• Naho_Zako@piefed.zip
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    42 minutes ago

    Picard, I know you didn’t post it on purpose, and I thank you for your onging service to Lemmy, but this is AI slop.

    This post was made a few months ago, and people pointed out the ports on the laptop, the nonconformity of the text, and how the people have weird effects on them (lines going through them)

    Edit: In fact, as this comment points out it’s literally stealing from Cyanide and Happiness’s artstyle

    • The Picard Maneuver@lemmy.worldOP
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      29 minutes ago

      Well damn, I had no idea. The ports do look weird, now that you mention it, but I don’t think I would’ve ever noticed anything was off, especially since lots of webcomics look similar to C&H these days.

      The linked post raises even more questions for me, because the user that posted it 2 months ago is the watermarked name on the comic, and their entire post history is filled with anti-AI stuff.

      I’ll remove it either way, since it’s a recent repost too, but giving a short bit longer because I’m curious what you and others think.

  • Jared White ✌️ [HWC]@humansare.social
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    46 minutes ago

    Fedora GNOME.

    If that doesn’t tickle your fancy, plenty of other options, but it’s a great beginner distro (especially for long-time Apple nerds like me).

  • Xylight‮@lemdro.id
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    22 minutes ago

    What is happening on lemmy brethren

    This is an ai image posted like a few months ago, and now it gets reposted without credit, and it’s an ai image???

  • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 hours ago

    Spoiled for choice is a good thing, and it’s one reason why Linux is great. I think the community could do better at two things in this regard:

    1. Helping new users understand that the choice is not really a major one (relative to making the switch to Linux). Adjust whatever to your needs as you learn, or distro hop.

    2. Not jumping down new users’ throats if they pick Ubuntu / Mint / Fedora / whatever. Again, the freedom is a plus. A new user picking Ubuntu doesn’t make an older user need to use Ubuntu. Let the new user have that joy of discovery how they want it.

    I think if we all focused on these, the community would be better off for it. I’m all for a good ribbing about distros between experienced users, but it definitely can scare newbies away.

    • Randelung@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      Options are great when you can make an informed choice. Too many similar choices lead to choice paralysis and regret, which is bad for first time users.

      • lobut@lemmy.world
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        14 minutes ago

        Not gonna lie, that’s what put me off the fediverse for so long. I was like, “fine, I’ll join mastodon or whatever”. Then I had to choose my server and I didn’t know what that meant and then when I tried creating my account, the server was full or something and I just freaked out and left 😂.

      • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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        Yup. I’ve been trying to decide and install for, what how long have y’all been watching me dither three years?

        Now i just have to get the backup computer working so if i fuck up, we still have a computer that can run all my wife’s work shit. That’s it after today’s errands! Guess i better put my eyes and legs on.

    • drcobaltjedi@programming.dev
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      50 minutes ago

      I don’t understand the hate for Linux newbies using the “beginner’s” distros. Hell, I actively tell people looking to get into Linux to use a beginner distro and offer to set up their computer for them.

      “Look, this is Linux mint, see how windows-y this looks and feels?”

      They don’t need to know more than that, I’ll tell them if they look for installation instructions for something not in the software manager to follow the Debian or Ubuntu instructions and that they should run an update at least once a day but it isn’t painful.

      • lobut@lemmy.world
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        16 minutes ago

        I think the power users have ran into issues in the past and instead of considering the learning journey they went through, I think they say it’s better to shortcut to their solution and forgetting the longer learning process they took to get to where they are.

    • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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      1 hour ago

      Maybe the same reason a 2 party system does well in the US. People are not intelligent enough to make their own choices (and they get overwhelmed) and want “daddy” to tell them what to choose, much like how Windows is just “the thing you use on a PC”. People don’t even want to find their own music anymore, they want the Al Gore Rhythm to feed them everything.

      That’s why when people ask me on Linux I just say Mint, use default settings. Because they won’t understand anything else and Mint will likely work fine in 98% of cases.

      • BananaIsABerry@lemmy.zip
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        51 minutes ago

        Choice paralysis has nothing to do with intelligence. This attitude is forever pushing the year of the Linux desktop away.

      • LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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        27 minutes ago

        Read “Nudge” by Richard Thaler. Choice architecture is a real thing that has impact on whether things we want to happen actually happen. It’s not because people aren’t smart enough.

  • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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    2 hours ago

    50% of Linux is being free to choose. The other 50% is knowing what the correct choice is.

    • lastlybutfirstly@lemmy.world
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      Lemmy isn’t too much. It’s just that the people using it right are the types that will tell you how to build a clock when you ask what time it is. They give too much info instead of just linking to lemmy.world or something. That might be the problem with Linux too.

  • BremboTheFourth@piefed.ca
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    2 hours ago

    The mistake here is not just picking. This is why most people who make the switch just go for the big one. lemmy.world, piefed.social, mastodon.social.

    You’re gonna have to pick. Pick a username, pick a password, pick a browser, pick between fuckin Amazon or Alibaba, idk. Using windows is also a choice. But yeah I say just use mint and move on to the next one :)

    • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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      Unfortunately this is not how the fediverse should work either. It’s not supposed to be “all in one” like everyone expects now. The reason google does so well is they infiltrate everything so Normie Joe only remembers their gmail login and can login to everything. This is dangerous, and we know why, but the convenience outweighs everything to Joe.

      • BremboTheFourth@piefed.ca
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        4 minutes ago

        I mean, sure, but it is people’s natural tendency. As long as there are systems in place for people to migrate services it’s not such a big deal. If someone asks me what social media I use, I say Piefed. If they asked me for a link, I’d link them my instance. But if someone were coming in totally cold and just needed to pick one, I wouldn’t fault them for defaulting to The Big One. I’d certainly prefer they do that over staying on Facebook or whatever.

        And that’s more of a federation problem anyway, in the case of operating systems it’s not as big a problem for all the noobs to be using the same one.

    • toad@sh.itjust.works
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      2 hours ago

      Unlike lemmy.world, ubuntu isn’t sending propaganda email to explain how Israel isn’t actually doing genocide

  • samus12345@sh.itjust.works
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    The Steam Deck uses Arch (btw) and KDE, so that’s what I’ll likely go for eventually since I’m most familiar with them.

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    Look at all the comments explaining what to pick to an invisible audience. The OP didn’t actually ask a question. 🤭

    • The Picard Maneuver@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 hours ago

      I just did it out of curiosity, and lots met my criteria, but the top was Debian, which is one that I’m currently using. Seems accurate!

    • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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      Thanks! I did this, the top answer for me was debian. The one i wanted before is mint. Scrolling through the ranked list of answers and the reasons it tells me, the one I still want is mint (both me and my wife are going to use it, but i have to first learn how to use it to teach her and that’s either a next week project or a this summer project. and i have to decide fast.)

    • Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone
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      3 hours ago

      That’s what I did 6 months ago. No issues so far that haven’t been solved by either a quick search or literally just waiting a few days for an update. The games I play work, I don’t depend on any Adobe software so I don’t even need Wine. Computers aren’t my hobby, Mint has let me keep it that way.

      If you’re a Linux veteran and this repulses you, that’s fine. This is more for people on Windows who want to jump but are worried.

    • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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      5 hours ago

      Yeah, if you hit a snag you can pursue other options but best just to dive into something easy to get started on.

      • drcobaltjedi@programming.dev
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        41 minutes ago

        Its a good beginners distro. The default desktop environment is very windows 7-y. It has a great out of box experience with everything having a GUI. It’s built on Debian (um ackchyually Linux mint is based on Ubuntu unless you’re using mint Debian edition. Ignore the fact that Ubuntu is a Debian distro itself) which is incredibly stable with most updates being small bug fixes or security patches with the biggest updates being infrequent.

      • altkey (he\him)@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        26 minutes ago

        The answer is: It’s basic, Windows/Android-looking, and it’s not Ubuntu with snap and shit

        And for me it was right. I left it after some time with it, when it served as a comfortable middleground for a Windows escapee. I needed it to feel security in my pretty extreme choice, not to bounce back in the first weeks. Only then I felt like I’m staying there and can explore different things and actually know what I’m looking for.

