More devices need to come with Linux out of the box. It should be possible to buy a device with Linux at your local Walmart.
It won’t, but it will be sold, and the moderation and censorship practices will change.
Be sure to remember to Activate Linux after a motherboard switch!
First full time distro was Manjaro. First exposure to desktop Linux was Ubuntu on a crappy school netbook. Now I use Arch (btw)
Like others have said, the community aspect of Lemmy allows me to follow things I enjoy, not people who may or may not post something I like. Additionally, even a simple algorithm that sorts content based on perceived relevancy makes it so I can see the stuff I want to see first (though someone did point out that that isn’t entirely fair, but the “New” sort does provide that experience).
Even if packages weren’t broken, the fact that they make it easy to use the AUR is problematic because the AUR expects the latest packages from the Arch Repos. Often, AUR packages will break on Manjaro for that reason.
Finally my qt6 apps have a consistent theme!
An “industry standard” that Google seems to have complete control over. Sound like another failed Google messaging app.
I feel like the web interface could be better. I would like to be able to hide posts, use keybindings to navigate, and generally the overall performance could be better. But we have third party clients, which is a huge plus!
Reminds me of the Windows 7 launch parties lol
Least idiotic suburban planning.
But please don’t give unsolicited advice about Linux. No one wants that.
What?! You are doing something without a profit motive? That’s impossible. 🤯🤯🤯🤯
Arch might actually be a great start if you had prior experience in Linux and want to learn more about it. For example, if you are in computer science and you are doing systems programming you probably have used Linux at the command line, Arch might be a great way to continue working on similar projects.
Before Chromebooks, my towns school system had netbooks which were pitifully slow on Windows. They installed Ubuntu instead. The netbooks still sucked, but probably sucked a lot less.
Don’t like these either, but it’s a nice break from being on my feet all day.
Galileo seems to be what they are calling the environment the USB boots to. This environment is moving from the XFCE desktop environment to the different KDE plasma desktop environment. These environments can both be customized, but they are very different under the hood. I imagine that you can still choose XFCE and other desktop environments from the installer.
Not a specific experience but I am more confident about contributing to discussions.
I noticed that the computer was magnetic and played with magnets around it. The hard drive was totally wiped. Now my parents could have reinstalled the operating system but they just got a new computer instead.