- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.world
You’ve heard the “prophecy”: next year is going to be the year of the Linux desktop, right? Linux is no longer the niche hobby of bearded sysadmins and free software evangelists that it was a decade ago! Modern distributions like Ubuntu, Pop!_OS, and Linux Mint are sleek, accessible, and — dare I say it — mainstream-adjacent.
Linux is ready for professional work, including video editing, and it even manages to maintain a slight market share advantage over macOS among gamers, according to the Steam Hardware & Software Survey.
However, it’s not ready to dethrone Windows. At least, not yet!
I don’t think that editing fstab is a necessary step in this process, going by the first set of instructions here.
I wonder if the GUI steps are Gnome or Ubuntu specific. The same steps in KDE work, except half or more applications won’t recognize it.
I’ll have to check that out. I remember it was like that on popOS but for whatever reason I ended up doing it the fstab way, I think it wouldn’t stay after reboots or something and after I learned about fstab I just copy pasta’d the same thing over instead of looking more into it