• wantonviolins [they/them]
    ·
    3 years ago

    Well, anecdotally I’ve had a bit more trouble with Mint than any official Ubuntu flavor. For your first real try, I’d recommend going with just regular, plain old Ubuntu. The documentation and online resources benefit from its popularity and it doesn’t change much between releases.

    Linux is much nicer to maintain than Windows even when you’re not fiddling with the nuts and bolts of it, but I haven’t found a situation where avoiding the command line has made my life any easier. Just accept that you’ll have to learn a tiny bit of command line stuff (that will save you time and headaches down the line) and don’t sweat it if you don’t remember how to do something, there’s tons and tons of info online.

    • RandyLahey [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      i appreciate the response, and im not trying to call you out or anything or start a struggle session here, but i feel like its a real blind spot of the open source community in general to not realise just how much of an absolute dealbreaker command-line stuff is for so many people. i get for people in the it sector etc that a lot of it is second-nature, and im sure its a timesaver in a lot of instances, but i will take the worst piece-of-shit gui over the most elegant and intuitive command line 1000% of the time and i dont think im alone. im not super techy but i grew up on dos, ive tried debian and redhat in the past, ive recently had to muck around in shell in macos, and i fucking hate command line. if anything, in many ways a little bit of command line is worse than a lot of command line, because youre just parroting what some guide is telling you without the slightest idea of what youre actually doing

      • wantonviolins [they/them]
        ·
        3 years ago

        no struggle session needed my friend, I completely understand your points

        Linux, unfortunately, still suffers from a lot of stuff that’s pretty anti-user, where something that should have been a solved problem 10 years ago is still missing or half-baked, and the people working on it don’t bother improving it because it doesn’t hinder their personal workflow. The relative necessity of the command line is one of those things.

        • invalidusernamelol [he/him]
          ·
          3 years ago

          With KDE and Gnome being what they are now, you can basically avoid using the terminal in 2021. It might still be necessary for some more machine level stuff, but for general purpose you can do most things in a GUI now. AppImages work like exes on windows too so you don't even need to use your package manager, just use whatever the built in "store" is for your distro.

        • RandyLahey [he/him]
          ·
          3 years ago

          these days my home desktop is mostly web, piracy, videos, and vidya, nothing terribly fancy

          i realise the vidya will likely mean keeping a windows partition anyway

          • wantonviolins [they/them]
            ·
            3 years ago

            Lutris+Wine has been great for me, even on heavier/newer stuff like UE4 games

            90% of what I play could run on a toaster from 2006 though so ymmv

          • Pirate [none/use name]
            ·
            edit-2
            3 years ago

            All of these things can be done on linux with no need for the command line whatsoever but you might have trouble with running multiplayer vidya that don't support linux natively unless they're one of these (there are other multiplayer games that also work)

      • Awoo [she/her]
        ·
        edit-2
        3 years ago

        If what you're saying were wrong we'd still be using ms-dos. It is astounding that many are still blind to it and how every single time someone says "you'll still need to use command line though" they are essentially writing down the dealbreaker for the vast majority of people.