118 points

I don’t use mint, but the serenity of a reliable platform to work on by far outweighs the boringness of the system.

My computer is a tool, not a hobby (anymore).

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23 points

I feel the same way on PoPOS. I have compiled my own kernel (it’s actually not that difficult honestly) and done all matter of work at work. It’s also how I know the system is super stable and I don’t have to mess with things for my daily driver stuff.

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17 points

Mint is my favourite distro. Is everything I want from my computer.

… Except the Nvidia support. I need the actual proprietary driver for cuda and it’s not the easiest of rides.

(I switched to Nobara for better support and now the drivers memory leak. I need the courage to distrohop again)

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11 points

Debian with the mint UI. All of the debian memes, but none of the UI headaches!

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21 points

There’s also LMDE which is mint built on Debian instead of Ubuntu. The Mint guys had the foresight to prepare for a future when they’d get fed up with Ubuntu’s nonsense.

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6 points

For me it’s everything but the HDR support.

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2 points

Same. I recently spent a few hours failing to either build gamescope from source or get the flatpak versions of gamescope and steam working together. Others got it working a few months ago, but their steps didn’t work for me and I just decided I’d rather spend my time playing without HDR than keep trying at it. Wouldn’t have been so hard on a disto better supported by gamescope.

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4 points
*

Except the Nvidia support. I need the actual proprietary driver for cuda

As far as I know, the open-source driver supports CUDA now, as long as you’re using version 560 or above and the latest CUDA packages. https://developer.nvidia.com/blog/nvidia-transitions-fully-towards-open-source-gpu-kernel-modules/

We’ve been using the open-source driver with workstation-grade cards at my employer for a while. The open-source driver didn’t get full support for consumer-grade cards until version 560 which was only released around 6 months ago.

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1 point

Nobara has always been ahead on GPU drivers, I’m surprised you’re having issues

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10 points

EndeavourOS on my DD laptop with time shift in case an update wants to be a dick (or I do something stupid).

Proxmox VMs for when I’m feeling saucy.

Ain’t no one got time for an unstable work machine.

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I run my “work machine” (Windows 11 VM) in Proxmox, cause I aint running windows on bare metal 🤘 Also means it’s always available wherever I happen to be, via Apache Guacamole. 👌

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66 points

I love Mint for this reason.

When my OS works well enough that I don’t even have to think about it day to day, it’s doing its job.

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59 points

the thing I think a lot of “linux dorks” (and I use that term lovingly) forget about is that most people want to work on their computer, not work on their computer. The OS, for most people, should be the software equivalent of a motherboard – an invisible plinth upon which the actual things you care about sit. With a motherboard, that’s your GPU, CPU, RAM, etc. and with the OS, that’s the applications you run.

there’s nothing wrong with making fiddling with your computer a hobby, and I’ve been known to dabble myself over the years, but for me and most other normal people, that ends up being too much work for too little reward in the end. Mint getting to the point where you can daily drive it and not have to worry about it even if you’re a complete brainlet when it comes to Linux is a massive W.

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20 points
*

What happens if I also tinker with hardware? Does that mean I am a mother dorker?

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7 points

Why do you think I shill NixOS here and actually installed Mint on my mom’s laptop?

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6 points

As someone who used Linux Mint for a while and will always keep it in my heart as my stable transition from windows, Pop OS is just about as easy with a much nicer out-of-the-box UI (especially love the native dock). So for anyone like me, try it out.

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1 point

Pop Os is nice. I went and bought the same hardware that system76 uses and then loaded their popOs on it. Going on 4 years of use now, zero issues. Battery life is challenging… Solid laptop otherwise.

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3 points

That’s why I love Ubuntu/Mint too.

It’s boring stable.

I’ve been tempted to try out other distros, but honestly, when it works as well as it does for me, it’s too hard for me to give it up for something that might not be as stable of an experience.

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33 points

daily driving arch

why is nothing working I JUST REFUELED MY TANK! HOW COULD THAT POSSIBLY BREAK MY CAR?!

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15 points

Sounds like a driver issue

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4 points

RTFCM

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11 points

Refuel your car next time instead of your tank, sheesh

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9 points

“Everything’s shiny, Cap’n, not to fret!”

“You told me these packages were supported for another 6 weeks!”

“Your last Pacman -Syu was 6 months ago, Cap’n!”

“My OS don’t crash. If it crashes, you crashed it!”