        At first, Mint gave a relief in having a simple visual software manager (~app store) that had both regular versions and flatpacks, where I first encountered the critical difference between the ways you can install the same app and underlying mechanics of dependancies etc. Then I got to know app images, that are less android-like and more windows-like in a sense you download executable files and fire them up. Having some problems and needs I started to google around, saw frequent mentions of archwiki, AUR, pacman, etc, and it just went on.

        But for a little while I feared it’d be a neverending challenge, it was comforting to know, that it would just work on the basic level, for browsing, surfing web, playing games. And that I can then pick my challenges to serve my needs. Like a safe zone where most MMOs put their newbie players at first to learn the basics.

      • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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        because it works perfectly on all my hardware, it’s fast, and has keyboard shortcuts I already know.

        I’ve tried popOS (lots of graphics issues, terrible shortcuts, REALLY BAD software manager (runs on 1 core only in 2026. wtf??? it’s slow as hell), and cachyOS (lots of hardware issues, no sound, keyboard shortcuts must be some weird alternate language because none of the ones I know worked).

        Mint is awesome. Anyone hating on a Linux distro is a chud. Well, we can hate ubuntu for their canonical reason i suppose.

      • whotookkarl@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 hours ago

        It was easy to move relatives to from windows without much effort, have done it multiple times and it ran fine for years with the only issue I had to support was cleaning up a boot partition that filled up after several years of automated updates.

      • SapphironZA@sh.itjust.works
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        2 hours ago

        Its got the highest success rate with new users that are not hobbiests. And a good distro to learn Linux on because of all the Ubuntu guides.

      • pienz@feddit.org
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        If you are recommending a first time Linux user a distro, the goal isn’t to find the perfect one tailored for them, the goal is to get them to use Linux and not have a bad experience, putting a bunch of upfront conditions on choice is overloading

        Distro hoping can happen later

        I think the obsession part you are referring to isn’t their love for Mint or them regarding it as the best distro. It’s like someone asking which direction they should take to drive somewhere, there’s a sea of people responding with different routes with tiny differences and the Linux Mint response would be “Whatever the GPS decided”

      • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Me either. I have tried it multiple times over the years and I did not have great luck with things “just working” as everyone claims. Plus I hate the windows style DE UIs so it seems like a weird choice that so many people will recommend it and tout it without even asking follow up questions.

        • DaGeek247@fedia.io
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          Plus I hate the windows style DE UIs so it seems like a weird choice

          The average user hates the changes involved in switching away from the windows distro. The thing you hate about it is an objectively good reason for recommending it to a new user.

          I have tried it multiple times over the years and I did not have great luck with things “just working” as everyone claims.

          I have used it for several years now (with multiple sets of hardware) with no issues. Every single Linux version is going to have something it can’t handle. Linux mint is stable and handles most stuff just fine. A bad experience is possible anywhere, so this isn’t really a good reason to not recommend it for new users.

          • OwOarchist@pawb.social
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            Every single Linux version is going to have something it can’t handle. Linux mint is stable and handles most stuff just fine.

            If you’d like to know that Mint can’t handle…

            *raises hand*

            6 monitors connected to 2 GPUs – one old Radeon and one 3090. I tried Mint and it could not handle that setup, no matter what I tried doing to it. Currently on Ubuntu, which worked with that setup right out of the box, no tweaking necessary.

          • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            Yeah I’m not saying it’s the worst distro, I just don’t think my multiple experiences with it remotely align with the reputation.

            Regarding the UI, I think people want familiarity and even think they want something with a design like that. But in practice the similarities are only skin deep and to me if they’re already going to need to learn all the ways it differs from windows, why not put the same effort into learning something that also varies superficially from windows (just in a different way than mint)?

            I think the real reason people recommend mint is, while deep down they know users will have a better time on Ubuntu, they cannot stand the idea of recommending that company’s product directly.

            • DaGeek247@fedia.io
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              43 minutes ago

              I think the real reason people recommend mint is, while deep down they know users will have a better time on Ubuntu, they cannot stand the idea of recommending that company’s product directly.

              I have no guilt when I say Ubuntu, and their managing company, have pulled enough shit over the years that it’s not a good first choice for a new user.

              But in practice the similarities are only skin deep and to me if they’re already going to need to learn all the ways it differs from windows, why not put the same effort into learning something that also varies

              The average user never leaves the web browser. The average gamer never leaves the web browser and steam. Skin deep is as far as most people ever go.

