110 points
*

No, no, this is the peak OS installation menu:

😜

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43 points

Oh hey, I remember that screen. I have seen it many times. Many, many times. Oh God, so many times.

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20 points

So, just to clarify, you’ve seen it many times?

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2 points

It needed many reinstalls! So yes, many times, indeed.

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3 points

Still more than you remember

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33 points

Ironically, this one is better designed than their current one lmao.

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26 points

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4 points

This one is second not OpenSUSE is still the best for me XD

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3 points

I was genuinely about to say how the openSUSE installer looks incredibly similar to the Windows XP one

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1 point

There you go, peasants.

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4 points

Everyone is nostalgic to XP so they decide to make part of a different operating system look very similar to it just for nostalgia sake

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2 points

Another old school, it’s very similar

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61 points

No, Ark Linux (not Arch) had Tetris in their installer, so we could play while we waited. It has been discontinued unfortunately.

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19 points

Wow I’d never heard of anything like that before, that’s pretty dang cool.

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15 points

I know some Minecraft mod packs used to have pong integrated in their loading screens.

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16 points

Small history lesson for those interested: the reason we didn’t see much of this sort of thing is because Namco actually had it patented, up until late 2015. Originally, you could play Galaxian while you waited for Ridge Racer to load! (At the expense of everyone else being able to have little loading screen games…)

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47 points

Just because of the loading bar? You’re easy to please 😁.

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21 points

I mean, it is something surprisingly absent from most installers

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13 points

You apparently haven’t tried Ubuntu in 20 years? Canonical has had a very clean Windows-ish experience forever, though even back in the day, Suse always had a pretty decent one as well.

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-3 points

Ubuntu is still just one series of distros

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5 points

It is also a lie as the installer doesnt know any percentages.

But afaik Debian installer, Calamares, Fedora Anaconda and more all have loading bars

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15 points

Not just loading bar it’s everything about the aesthetic in the menu, logo on the top, installation steps on the side and loading bar on the middle just enough to fill the screen while not being too crowded or overwhelming

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6 points

And then there’s the installation options that look and behave exactly like a regularly themed Qt application (which it probably is). Wonderful!
Okay, I’m coming from Gentoo and Debian, cut me some slack, I’m easy to please regarding installers :-P

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2 points

No shame in that, I also get the warm fuzzies when I see a nice installer.

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1 point

yeah, if I remember, they use something called libYUI which translates to a Qt application or TUI depending on requirements

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2 points

Was just kidding 😁 Keep that feeling, it’s a great one ! I love to see other people enjoying such simple but powerful brain flooding dopamine ! That awwwwww moment is really enjoayble, for others and yourself !

Hope you will have fun with openSUSE ! I’m also thinking to switch from Debian to OpenSUSE for my daily drive. Debian as server is fantastic, but got some quirks running it with backports and testing.

Maybe a skill issue? Probably, but trying something different will give me the necessary boost to find out 😄

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35 points

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19 points

Help, why does this picture feel like it’s ever so slightly tilted?

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12 points

I didn’t see it until I read your comment

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4 points

When I look at it as a thumbnail, it looks like the installation box is popping out of my phone. When I fulllscreen it, the illusion vanishes for me.

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4 points

Yes, I guess it’s just an illusion, zoomed too before to check, but after zooming out, I still see it wrong lol

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2 points

I bet it’s something to do with the drop shadow. Seems like the center of mass is shifted, eh?

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3 points

Much better

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20 points

Yeah it’s alright. I’ve been using Tumbleweed on my Desktop PC for the last few months and I gotta say it’s mid. They do hard drive unlocking in Grub instead of in the initfs which means that only LUKS 1 and with that only the not-so-secure PDKDF is supported, instead of argon2id which is the modern KDF you want to use. This is a small and annoying oversight in the distros security which is why I will not be using it in the future

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6 points

Doesn’t GRUB support LUKS2 nowadays? I know that wasn’t the case a year ago or so, but I didn’t see a notice on the Archwiki last time I checked.

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4 points

Not sure how up to date this is, but it claims LUKS2 is only partially supported by GRUB https://docs.voidlinux.org/installation/guides/fde.html

LUKS2 is only partially supported by GRUB; specifically, only the PBKDF2 key derivation function is implemented, which is not the default KDF used with LUKS2, that being Argon2i (GRUB Bug 59409). LUKS encrypted partitions using Argon2i (as well as the other KDF) can not be decrypted. For that reason, this guide only recommends LUKS1 be used.

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2 points

You can fix this by manually placing the /boot partition outside of luks when you do your install. I did it and now my opensuse system boots in a reasonable time. Annoying to do but 100% worth it.

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1 point

Luckily most installers support installing wherever you tell them to. So if you install from a live image you should be able to set it up the way you want. I’ll definitely try that as soon as a I do my next installation.

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