Edit: Enough money as in buying a PC supporting windows 11

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    Yeah…this is going to be a super unpopular opinion, but there needs to be a designated distro for new users who aren’t sure what to go with. If someone asks “What distro should I-” the rest doesn’t matter. We just agree on one distro and that’s it. Once they have a reason to look for another distro, they’ll have the knowledge to find it themselves.

    You have to make the first step easy.

    • @pathief
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      81 year ago

      Linux Mint should be the default answer for newbies. Tech savvy users can probably find “the right distro” themselves.

        • cally [he/they]
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          21 year ago

          Yeah, I used Linux Mint when I started using Linux in 2021, and I would definitely still use it if I didn’t prefer rolling release.

          • @vic_rattlehead
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            11 year ago

            What does rolling release get a user if they’re not tinkering with hardware all the time?

            • cally [he/they]
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              11 year ago

              To me? I use a laptop and don’t really tinker with my hardware at all, the benefits for me is I get the latest-ish versions of software (including user applications), and there isn’t this big jump between new versions

    • ares35
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      31 year ago

      that ‘designated distro’ for newcomers used to be ubuntu. probably still is. as much as i’d want to say mint or some other variant of ubuntu or debian that i happen to like… ‘one man shows’ and distros with very small teams aren’t what a new user should be going with. there’s a reason why so many base off ubuntu. it’s big. it’s solid. and it just works.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Ubuntu was always the answer I gave, but it feels like they’ve fallen out of favor with the whole snap debacle.

        • @ChunkMcHorkle
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          11 year ago

          As a technically literate person who is mostly new to Linux, Snaps along with Canonical’s corporate behavior was initially a dealbreaker for me.

          Except now I’m on Zorin (a Ubuntu fork) and find I can install flatpak, apt, etc as well, so I’m not wholly opposed to it anymore.

          Still think they’re assholes for taking initial steps in a paywall direction, though, not to mention doing the FOSS community that way.