              This not a condemnation, but it’s important to be aware of the differences between the average user, the average gamer, and the average Linux user. https://www.nngroup.com/articles/computer-skill-levels/

        • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          I have tried it multiple times over the years and I did not have great luck with things “just working” as everyone claims.

          This is why I don’t like recommending LTS distros for anything other than servers. The Linux kernel and desktop software moves fast these days, and running 2 year old kernel and DE means missing out on the fixes and improvements that the “it just works” people are talking about.

          • NekuSoul@lemmy.nekusoul.de
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            3 hours ago

            Yup. People need to understand that “stable” is not a synonym for bug-free.

            As you said, DEs in particularly move so fast that the rare bug that makes it through and is subsequently quickly fixed is much less problematic than sometimes years of missing features and longstanding bugs that don’t get backported.

    • root@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Really wanted to try the Debian version of mint, but unfortunately it’s systemd based

    • rtxn@lemmy.worldM
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      4 hours ago

      It’s the objectively correct choice, but it might draw the ire of Fedora stans.

      • RoyaltyInTraining@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        The only reason I dislike mint is because the developers kept postponing the Wayland transition so insanely long. Once it does HDR, variable refresh rate, and fractional scaling on heterogeneous displays correctly, I’ll start recommending it again.

          • BladeFederation@piefed.social
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            Wayland: display server. The thing that shows the visual stuff on screen. Wayland=new and more features (features explained below). X11=old but stable and takes time to transition from without bugs.

            HDR: high dynamic range. If you have a really nice TV or monitor, this gives you better color accuracy. Make sure you have good brightness levels with brightness cranked up, or it will counter intuitively look worse, like the brown filter PS3 era of video games.

            VRR: variable refresh rate. When you run a game, some parts are harder to render than others due to increased detail and things happening in the screen. Thus, your frame rate will dip, making a noticeable jittery effect that is not smooth, especially if you have a high refresh rate monitor. My monitor refreshes 165 times per second to detect changes, and if the frame rate goes from 140 frames generated to 90, that is very noticeable. VRR syncs the refresh rate of your monitor to the GPU itself, so it knows exactly how many frames it will be getting. My monitor will refresh 90 times for that second that I got a frame drop instead of 165, which drastically decreases the jittery effect of the dropped frames. You can still kind of tell, but it is more smooth and responsive in terms of what is happening on screen.

            Heterogeneous displays: monitors of different resolutions.

            Fractional scaling: this allows you to set display zoom at different percentages on different monitors, as well as setting non-integer scaling (integer is 100% to 200%, non integer is 100% to 125%). This is important because 100% scaling is often too small on high resolutions, and 200% is comically large. Also for the multiple monitor scenario, most people have a new monitor and their old monitor as the secondary. For example, 4k will require 150% scaling at least to be readable st most screen sizes. 1080p will look too zoomed in at over 100%, and not match the look of the other monitor.

            In summary, most of this is going to matter only if you are a gamer or watch HDR content like movies on your computer. Having matching monitors despite non matching resolutions is pretty nice though. But if you have matching monitors or 1 monitor it doesn’t matter either. Hence, Mint is not a good choice for a gaming or home theater situation, but its hyper focus on being stable makes everyone else like it more because they never do anything different unless it is for sure going to work. At this point though, most distros are using Wayland with no issues.

        • rtxn@lemmy.worldM
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          It’s better to delay it and release an immediately usable product than to break the desktop when an unexpected bug is encountered and make the computer unusable. I’ve never transitioned a desktop environment and framework to an entirely different display system, but I don’t imagine it’s as simple as flipping a switch.

          Mint is not a bleeding edge distro. Reliability should come first, always.

          • BladeFederation@piefed.social
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            2 hours ago

            It definitely takes time, and stable distros should exist. Wayland has been the clear choice moving forward for 7 years though. It feels like Mint & a few others are just stalling at this point.

        • GaMEChld@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          HDR is like the only reason I’m on Windows 11. Already switched my entire home lab over to proxmox.

          What would you recommend today if I wanted good HDR support and gaming with a Radeon GPU?

          Or should I just wait for Mint to get those features?

