TUI stuff is so underrated. I’d gladly run them exclusively.
- Stalinist-Hoxhaist.
I go to bed every night wishing for a revolution.
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procapra@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Bazzite surpasses 30k active users, gaining 5k users since two months ago 🎉
9·6 days agoI so badly want to do the “old man yells at cloud” meme and be angry that Bazzite is so popular.
I want to do it, I’m resisting hnnnngg
Atomic bad because different and I don’t like things that are different. 🧓
procapra@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What are some bare minimum concepts beginner Linux users should understand?
141·9 days agoThe average day of a “computer wiz” on debian (me):
sudo apt install ./randomshitfromgithub.debsudo nano /etc/apt/sources.listpastes stuff in“Oh no something isn’t working right!” Pastes some slop from chatgpt into the terminal
9 months later
“This shits fucked beyond repair, time for a clean install!”

Honestly? Not much different than my experience with windows. ;P
procapra@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•I just found out my fiancee wants to switch to linux, lets start a distro war, what should be her first? + other questions
41·13 days agoI vastly prefer/recommend stable LTS distros. There are really 2 main families of distros for this:
- Linux Mint / Ubuntu LTS / Debian Stable (Ubuntu is based on Debian, Mint is based on Ubuntu LTS):
Basically endless amount of packages. Most people in the linux world have some familiarity with these so it shouldn’t be hard to get help if you need it.
- Rocky linux / Almalinux / RHEL (Rocky and Alma aim to be compatible with RHEL software):
For desktop systems people usually opt for fedora, but that distro does not meet my own criteria. Biggest reason you’d use these is for professional VFX software support. For whatever reason a lot of that stuff only has official support for this family of distros. Not sure why!
Get good at 1 of these families of distros. If you aren’t vibing with one its okay to switch to the other. Both have more cutting edge options if you desire them.
Linux Mint is a community favorite and very much is built with a desktop user in mind, but I don’t think it’s unreasonable to subject someone to learning any of the others even if they are more server focused. Everything I listed has atleast 5 years of support! If your fiancee isn’t super tech literate, you’ll probably be the one doing a lot of the system maintenance so keeping those major updates sparse is a very good thing. And of course, if you don’t wanna learn 2 different sets of tools, try and keep in the same family of distros.
Also, for desktop environment don’t choose anything crazy obscure. KDE & Gnome are most common, Cinnamon & XFCE are less common but IMO fine. Venture into others at your own peril.
Transfer process depends on what you mean. Transferring your files will probably just take time. I’m hopelessly unorganized so for me backing stuff up takes a few days of combing through a bunch of junk and copying to a flashdrive or cloud storage. Other people might have more efficient ways of dealing with this though.
If you mean software Libreoffice is great local office software, SMplayer is imo a good media player, GIMP, Inkscape, and Krita got art stuff covered. We’re also at the point you can more or less run most windows software on linux with enough fiddling, but that obviously isn’t ideal.
Your biggest hurdle moving to linux full time will be understanding commands when you inevitably do need to change configuration of something with the terminal. If you need help there are usually forums, IRC, matrix, etc.
Happy computing!
procapra@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Does anyone use SimpleX chat? Why or why not? Is it actually tangibly better for privacy than say, Signal, for example?
4·20 days agoNutomic has said some problematic shit, and is one of the devs of lemmy/admin on lemmy.ml.
This isn’t anti-commie nonsense, dudes transphobic.
I support the antix project for sure, but non-systemd can be a lil tough. Not that other init systems are inherently more difficult, just systemd is far more standardized/widely used and that helps with troubleshooting.
In general, following as many standards and defaults as you can is helpful when learning. Debian, Ubuntu LTS, RHEL, SUSE, and
anythingmost things derivative of them. All get a person used to a certain set of commands and software, all have sane defaults, and all are stable.
procapra@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•How to keep avoiding Google when it hamstrings Freetube [Linux]
14·23 days agodeleted by creator
Why not? You (usually) just click the check box during install, and you have 1 extra password when you boot up your system. Doesn’t seem too hard but I might be missing something.
procapra@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Ubuntu mod team takes anti-queer "Don't say gay" stance.
0·2 months agoIt seems for the last 5 years or so, Ubuntu has done a good job of making everyone hate them.
Anyone suggesting a rolling release distro to you is setting you up for failure, especially on a 2014 laptop that will absolutely not benefit from it.
Use Linux Mint. It’s still Linux, you can still
break itcustomize it as much as you want.edit: Y’all are absolutely insane to downvote this when we are talking about a NEW linux user using a 11 year old laptop.

😱 😢