87 points

The Linux community is united! (Unless you mention Rust, or Wayland, or systemd, or Snap, or GNOME, or…)

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5 points

You’ve made an enemy for life!

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5 points

Rust as well? In what way? (Genuinely interested, just don’t know much about that community)

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33 points

There’s an ongoing debate tantrum about introducing Rust code to the kernel. Some people are pushing for it, some people have made it their life’s purpose to make sure that doesn’t happen, it has led to a wave of maintainers resigning, and Linus is sitting with his thumb up his arse when his leadership is needed.

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4 points

Interesting, thank you for explaining!

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1 point

GNOME>KDE

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5 points

I used to prefer Gnome for the longest time. It seemed to be lighter on resources and cleaner. I tried KDE again a few years ago and was blown away at how much better it has gotten. KDE has quickly become my go to. The ease of customization, theming, and the wealth of settings sold me on it.

I ought to go back and try Gnome again since it’s been a few years. I’m sure they’ve gotten better too since I last used them.

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33 points

Peace was never an option

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51 points

Wet Ass Penguins?

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20 points

Bring a bucket and a mop.

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5 points

For this wet-ass penguin

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5 points
*

Wireless Ass-Penguins

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1 point

Now we need Cardi B Linux alongside Hannah Montana Linux.

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21 points

I honestly hated idea of linux for soooo long. Ew. Like ew. Doesn’t work, borks, needs command line, wtf is that steaming pile of…yeah. Ew.

But insert the goddamn bird with cracker meme after I tried Nobara last year (tried some other distros too). When Windows 10 loses support, I am pretty confident that Nobara will fill most of my needs.

And, well, have some IT experience, with linux too, so occasional terminal isn’t that bad. I was simply afraid of constantly having to work in terminal.

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10 points

I use CLI a lot because I find it much more convenient, so I’m genuinely curious where do you actually still need it in a modern distro as a standard user?

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6 points

It’s not that you neeeed it for most basic stuff, but if you search how to do something the results are more commonly terminal commands.

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7 points

Which is honestly a good thing, it’s so much better than instructions that are like click here -> drag to the left -> open a three level deep menu -> check the box -> reopen that menu -> click go. Or even worse, instructions that are a video

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2 points

In my experience learning Windows 10 for my job, the results of searching for how to do something are: ‘click-this’ tutorials that don’t work because Microsoft changed something in the next edition, editing the registry, or PowerShell commands. The registry editing sometimes doesn’t work because Microsoft changed something. The PowerShell method is the way to go, because Microsoft has embraced the command line.

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1 point

Yep, when posting how to do something, between ‘select an example and paste to answer’ or ‘series of screenshots to illustrate a gui way’, the text copy/paste wins on laziness of answer.

Besides, there’s a decent chance that a person has to solve it for some arbitrarily large number of systems, and speaking in CLI is a vocabulary that can more trivially be made headless across a bunch of systems.

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2 points

I just use it to get updates with apt-get or Pacman or yay. I haven’t seen any other way to update non flatpack programs on the distros I use

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3 points
*

My kids’ PCs have a gnome extension that says how many updates there are and you can install them by clicking on the icon. Could be handy if you use gnome too.

https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/1010/archlinux-updates-indicator/

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1 point

I actually use KDE’s discover to apply all the updates (flathub and yum). Mainly because I’m lazy and the update icon appears and it’s quick to just click through.

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2 points

Well, the thing is, you almost don’t. But like the other commenter said, most instructions are for terminal when something happens and from my - fairly limited as of now - experience, terminal is still key to linux configuration.

What was mostly generating the Ew response was the fact that linux isn’t really known for being newbie friendly. Then getting hit with headless debian during studies also didn’t exactly change what I thought.

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1 point

I understand your argument, just isn’t the GUI version meant to work without external instructions? Otherwise I don’t really see a point in it. That instructions are mainly for terminal is probably because it’s easier and clearer than posting screen shots, and that for both authors and users. But that might just be my impression.

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1 point

Hmm, mount a network drive, or any drive? On Windows it’s a few clicks in Explorer, but I’m not aware of it being that easy on any distro I used. Always had to go into /etc/fstab manually

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1 point

Mounting of USB drive is automatic, SFTP can be done with file browser (bookmarking). Permanent nfs mounting, like you do in fstab I don’t know, maybe in the “drives” program. I would honestly argue that this is not a casual use case, but yes, I get your point. In the end it simply depends on the desktop environment.

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1 point

I think the file managers do this for you nowadays, though I generally use ‘cloud’ style file syncing nowadays and so I’ll confess to not having done it lately.

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25 points

Wait until someone starts complaining about bad GUI…

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4 points

Which one? 😁

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