          • BladeFederation@piefed.social
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            Most anything that used KDE or GNOME will use all Wayland features. Every once in a while some distros with GNOME won’t but I forget who and they may have fixed it by now. KDE has better customization and looks more like Mint/Windows by default so I’d stick with that personally.

            I use Fedora KDE. It gets more updates than Ubuntu based stuff but nowhere near what rolling distros like Arch do. It’s a very well documented “regular person” distro. I like their package manager better than apt. Can still use KDE Discover for just about any app installation. Downsides: you have to install Nvidia drivers manually, and sign them + your Secure Boot keys if you want to use Secure Boot. Not relevant to you though.

            Bazzite is Fedora Atomic but with additional gaming tweaks. Atomic/immutable means you can’t break it, but also aren’t supposed to/can’t install native packages and drivers yourself. But Bazzite gives you everything you need from the jump like drivers. Also Secure Boot needs Universal Blue’s signature I think which isn’t too hard but you will have to look it up. You must use flatpaks only.

            Cachy OS is Arch but with a sane installer that walks you through everything in GUI. It has even more optimizations than Bazzite, and is #1 for gaming. It also holds back updates slightly from regular Arch, so breaking happens less often. But it’s still “basically” a rolling distro, so breakage may happen. You pretty much have to use their app store instead of KDE Discover or whatnot. No Secure Boot.

            Overall Fedora and Bazzite are both easy to medium difficulty at worst, but for different reasons. Cachy is medium difficulty but best at gaming & general performance optimization.

        • Pat_Riot@lemmy.today
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          4 hours ago

          Enough posts about Wayland are complaints I don’t care if it ever happens. Mint works fucking great just like it is.

        • redsand@infosec.pub
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          4 hours ago

          I’m old and remember the string of hacks early on. I think the ISO server hack was made public for those interested.

          • 14th_cylon@lemmy.zip
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            We are not pretending. Debugged and working reliably is better than new. Being new is not automatically useful attribute.

      • tyler@programming.dev
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        4 hours ago

        For me it was the objectively incorrect choice. Sound issues, display issues, slow. Whatever is up with mint, it absolutely doesn’t work with my hardware.

        • swelter_spark@reddthat.com
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          2 hours ago

          It didn’t work on my laptop either. I moved on to another Ubuntu derivative that didn’t have that problem.

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          3 hours ago

          It’s possible to install a newer kernel in Mint using the Update Manager. This might have solved your hardware issues. Admittedly, though, this option is not very easy to find if you’re not aware of it.

          • tyler@programming.dev
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            3 hours ago

            It’s also kinda antithetical to what people are saying, which is that mint is great out of the box.

            • Ftumch@lemmy.today
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              3 hours ago

              Yeah, ideally the Mint installer or Driver Manager or whatever would be smart enough to tell you “some of your hardware is not supported by the default kernel, click here to install a kernel that will support your hardware”. This is definitely a shortcoming in Linux Mint.

              On the other hand, it is worth noting that it is possible to get Mint running right on most hardware without touching a terminal.

              Personally I’d recommend a beginner try running Mint or another stable distribution with a newer kernel before trying some sort of cutting edge rolling release, which might be buggy. But that’s just, like, my opinion, man.

      • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        Mint noobs : Haha entry level distro go brr
        Fedora wearers : Noooo milady you have to use a version of an OS based off corporate bs

        • wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz
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          RHEL is downstream from Fedora. They’re both forks of Red Hat, but Red Hat ≠ RHEL

          Edit: also, since you wanna fuckin go there, Linux Mint is downstream from Ubuntu, which is corporate BS. So you’re making accusations in a mirror.

          • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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            Edit: also, since you wanna fuckin go there, Linux Mint is downstream from Ubuntu, which is corporate BS. So you’re making accusations in a mirror.

            yeah, corporate bs with all the corporate bs taken out.

            also, LMDE exists.

            • wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz
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              31 seconds ago

              Der der der, as I pointed out elsewhere in this thread that LMDE is a better option. But you didn’t say LMDE, you said Mint, which is based on Ubuntu

          • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Me: At least my neighbors aren’t those inbred hicks over there
            You : Actually, those people have only practiced cousin marriage, which has been socially acceptable for various centuries
            Me : Yeah, the point is more that they are hicks.