My brother is 12 and just like other people of his age he can’t use a computer properly because he is only familiar with mobile devices and dumbed-down computers

I recently dual-booted Fedora KDE and Windows 10 on his laptop. Showed him Discovery and told him, “This is the app store. Everything you’ll ever need is here, and if you can’t find something just tell me and I’ll add it there”. I also set up bottles telling him “Your non-steam games are here”. He installed Steam and other apps himself

I guess he is a better Linux user than Linus Sebastian since he installed Steam without breaking his OS…

The tech support questions and stuff like “Can you install this for me?” or “Is this a virus?” dropped to zero. He only asks me things like “What was the name of PowerPoint for Linux” once in a while

After a week I have hardly ever seen my brother use Windows. He says Fedora is “like iOS” and he absolutely loved it

I use Arch and he keeps telling me “Why are you doing that nerdy terminal stuff just use Fedora”. He also keeps explaining to me why Fedora better than my “nerd OS”

287 points

“Is this a virus?”

Your 12-year-old brother is more security-conscious than most of the adults I work with.

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133 points

Non techies have two settings. Either everything is a virus or nothing is a virus.

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35 points

Still better security consciousness than 99% of the population.

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34 points

Nah, my father is one of those who thinks everything is a virus, especially emails. And so he installs all kind of “clean your PC from viruses”-software …

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10 points

That’s because everything is a virus.

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12 points

I remember an old story about a father deleting bat.exe off the family computer and blaming his son for breaking the computer with his Batman game.

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20 points
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My dad is in his 70s, but he is thankfully rather aware of these kinds of things. He forwards me messages or calls me to ask “is this legitimate?”

He’s aware of computer viruses, but I think he’s really on the lookout for scams, which is an interesting and effective approach.

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1 point

My brother is the kind of people that installs stuff without reading a single option, just ‘next next next’ until the installer closes.

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206 points

This is a lovely story

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220 points

I absolutely lost it the first time he called me a nerd for using Arch and straight up started doing Fedora elitism lmao

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92 points

Time to become a toxic arch elitist user now.

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8 points

Time to replace Fedora with Gentoo.

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33 points

What your brother sees in Arch: Oh no another driver update, let me write a paragraph in computer language

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28 points
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Deleted by creator
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24 points

Tbh he’s got a point

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12 points

AHAHAH that is so cute

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8 points

“Btw i use fedora”

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5 points

Love at first sight really.

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170 points

He also keeps explaining to me why Fedora better than my “nerd OS”

lol he’s already a true linux user.

But probably best to have a talk about gatekeeping linux though. There’s no wrong way to run linux.

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37 points

haha I thought exactly the same thing lol He’s linuxplained why his distro is better. That’s the spirit.

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23 points

I mean, there are definitely wrong ways to run Linux, like a single root user with no password, but your point is well taken. If Linux fanboys would keep the subjective gatekeeping to themselves the new user experience would be much more pleasant.

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10 points

Hey now single root user no password is all that will fit on my 2 kb hard drive

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6 points

Or a disabled root account with unconfigured sudo and/or doas

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3 points

I have an auto deployed server with only a root user and service accounts… I think that’s valid. :)

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4 points

True, but when done in jest I think distro wars are fine. The charm is that each distro has stuff you’ll like and dislike.

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132 points
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My older sibling did something similar - getting Ubuntu installed on my very first laptop (a 9" netbook) back in 2008 and replacing windows XP. But be warned: it is a slippery slope. At the time , I just wanted a computer that I could take class notes on (high school), and never wanted to touch programming or the terminal. Now I have a PhD in computer science. I still don’t use Arch though.

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10 points

Tangent, what’s it like going for grad and post grad in computer science? I’ve wanted to try teaching for the longest time but I learned very little new material over the course of my Bachelor’s and the only thing that made it worth my time was the math content lol

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38 points

The further you go, the more specialized it gets. There are people I know doing their PhDs in CS, but it was pretty much just straight math. I’m now an expert in a very specific area of robotics. But it’s only worth it if you have a specific reason to go to grad school, like for a particular career path. If it’s just because you like learning, it’s not worth it. There’s a big opportunity cost.

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3 points

Totally fair. Thank you!

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7 points

Same with me but it was 2012 iirc. My sister installed ubuntu on my first laptop(which was a hand-down btw). Never used windows in any capacity in my whole life except for school.

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94 points

He also keeps explaining to me why Fedora better than my “nerd OS”

Your brother is the wise guy of the bell curve

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11 points

He used a wormhole

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4 points
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Or he’s currently on the left, and he’ll be on the bell’s top by the time @yogurtwrong@lemmy.world is on the other side?

On another note, I feel this so much. I went from “Mint seems comfortable”, to “Ooh slackware, i3 WM, running Arch with i3 completely built up and customised by none other than me!” back to “I can set shortcuts in Mint, and it’s comfier there anyway”

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2 points

Yeah, same but with Fedora: since Gnome 40+ came out I got back to it and never left again

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