It sounds like they’re talking about the N versions of Windows, which can only install apps through the Microsoft Store. That can be disabled, but my understanding is it’s a pain to get it done. It’s meant to be locked down kind of like Apple products.
I don’t know how this solution should be hard. I always have a live boot usb(O.K. not Fedora) with me and installing these apps is about 1-2 commands and I really don’t like scrolling through legacy Gui apps.
I couldn’t find any way to do it. I also carry a Ventoy USB drive with me everywhere I go with Fedora on it as it’s the distro I use so it was the quickest way I could think of to get everything working at the time.
All you have to do is turn that off and you can install anything you want. You took a simple problem and made it hard.
It sounds like they’re talking about the N versions of Windows, which can only install apps through the Microsoft Store. That can be disabled, but my understanding is it’s a pain to get it done. It’s meant to be locked down kind of like Apple products.
It’s S mode and it’s just a couple buttons.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/switching-out-of-s-mode-in-windows-4f56d9be-99ec-6983-119f-031bfb28a307
I don’t know how this solution should be hard. I always have a live boot usb(O.K. not Fedora) with me and installing these apps is about 1-2 commands and I really don’t like scrolling through legacy Gui apps.
I couldn’t find any way to do it. I also carry a Ventoy USB drive with me everywhere I go with Fedora on it as it’s the distro I use so it was the quickest way I could think of to get everything working at the time.