Chimera Linux is actually really nice. Been daily driving it for a little bit, and as long as you don’t have an Nvidia GPU, it should work just fine.
Professional Neckbeard
Chimera Linux is actually really nice. Been daily driving it for a little bit, and as long as you don’t have an Nvidia GPU, it should work just fine.
I’ve tried FreeBSD and in my experience, it was just like clunkier, worse documented linux. I specifically remember having issues with wifi drivers not working and drivers as a whole being a huge pain. I’ve also tried setting up OpnSense in a VM (for testing purposes) and that was just as clunky.
I’ve also thought of trying TrueNAS core… But the way I see it, it’s just clunkier TrueNAS scale without proper virtualization and with more limitations.
And those my thoughts on FreeBSD. Clunky.
E: All of that and it’s just licensed under the wrong license… I like the BSD license, I just don’t think it works for an OS.
Chimera Linux. You’d think that a distro using its own bsd-like userspace and dinit instead of systemd is janky and unusable, but it’s been one of the most painless experiences I’ve had.
Genuinely recommend trying it if you don’t have an Nvidia GPU.
Chimera Linux on the way home about it’s just a little bit of a side of the house for a while now I have to
Depends on the distribution. And how used you are to windows.
Imo, for the easiest possible experience, choose fedora and use it sorta like desktop android.
Generally, no. M$ office has some pretty invasive DRM, so your best bet to running it on linux is to run it on a windows virtual machine
Truer words have never been spoken before
It’s kind of a bad habit of mine… yeah, i got no excuses
Did you just, not read the OP and come straight to this person’s comment to argue with them based off the least charitable interpretation?
Yeah, kinda
LMDE isn’t Debian. It’s based on it, but removes a lot of the headaches, found in Debian.
Not only that, installing flatpak is also a thing. PPAs also work differently on debian, compared to ubuntu… And if the beginner has too new of a hardware setup or wants to game at all, Debian is gonna throw them for a loop.
There is a difference between Debian and Debian-based. I wouldn’t recommend Debian itself, because it’s got quite a bit of post-install setup (installing sudo, setting up flatpak, installing network manager, that kind of stuff). Linux mint is one of my go-tos when it comes to new users though…
The best advice… Just use Linux more… It’s the only way to get familiar with it
Debian is a terrible choice for beginners
GNOME has an entire extension ecosystem. Look up “gnome extension manager” on flathub.
Yes, Linux can be more problematic on some laptops. Especially ones with realtek wifi/Bluetooth or Nvidia/Intel hybrid graphics.
Yes, try EndeavorOS.
Linux gives you the full power to delete whatever, whenever. You can delete anything and everything you want without needing any workarounds.
No. Linux by default gives you root access. It’s a thing you just get. In fact you need it to update most* distros. You don’t need to “root” Linux. Root privileges are a given on most distros.
Install the other DE’s package from your distro’s repos, logout and the login interface should have an option to change your DE, the next time you login.
It’s… Complicated. TL;DR Wayland is the more modern display server that most distros and desktops are in the process of moving to. I’d suggest using it over X11, wherever possible. As for docker, that doesn’t really matter for desktop use.
Windows 11
I’ve imaged an entire 128GB SSD to my NAS…
It’s between konsole and kitty for me. Both are great.