

I had a few weird bugs with Aurora in container management, especially Distrobox. Maybe fixed, but honestly the installation quirks of an immutable distro just piss me off.
I had a few weird bugs with Aurora in container management, especially Distrobox. Maybe fixed, but honestly the installation quirks of an immutable distro just piss me off.
After a decade of Arch, I was ready. Moved to Nobara and then vanilla Fedora with KDE. I think it was definitely the right move for me, I haven’t found anything I couldn’t install that I used to have in Arch. No regrets.
I mean, it’s bcachefs. It’s far from production ready.
If LO doesn’t work for her, there are other options like OnlyOffice and WPS Office as well.
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Wayland support in Mint is experimental, it’s not worth your time if you’re playing games. X11 is on maintenance-only life support these days.
I ran WoW for years on Arch until I stopped playing a few years ago. IDK what the experience is like these days, but it was fine then.
Personally, since I don’t like the runaround to install things on Bazzite, I would use Nobara or just vanilla Fedora with your own drivers. You can use Btrfs Assistant to set up Snapper snapshots and boot entries if you want, but I’ve never seen a Fedora update fail in any critical way. Frankly, I’d be inclined to just go with vanilla Fedora since GloriousEggroll is a busy guy and updates aren’t very up to date on Nobara IME.
Well, there wasn’t much danger of me using Zorin before, so that’s fine.
I’ve been using Flutter, I like how it’s cross-platform, mostly. I’ve generally built things for Android, but the desktop (Linux and Windows) and web versions usually compile fine with no tweaking. Couldn’t speak to the iOS versions as I can’t be arsed to jump through Apple’s hoops. You can make a nice looking app with it for whichever platform you’re targeting.
It’s very well supported, lots of examples, well documented. Not as much out there as Python for examples and troubleshooting, but not bad.
I’ve tried nothing and I’m all out of ideas.
Domain authentication and group policy analogs. Honestly, I think it’s the major reason it isn’t used as a workstation OS when it’s inherently more suited for it than Windows in most office/gov environments. But if IT can’t centrally managed it like you can with Windows, it’s not going to gain traction.
Linux in server farms is a different beast to IT. They don’t have to deal with users on that side, just admins.
And why is it Oracle?
Not as confusing as Debian though.