommend for someone with zero prior experience with Linux? **Edit: Linux Mint it shall be.**
@Dirk@lemmy.ml avatar

You should try Linux Mint. It’s a good distribution for new Linux users. It’s easy to understand, has a good community with plenty of solutions for all types of problems and it is not too specific.

Gaming with Steam on Linux works without any major issues except when it comes to games that intentionally made run on Windows only due to their DRM. I suggest using the Flatpak variant of Steam so you won’t clutter your system with too many weird dependencies.

ParetoOptimalDev,

I don’t know about flatpak. I have a high tolerance for annoyance but configuring flatpak permissions right was annoying.

Dirk,
@Dirk@lemmy.ml avatar

I just installed it and never changed any permissions. Maybe you confuse it with AppImage?

qaz, (edited )

Some Flatpak apps don’t have the proper permissions or they can be quite restrictive especially when it cames to file access.

For example; it’s not possible to upload files using Discord from the user home (except a few specified folders). This could be solved with a XDG portal, but most apps don’t bother implementing that.

Loucypher,

Yeah that is annoying. I get that problem with Cryptomator

kalpol, (edited ) in What's your current favorite distro that isn't Arch, Debian or Fedora?

OpenSUSe. Tumbleweed as a rolling bistro is amazingly stable, yast is nice, and it all just works great. Leap for the servers, and things are solid.

Evil_Shrubbery, (edited )

OpenSUSE for me too.

I also switched family & friends to Thimbleweed (since a bit too snappy Ubuntu) & it’s been great.

milicent_bystandr,

I should think so too. A Thimbleweed sounds an excellent plant for an Evil_Shrubbery.

Evil_Shrubbery,

My evil plans have been discovered!!

Regardless the evil plant army must grow. Rolling thimbleweeds are usually our scouts and assassins (rarely kamikaze when on fire, looks cool tho).

What I’m saying is that you better be on the lookout, maybe hide if you see a thimbleweed with a gun or knife.

Dio9sys,

Same. Tumbleweed here. All the benefits of the rpm ecosystem but with less hassle and more updates

milicent_bystandr,

I, too, get my coffee from the rolling bistro.

kalpol,

Loool I’ll leave it

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