About two weeks ago, I posted my frustrations with Linux, and how it seemed unstable and breaks too easily. At the time, that had been my experience every time I tried Linux over the last 20 years.
But I made an effort to persist, tried some other distros, and found my happy place!
Thank you to the people who sent me on the path of "atomic" distros, and mentioning the likes of Bazzite, Bluefin, and Aurora (All from the Universal Blue group).
The last two weeks have been pure Linux joy on my daily-driver (Framework laptop), with only a few problem-solving expeditions.
I was looking for stability, and got it!
As a Windows user since the 90s, it's such a breath of fresh air to use an OS that's clean and designed to serve me (and not the corporation in charge!).
And I've also replaced windows on the minipc hooked up to our family room TV, and will also replace Windows that I've got on a lesser used desktop.
It's exciting to see just how far Linux has come, and even though I'll likely need to learn some terminal commands, I don't feel it's necessary for most people to even get into that.
The GUI in both KDE and Gnome already offer more than Windows. And I'll never have to see those goddamn pop-ups and banners about Office 365, OneDrive, or Xbox, at least not outside a VM!)
I mean, even just the fact that everything seems to simply work (i.e. drivers) without messing around is mind-blowing. Huge kudos to anyone who's helped to build Linux into what it is today.
It'll be interesting to see how my desktop handles it. It's like 15 years old, and I remember always having to mess around to get things working right, especially wifi.
I think Linux looks intimidating when you're first getting into it, but once you realize it's not user-hostile by design like windows, you really begin to appreciate the experience.
Same. Bazzite was the first distro I used that had a great "out of the box" experience, with fractional scaling, gear lever, gamescope, caffeine, tiling shell, seamless background updates, etc.
Cool to see them grow beyond their initial notariety as a handheld distro and into one of the top recommended distros for beginners.
Do you think Aurora is a good choice for beginners? A friend of mine wants to switch and I'm still looking for a good match.
It should be immutable, use KDE, have Nvidia drivers pre-installed (or a easy UI for installing them), not be maintained by a single maintainer and should not have non-OS applications like Steam pre-installed.
Aurora is a great choice given those parameters. I also installed it on my wife's laptop and she hasn't had any problems. I even edit video in Resolve on my Aurora thinkpad so I know the nvidia drivers are fine.
I've been a Linux user for years and had plenty of similar experiences when trying to make the transition.
Let me tell you, I know very minimal amounts of commands off the top of my head, but I know for certain if I have an issue or want to change something advanced, there is definitely an excellent article or post somewhere that can help me
Brew for native commandline apps, Distrobox for software that runs on other distros. Boxbuddy (GUI) is an easy tool to create and manage distroboxes, and the default terminal app, ptyxis, allows you to switch distros easily from the top-left dropdown.
The answer is toolbox or similar container systems. It runs a sandboxed version of another OS inside your Bazzite install with minimal performance overhead. Not quite the same thing as virtualization, but thinking in those terms can be helpful for those new to the concept. It won't let you run and install everything, but it sure will handle a lot!
Love to read this, I'm exactly on the same journey! Was using Mint until a few days ago, and now I'm on Aurora. There is a bit of a learning curve due to the atomic factor (some apps aren't in Discover), but overall I'm happy with the stability.
Linux is truly wonderful and I look forward to learning more and seeing it grow. Fuck Microsoft, I'm done with their crap.
Yes! As much as I wanted to love Mint and Ubuntu, they just didn't work well for me. Aurora has been amazing.
I am trying to stay with Flatpak apps (for convenience and probably stability, too), but I feel pretty safe installing apps outside of Discover, if needed. Fortunately, most of the stuff I use is already supported as a Flatpak, so it hasn't been a big shock.
I feel like if people started on Linux first, moving to Windows would seem like a massive PITA and a huge backwards! I'll be moving my wife to Bluefin in the near future. She's unbelievably hopeless with computers, but I honestly think it would be easier for her to use Gnome on Bluefin than Windows!
I agree with you, lol. The other day I tried windows 11 at a store, and it was a pain. The learning curve was bigger from windows 10 -> 11 than from windows 10 -> KDE.
I'm curious about your choice of Gnome for your wife, though. If she's hopeless with computers, why give her a less (imho) intuitive DE to play with?
Honestly I've daily-driven Fedora, Mint, and Ubuntu and I can't say I saw a fraction of the problems that you did.
I will say that I struggled with PopOS -- despite claiming to be the most Nvidia and gaming friendly distro, it gave me endless trouble with the Nvidia graphics in my gaming laptop. Mint and Ubuntu, though, never had a whiff of trouble. I'm on Ubuntu now with no complaints.
I really don't know what the problem was with Ubuntu. I had issues every time I tried... but funny enough, these problems seemed to only happen if I was running a live USB or an installed copy. Ubuntu or Mint on a VM seems to work just fine! LOL
Oh well, I'm quite happy with where I'm at now, but I'm glad that my past issues don't seem common or "normal".
Same issues with Pop!_OS -- I'm having a much better time on Nobara. But you're making me want to try Kubuntu... still haven't found my happiest place but I'm happy :)
While I run straight Fedora on some of my systems now, I do agree the Atomic versions are a boon for stability.
Used to use Ubuntu and Mint for desktops, but they are a bit too vintage with the kernel and package versions, and everything is moving very fast with Wayland replacing X11 and lots of kernel driver improvements for modern hardware (especially AMD hardware), so being on Fedora is the next best thing to the bleedingest edge Arch when it comes to uptodateness.