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_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.

I’m still learning to read through and interpret documentation and it often get way too over my head that I need to ask the community for help; […]

And there’s nothing wrong with that. And if you just ask, not even nicely, you’ll usually get productive help. I know I’ve provided help many times, no matter how “noobish” the question.

[…] and honestly, I don’t like to because of reactions like yours.

If you don’t act like a massive asshole, you don’t get such reactions.

It’s really disheartening to come to the community, try to ask for help and to be told that I should just do it right, or to catch flak for not asking the rifht question, or to have someone share a chunk of code and say, “just use this,” which doesn’t help me learn.

He didn’t come and asked. He ranted and shat on everything and everybody. He even received some help despite that. His reaction was offensive and more verbal diarrhea.

To be clear, my previous comment was a pre-coffee and just irked me in the wrong way; I do owe you an apology for that so, sorry.

Don’t sweat it. My skin is thicker than that.

_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.

Consistent in your ignorance.

_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.
_cnt0, to memes in This IS my final form

I did some Cobol, too, back in the day.

_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.

You’ve clearly not read his post and comments. He’s a massive asshole.

_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.

Then feel free to fuck off.

I’ll come back to this at the end.

You came in here […]

I’m the OP of the post; you came in here.

[…] and started this saying it’s basically my fault I had a bad time with Fedora.

It is/was.

[…] Your condescending and pretentious attitude has been noted, […]

I’ll come back to this further down.

[…] but I’m a new user to Linux my man.

And evidently a very ignorant one at that. You come at it with preconceived notions of how distributions should work, and then get angry when they don’t, when five minutes of googling could have prevented your problems. Only to be followed by troll-level low effort rants on the internet.

None of this is familiar.

And blind trial and error is no good way to change that.

As my day 2 and 3 posts show I can actually troubleshoot and fix things, if I couldn’t figure it out, I’d say it’s indicative of production and deployment issues on the developers end.

Or, your aforementioned ignorance and wrong preconceived notions of how you think things should work.

As your day 1 post shows, you have the attention span of a squirrel and frustration tolerance of a toddler. Your assumption, that your opinion on a distribution, after spending less than one day with it, has any merit or value is plain arrogant.

But please feel free to not respond, […]

You can always walk away from this.

[…] you’re exactly the kind of Linux user that gives the community it’s negative stigma.

You are exactly the kind of person, why I’m in favor of something akin to a drivers license for computers.

[…] Your condescending and pretentious attitude has been noted, […]

There’s nothing noteworthy about your arrogance, ignorance, lack of frustration tolerance and attention span.

Then feel free to fuck off.

Your opinions have the substance of a vacuum and structural integrity of a house of cards. Do yourself and “us” (the linux community) a favor and kindly fuck off yourself.

_cnt0, to memes in Amiright?
_cnt0, to memes in Amiright?

Sie haben gerufen? Worum geht’s?

_cnt0, to memes in This IS my final form

We have very different ideas of what constitutes ‘fun’.

_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.

Honestly, I don’t really care what you think.

The feeling is reciprocal.

_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distros were WW2 tanks. Made by a guy who tries to play War Thunder with linux.

It’s more of a joke. The tank in the picture is a T28 Super Heavy Tank . It was developed in the US and was ludicrously large. Not being ready for serial production at the end of WW2 the project was canceled. Only two prototypes were ever built.

_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.

I think I don’t need to reiterate the replies you got on that post and explain why it was downvoted.

_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.
_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.

If your fedora experience is that terrible, you’ve clearly not figured out how it’s done.

_cnt0, to linuxmemes in If linux distributions were tools.

I have no experience with Darktable. But, really any and every distro should do it. Every distro comes with a learning curve. My personal advice would be not to go with distro derivatives. In the early days, Ubuntu was quite good, for making Debian “more accessible” to a larger audience and people unfamiliar with linux. I still like it for being an African success story. But, I can’t recommend it anymore for a slew of reasons. So, I’d say, go with debian, fedora, or even Arch. If you want to go with debian, you should know about non-free. If you go with fedora, you should know about rpmfusion. If you want to go with Arch, you should be comfortable with a more bare-bones and hands-on experience and reading the Arch-wiki (which is one of the most extensive and best wikis out there, and even useful if you use another distro). If you want something stable that just works and don’t need the newest of the new software, use debian. If you want the bleeding edge, that mostly just works, go with fedora. If you want the bleeding edge, want maximum control, and are not afraid to stay on top of it, go with Arch. Of course, many other distros could be a good pick for you. They all have pros and cons.

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