Looks nice, I like the lowercase g
Looks nice, I like the lowercase g
I just a few weeks ago successfully switched my father-in-law’s mid-2011 iMac (out of support for years) to Nobara 40. It took some finagling with the SIP settings and some other macOS specific stuff before it would boot the liveUSB but once it did, it works flawlessly OOTB.
Pretty incredible how frictionless the transition was for him. He even chose to switch from chrome to the default firefox, despite me having setup chromium for him to compare (but he knows its there if a website doesn’t load right in Firefox). He’s in his 60’s and not a techy person at all. Everything is so intuitive with KDE these days he picked it up no problem.
Only downside is background sync for KDE connect doesn’t work on iOS yet, seems this is a sticking point for most FOSS apps for some reason. It was causing disconnect/pairing issues for us. But I showed him localsend for now and it works flawlessly for transferring photos from the phone to the computer.
He’s happy with all the default apps and onlyoffice (which I switched out from libreoffice as I’ve found much more consistent formatting when sending/receiving to MSoffice users)(maybe this is outdated, haven’t tried the new release). Printing and scanning was plug and play. Apple trackpad and keyboard auto-paired. I showed him how to setup widgets and he went nuts. Overall 9.95/10 would convert a normie again.
Forgot to mention there’s also the linux upskill community on programming.dev as a continual improvement tool
Edit: spelling
Very useful fallback even for non-arch based distros if you cant find the info you seek for your distro.
I agree obsidian style notes (and zettelkasten in general) are great for learning stuff (I use logseq for my PKM so quite similar); however, I have heard the suggestion for linux/SYS admin type stuff its better to not take notes, and learn how to find the info you need in the docs (RTF(riendly)M). This builds the skill to find the info you need going forward, even if its something you have not previously studied and taken notes on and even if the ideal method has changed since you first learned it.
Just something to consider
Unless you can’t pass through a GPU if you need one…
Spoken like someone who has never tried it. Thats quite literally exactly what vfio mentioned above me is for.
Exactly; if there’s something on windows you “cant give up” then just spin up a VM and run it in there.
I liked learning through osmosis watching linux videos in bed as I fall asleep. Stuff like this
Print out a linux basics cheatsheet for whatever distro you’re on.
Use and practice.
Oh and don’t forget timeshift snapshots.
With your usecase you should have a smooth transition. I’ll recommend you skip straight to NobaraOS since you are replacing your windows and gaming on it.
Based on fedora and made by GloriousEggroll, the maker of protonGE. It the best desktop linux experience (including gaming and laptop specific usecases as well) I’ve had after distrohopping for a few years.
For the love of god save yourself the headache of constantly trying to undo ubuntu’s stupid decisions and just don’t bother with that (unwilling to just die) common recommendation. IMO its like fighting with windows’ little sibling for control over your computer. Defeats the purpose of switching to linux and gives a v. bad first impression to new users.
P.S. don’t dual-boot this shit is constant, its almost like Microsoft does it on purpose 🧐 just commit and you’ll have an easier time.
I literally made an account the day before and transferred from GitHub, then wake up and see this. FFS just my luck.
<@:^)