• rumschlumpel
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    52 years ago

    I’m at the point where I actually don’t want to reinstall anymore, because it’s a pain in the ass. I’m still on Ubuntu 20.04, even though the new LTS version has been out for more than a year by now. Ubuntu’s current direction doesn’t exactly give me an incentive to update, either, but to actually rectify that situation I’d need to reinstall as well.

    • IHeartBadCode
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      42 years ago

      If you ever do decide to jump, I recommend PopOS. Based on Ubuntu, no snaps.

      • rumschlumpel
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        32 years ago

        I’d rather switch to Debian, TBH. Derivative distros (or rather double-derivative) like PopOS don’t feel all that safe to me.

    • dotfiles
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      12 years ago

      Backup all your config files, reinstall OS, restore config files. Done. When I do it, the whole process takes a half hour tops. Let me know if you need help with that.

  • @ssjmarx@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    installing something goes slightly awry

    system still runs fine but there are a couple empty read-only folders on the drive

    “Oh no! My perfect system is BORKED!”

    reinstall the os

  • @Alkider@lemmy.world
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    22 years ago

    Sounds about right, especially with AMD drivers. Windows 10 messes them up and nukes the os, leaving linux as the only thing that works on my PC lol

  • dotfiles
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    22 years ago

    Rolling release means I never have to reinstall linux. Unless it breaks and I don’t know how to fix it. So far It’s been 1 year on Arch.

      • dotfiles
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        2 years ago

        A rolling release Linux distribution continuously provides updates as they become available, without the need for an OS re-installation to get the latest released version.

        • @shrugal@lemmy.world
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          12 years ago

          You can update a standard release distribution just fine, no need to reinstall anything. It does basically the same thing as a rolling release, just not as often and more packages at once.

  • Saturdaycat
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    2 years ago

    Ughh this is me , I’m going to do it. It’s been since 2016 I’ve had Linux installed. Why not again

  • @samaritan1331@lemmy.world
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    12 years ago

    I had a perfectly working Debian desktop a year ago but I still wanted to try out fedora. I thought I found the perfect distro. Fast forward 3 different distros later. I’m now on MicroOS. I promise this will stay for a while. (Will it?)

  • Pastor Haggis
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    12 years ago

    I’ve been thinking of going back to linux off and on again. The last time I did it, the games I wanted didn’t work on Linux but that was, primarily Halo Infinite, but at this point most of those games suck. I’ll have to check if Diablo will work and I’ll especially be upset if Started doesn’t work, but Linux is very enticing again.

    The other issue I had last time was seeing fan curves was a nightmare, so I’ll just have to find a good tool for that.

  • Bush Wizard
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    12 years ago

    I have been going through this dance for the last year, and I swear if not for clip studio I would have already dumped windows a long time ago. I have found an alternative for almost everything else (OneNote, Premiere, etc) but dammit, those vector layers are like a lifeline for me.

    Blender’s grease pencil is looking very appealing, but it’s sheer scale e scaring the shit out of me lol

  • AnonymousLlama
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    12 years ago

    Recently had to get Linux running on a VM so I could get kbin running locally for some PRs. I’m still struggling to understand what’s eating my ram. The VM has 12GB of ram associated and it just runs docker, node and npm, I’m really at a loss as to what’s eating it all (when in the process view there’s no process even showing high usage)

    Anyone know if this is a Ubuntu on a VM thing, a docker thing etc?

  • @cashews_win@lemmy.world
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    02 years ago

    Since switching to Arch Linux distros I’ve never felt the need to re-install. Arch has also been the most reliable distro for me which flies in the face of convention that rolling distros can be unreliable.

  • @Waitwuhtt@lemmy.world
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    02 years ago

    I’m on the verge of switching my gaming PC to Linux, the bloat of windows is becoming too much. I’m fairly PC literate but don’t know anything about Linux or distros. It is intimidating to commit to a platform where I know so little. Does anyone have any tips regarding distros or learning the basics?

    • @rgamuffin@lemmy.world
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      22 years ago

      Look at ProtonDB to see what games you own will run on Linux.

      Pop OS: is a good Ubuntu based distro.

      The Nobara Project: is a Fedora based gaming distro.

      Drauger OS: is another good gaming specific distro.

      Each of these has their own pros and cons depending on your needs and hardware. Google is your best friends here. You will have issues with a game not working like you want. Again Google will be your best friend here.

      My biggest suggestion is to embrace the challenges. Understand that in the last two years alone gaming on Linux has improved dramatically. Stay with it Linux is always maybe a better experience overall even if some of our games don’t work right now.

      • curiosityLynx
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        22 years ago

        With Redhat going kinda closed-source, will its derivatives like Fedora remain viable?

        Don’t remember how Canonical shit the bed, but I’m wary of using Ubuntu derivatives.

        What would you recommend for a distro that keeps on top of security updates and is at least acceptable in terms of running games like AoE2 DE or The Outer Worlds?

    • HangnMoss
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      12 years ago

      As a Linux home user that uses windows for work, I recommend you start by debloating your windows. I prefer the Powershell script found here. There are multiple options for debloating windows on github, some also include tools to disable telemetry. I prefer more control over what telemetry gets disabled, and use O&O Shutup to manage that separately.

      Then install a few Linux distros in a free hypervisor (Hyper-V/VirtualBox/VMware Player) on your lean windows. Note, Hyper-V is only avaliable on Pro versions of windows. Experiment until you find a Linux distro you are comfortable with. Build your confidence before you take that jump, and you’ll be more likely to stick with it.

      If you still find you may occasionally need windows, you can always dual boot, or run windows inside a hypervisor on Linux.

    • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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      22 years ago

      I’ve wanted to like Linux for such a long time.

      But I don’t want to have to troubleshoot simple things when I’m at home just trying to enjoy myself. I don’t want to have to figure out why this or that won’t install or why the instructions for this piece of software aren’t working like they say it should.

      I use Windows because it’s just easy. Not great, but at least I can install applications with zero issues.

      The idea of Linux is awesome, but the execution is so messy.

    • darcy
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      02 years ago

      yeah, linux, famous for being bloated and slow on old laptops, especially old thinkpads