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5 points

Me after a restart following a seemingly harmless package update:

“Ah, curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal!”

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27 points

I use Arch BTW.

Today the liquidctl integration of cooler control died, making all my fans go into a safe profile which makes a lot more noise than normal. Imagine having to listen to that for an hour trying to get it working again. I did get it working luckily, somehow the coolercontrol-liqctld python module didn’t register properly. Once I got the module registered everything was working, for now…

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9 points

Not gonna lie, I’m glad I’ve moved from Arch to Tumbleweed. Media codecs are handled worse somehow, but I haven’t had to deal with crap like this ever since…

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3 points
*

You have to add the source with the non free codec packages:

https://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Installing_codecs_from_Packman_repositories

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2 points

I tried that already, didn’t really help. That repo is currently deactivated on my machine, I think I had some (more) annoying problem with it (don’t remember all the details), but after spending quite a few hours on this problem, I essentially gave up trying to fix it. Right now, video playback works well enough that I don’t want to deal with it anymore.

And, honestly, I haven’t had a Linux installation where everything related to multimedia and graphics drivers just worked flawlessly. Ubuntu, Debian, Arch and Suse all had different issues. Switching from Nvidia to AMD didn’t help, either. Sometimes the flaws were minor and easy to ignore, but it has never ever worked as well as it does on Windows.

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8 points

yea this is probably the most annoying issue i’ve had on Arch. every time there’s a new version of Python, you’ll need to reinstall some python packages, usually the AUR stuff.

https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Python#Module_not_found_after_Python_version_update

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2 points

Is it that hard to roll back an update?

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7 points

No, but depending on what’s wrong that might not be the best thing to do. If the new version is broken, rolling back to a previous working version might fix it. But when the update broke something, it might not fix it and could even make it worse. I’d rather figure out what went wrong and how to fix it, it’s a good skill to have. And if the new version does turn out to be broken, it’s good to have dug into it so you can make a proper bug report.

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3 points

I think I would rather just use something stable.

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23 points

As a windows user I didn’t like Mint

I tried out Kubuntu and it was really nice.

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19 points

+1 Kubuntu.

KDE Plasma and Debian is where it’s at.

Comfortable, familiar OS GUI, working drivers out of the box, and a non crashing kernel with updates once a month.

And also steam works.

Steam and gaming working is a big thing.

Like 96.6% of the operating system.

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4 points

KDE Plasma and Debian is where it’s at.

Yep, in fact sadly I move away from Ubuntu after years of using because of the slow yet seemingly inexorable trend toward bloatware. Going back to the “basics” with Debian, and keeping KDE, made the transition very easy. As you also highlight, Steam works perfectly. Anyway, time to go back to Elden Ring ;)

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3 points

I just found out about the global themes! KDE is just so good.

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8 points

KDE more like goodest desktop

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1 point

Plasma kept crashing my system after waking it up from suspend. I tried fresh installs twice, with different revisions of graphics drivers. Plus, I had to install a bunch of crap from github just for my games to work properly. Lighting issues, texture issues. The mouse wouldn’t stay captured to one monitor in Fallout 4. Mint with Cinnamon just worked out of the box for me.

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3 points

Did you remember to sacrifice a pigeon?

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4 points

Why didn’t you like mint? It’s set up pretty much like windows.

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13 points
*

sdfhjlaks;fjlk;asfjkl;sfjakl;

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6 points

I’m not OP, but I also prefer KDE over Cinnamon. The size/spacing of the buttons on the left side of the start menu/application launcher looks weird to me, and while I’m sure there’s merits to Cinnamon that was enough to sour my tastes.

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2 points

A windows like linux isn’t really attractive to a windows user, they just want an intuitive but also customizable system. Chances are Windows users trying linux still have their old windows system, anyways. Why would they want a windows and also a fake windows?

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7 points

There are a lot of reasons people might want to switch to Linux from Windows, but I don’t think it’s usually the GUI that’s the main problem on the Windows side. I think it’s pretty reasonable to want the GUI to work in the way you’re used to but still want an OS that doesn’t shove ads at you, install AI without your permission, bug you about Teams and OneDrive, reboot every time it needs to update anything, etc.

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2 points

Because modern windows is garbage and old windows is full of holes. Or at least that’s why I switched 🤷

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3 points

Kubuntu is great nowadays.

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2 points

Try out Zorin then

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