• @ProfessorProteus
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    51 year ago

    I’m holding onto hope actually. I recently started dual-bootung into Mint and the installation process was a breeze. The only thing I could imagine a “typical” user finding difficult is setting up the flash drive for booting/installation. The UI is nice and familiar too. As a Linux newbie I hear that Mint is basically Ubuntu, and that (modern) Ubuntu is hot garbage, but even if it caused my computer to take an actual shit on the floor, it still beats Windows by a country mile.

    I think (perhaps too optimistically) that with some more awareness we could see a fairly sizeable migration.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        I too am curious. I see this often here on Lemmy, that Ubuntu is shitty. I’m wondering why.

        I will say they keep fucking up the window manager, and I personally always have to go and manually install unity. Which is annoying.

        But other than that, I don’t see it as shitty. What am I missing?

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Well, there is a transition away from X because it’s old, but wayland is still new. People are having issues. So, just use X, I say?

          Other than that, it’s the most popular distro (or a forked version of it).

          Buuuuut yes, a lot of “preference” comes down to the interface.

          Mint is good I hear. I’d be more interested in Pop, myself.

      • @ProfessorProteus
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        11 year ago

        I didn’t mean to make it seem like I had any opinion either way, just that it has received some hate over the years. I did some research - admittedly it was cursory - and it looks like the issues are somewhat exaggerated.

        Canonical, it seems, has made a number of poor decisions but apparently they pay attention to user complaints and revert / make adjustments accordingly. Some of the controversial things I saw were related to the Snap package manager, possible telemetry, bloatware, and some partnership with Amazon.

        Some of those things were either nothingburgers or simply overblown (one person said the only thing they could see as bloatware was… a few board games), so I would take their anecdotes with a grain of salt.

        Again, I’m a relative idiot when it comes to Linux, but my takeaway is that Ubuntu suffers from the typical growing pains / compromises that a relatively popular OS will inevitably encounter. Especially when most of the Linux userbase consists of power users who prefer having complete control (which is perfectly fair too!)

        Use whatever distro fits your needs; as long as you ditch Microsoft, you’re making a good choice :)