I've been 100% on Linux for several years now and I don't miss Windows at all in any aspect.

But in my opinion, there is one thing that Windows does significantly better than Linux, kiosk mode.

I wish Linux had something similar. All the solutions I've been able to find are far more complex and technical to implement and use.

If anybody has suggestions for something that's easy to use on Linux that works similar to Windows kiosk mode, I'd love to try it.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
    hexagon
    ·
    29 days ago

    Permanent kiosk is the use case I am looking for. I am aware of cage, it looks pretty interesting and I am planning on trying it sometime soon.

    I should clarify, I don't think that Windows kiosks are better than Linux kiosks in their general functions, I would say Linux kiosks take that crown too.

    I'm referring specifically to the ease of setup in Windows vs Linux. With Windows, I can convert any machine to a kiosk in less than 5 minutes. No scripting, no changes to login credentials or permissions, no extra packages installed.

    I just wish Linux had something that easy. I would even be happy if it was tied to a specific distro or desktop environment, like a special mode in Plasma or Cinnamon.

    • jrgd@lemm.ee
      ·
      29 days ago

      For the most part, you won't be able to escape Unix-like paradigms when using Unix-like systems. Notably, users have to exist in some form. You don't necessarily need to give them passwords for the frontend signage, but they need to exist. The shortlist of setting up cage would be:

      It's not quite a few clicks, but this can in contrast also be fully automated trivially if it's something you need to setup more than once.

    • jacab [he/him]
      ·
      29 days ago

      It would be great if Plasma gets a kiosk mode option some day, that seems right up KDE's alley as far as the "simple by default, powerful when needed" philosophy goes.