Yeah, it was ready for my old AMD machine. My new Nvidia box…nah.
But since I’ve switched to XFCE, I don’t need to worry so much about new-fangled things like Wayland…for now.
Yeah, it was ready for my old AMD machine. My new Nvidia box…nah.
But since I’ve switched to XFCE, I don’t need to worry so much about new-fangled things like Wayland…for now.
The one and only objectively best answer, imo.
Who needs therapy when you have pacman?
Well even a bare bones install of Debian has USB plug and play, networking, printing…they include a bit more than Arch, even if you do have to install your own programs.
Some functionality is missing, like USB plug and play, certain network file sharing capabilities, printing…so in addition to learning pacman, having to learn all the package names, you have to look up how to give the OS certain functionalities…it’s a lot as a newbie. If you don’t love working on computers, you may not make it through that phase.
And I say this with all due respect, as an Arch user myself.
I’ve “refreshed” a couple coworker’s old PCs with Linux Mint XFCE. It’s actually gone pretty well.
“All I do is browse the net.”
Okay, I’ll put the browser right on the desktop, so you don’t have to search for it. Be patient, it’s an older computer. But at least this works, unlike Windows.
And I haven’t really heard too much from them. Internet works. Basic needs fulfilled.
I feel like someone who knows a bit more could be more of a pain. But for very basic computing needs like paying your bills and surfing IG, it can go well.
That is likely it. Okay, thank you.
You’re actually 100% right. I don’t know what figure I was thinking of, but you’re just right.
I was thinking the same thing. We’ve actually surpassed Apple on desktop. I know we’re gonna laughingly say “year of the Linux desktop,” but we have to honestly look how far we’ve come in a relatively short time.
Obsidian. I know it’s not open source, but it just felt right.
I’ll give SteamOS a shot when I get my Steamdeck. Until then, it’s just vanilla Arch on my main machine until I’ve seen what it’s like.
Yeah, honestly you can replace Arch with Gentoo. Arch is for when you don’t have a life for an afternoon or two while you’re getting set up. After that it’s smooth.
And they have a shocking share of the server market despite the existence of Debian. Unfortunate.
It was a third party vendor, so I’m guessing the profit didn’t go to the distros. But advertising is advertising.
I run Debian on my work laptops, and Arch on my gaming rig. They are absolutely equal in terms of time sink, and it’s not that bad at all.
This guy programs.
I recently happily purchased some metal Debian stickers for my work laptops. If you know, then you know. And if you want to know, I’m more than happy to explain.
The Arch metal sticker for my home gaming rig? That was for me.
My two recent $90 laptop purchases can confirm this.
Oh yeah, LMDE is definitely the future of Mint. Good point.
I work in logistics. I’ve always had a fascination with tech, and was leery of all these neato things on offer from big tech, from social media to the cloud.
Found out I could self-host, and got to learning.