lascapi,

I love how it’s focused on stabilty in UI/UX and that it’s supported by a lots of peoples around the world.

deczzz,
@deczzz@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Installs mint. Connects to wifi at work. Prompted with a window that wants me to specify certificate versions or whatever. No clue about what any of it means and never get to connect. Uninstalled and back to Windows. Mint so easy to use /s 👍

mercury,

Mints wifi was a pain in the ass first time I used it, try some distro with kde as stock, or install it yourself. Might be more usable

deczzz,
@deczzz@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Yeh and apparently Lemmy folks down votes legit bad experiences with gnu/Linux. If you think the user is the problem here, this community seriously have a problem if thet want gnu/Linux to be mainstream.

mercury,

People here really do need to realize how little the average user is willing to tinker and troubleshoot. Not to mention the software availability. Saying “it’s soooo easy to switch over” is just blatantly false, even now. The vast, vast majority of gamers play games with incompatible anti-cheat. Those people will likely not stop playing the games they want to because of moral values or Foss whatever’s. Same with software. Sure, krita or gimp are easy as hell to pick up, but if you’ve lived your whole life with Photoshop, and have no problem other than the usual adobe bullshit, you’re not gonna switch to an is with zero possibility of supporting that app any time soon.

I can’t offer a solution to fix linux’s issues, but there needs to be a community willing to answer the most basic questions honestly.

Maragato,
@Maragato@eslemmy.es avatar

For a home user with recent hardware in my opinion the system to beat is openSUSE Tumbleweed. It is a stable and rolling distribution, that is, it has the best of both worlds.

Sh1ft,

I have used some distros by now and I do love mint. But a few years back every major upgrade of mint lead to bugs and me reinstalling my system. So far the only Distro i tried that just keeps working is MX Linux on my old laptop.

Because I want to get rid of windows I installed Nobara. I love to play games. I works pretty good, but since only one guy ist maintaining it, it should be not considered a daily driver.

I am still not happy because it dont want to switch between distros for gaming and working.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Because I want to get rid of windows I installed Nobara. I love to play games. I works pretty good, but since only one guy ist maintaining it, it should be not considered a daily driver.

Nobara is just a Fedora remix. I’ve used another remix a bunch of years ago and converting that to a regular Fedora installation after its maintainer left was just removing that addon repo and letting dnf handle the rest. I think I only needed to switch to Fedora’s branding packages.

kelvie,

I’ve used Linux for over two decades (red hat to Gentoo to Ubuntu to arch) and I must say it’ll be a tough sell to get me back to an RPM or a debian based distro solely due to how god awfully slow the package managers (dpkg and rpm) are.

Since Docker came along and brought with it the ride of Alpine and APK, it made me realize that system upgrades on a modern processor, fast internet, and an SSD should take seconds, not minutes.

registrert,
@registrert@lemmy.sambands.net avatar

The only thing I dislike about Mint is that their forums uses that awful Sukuri(?) firewall that blocks VPN’s, and when people complain about it the forum users say that the firewall doesn’t block VPN.

I half expect if I ever needed to seek help in the forum to, say, ask for help with boot problems the reply would something like “You don’t have boot problems”.

But that’s not really a Linux Mint problem, so I guess there’s nothing I dislike about Mint.

Eopia,

It was my first distro I liked it at the time, but after they killed of the KDE Edition I tried out Manjaro and the rolling release with up to date software just fits my use case much better.

lordgoose,

I’ve been using Mint for a few months now after initially trying Fedora and Kubuntu. Mint has been by far my favorite experience and I’ve even gotten a few people converted to Linux via Mint. Definitely my recommendation for any Linux newbies.

ShitOnABrick,
@ShitOnABrick@lemmy.world avatar

Linux mint at least in my experience seems to be one of those shit just works distros

CalicoJack,

I don’t use it myself, but it’s been my main recommendation for newbies for years for that reason. No complaints yet, even from the less tech-literate.

miss_brainfart,
@miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml avatar

A lot of distros work really well on my laptop, but Mint has always been the only one that works perfectly

Immersive_Matthew,

I sure wish I could get off Windows and onto Linux, but as a VR developer, it really is not feasible. Sucks

Subverb,

I run a small business, but I’m also I’m an embedded systems developer on ARM processors for my products. Our toolchain is Windows-specific. That and the Adobe suite which I also need for my business keep my primary work machine Windows.

My laptop is Linux but even that creates occasional hassles with my work flow and presentations.

morrowind,
@morrowind@lemmy.ml avatar

What are you developing for? Hololens?

Immersive_Matthew,

Meta Quest and SteamVR.

I_like_cats,

Me here playing VR games on Linux: wut?

Immersive_Matthew,

My VR runs fine on Linux, just I cannot develop it on Linux as the tools are simply not available.

Molten_Moron,

At least you get Windows and not the abomination that is MacOS.

cries in iOS developer

dino,

I’d rather use macOS than windows anyday.

GustavoM,
@GustavoM@lemmy.world avatar

Indeed! My grandmother loves it. :^)

Aggravationstation,

And I love your grandmother :D

stella,

I think most mainstream distros have reached a point of diminishing returns, and that’s a good thing.

Pantherina,
@Pantherina@feddit.de avatar

I too think Cinnamon is a pretty great Experience. I am using KDE and heard from many people that it feels better, its more unified and has way more features.

Wayland is important for security, and Mint will need a long time to adopt that. There are already apps only running on Wayland for reasons.

KDE is a bit unstable as its a huge project. I hope that will get better in Plasma 6.

I sure wish to have something like KDE more stable. But once you are used to it, its just better. Things that are not there yet on Mint are on KDE since years.

Its a bit of a mess as its so old. Extensions need to be cleaned up. But like, Dolphin extensions are so great, I dont know an equivalent on Cinnamon.

Also the distro model is the standard one. A Fedora Atomic Cinnamon variant, with modern presets and everything working, would be a great thing to install anywhere. Automatic atomic updates, easy version upgrades, transparent system changes and resets being just one command away.

stella,

Cinnamon is more unified, but I don’t think any DE has as many features as KDE.

registrert,
@registrert@lemmy.sambands.net avatar

XFCE, XFCE, gobble gobble

comicallycluttered,

You can get a Cinnamon image via U-Blue.

U-Blue in general is a nice collection of images because not only are there various unofficial options, but a lot of things like RPMFusion, etc. are preconfigured in their versions of the main editions (SilverBlue, Kinoite, Sericea, Onyx).

Or you can just rebase regular SilverBlue (or one of the three other official variants) to one of those images if you’re running it already. Can roll back if you don’t like it.

I doubt there’ll be an official edition until Cinnamon has full Wayland support since Fedora is going all in on that now.

In the meantime, the community has it covered.

Pantherina, (edited )
@Pantherina@feddit.de avatar

Right! I have to try that.

Personally I dont care for cinnamon, but it is easy for users and ublue is great.

My personal wishlists are a Fedora-based TV OS, a hardened version and a rawhide kde 6 one

pastermil,

I’ve been using Linux for a decade, and I think Mint is great!

imgel,

Lmao

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