I went with Mint and it is great. Gives me Windows 98 vibes, inca good way. It is really intuitive.
You will need the terminal only for some more advanced stuff and maybe some setup steps, like getting Proton VPN. You really just copy and paste the commands Proton has in their instructions, that's it. Mint is not officially supported but works fine - only issue I have is that while it launches on startup just fine, I have to connect manually. Support wouldn't help as Mint is "not officially supported" but that's about it.
Switching to Linux looks like a monumental task at first, but once you establish a beginer friendly distro you'd like to use it's really straightforward. I can vouch for Mint in this regard.
It's not that I try to ne hardcore. Reddit was alright, but I felt subconciously it is going to shit for some time. But I liked the format, so I stayed. The API fiasco just showed the really bad face of it (mainly how it was handled) and made an opportunity for people to talk more about alternatives. Sure, Lemmy doesn't have as much stuff as Reddit, especially for more niche topics but I enjoy my stay much more.
You can use the export feature via the web, as others said. It will also carry over your saved posts and comments in addition to what the other guys said. But not your post and comment history. If you have some you'd like ti return to I'd recommend saving those and then exporting.
Yes, but what isnthe prize? Is the prize real? Or is it just a construct that we imagine because we expect it? Can you even truly experience the prize?
I checked and while there is not a specific issue for this, there is one suggesting multiple features of Mapy.cz (now Mapy.com) that covers it (though not by the specific name, they describe it).
I was Mapy.cz user so that thread pretty much covers all I would love to see in CoMaps:
Oh I didn't mean it in a bad way. The dramatic Neeson with Naked Gun style humor worked on me. I don't remember the original movies that much but I felt it did have similar energy.
As a child, has to be Diablo 2. I had no idea what I was doing but I had fun. And it got me into reading, actually. I read some books now and then, but wasn't an avid reader. But when I played Diablo 2, I found out there are books from the Diablo world and got one. I remember when I got home I was like "ok, since I got the book I will read one chapter and then go to playing" - well I didn't turn on the PC for 3 days until I have finished the book. And then went to get more.
Another was World of Warcraft (though I was not exactly a kid by then). It made me fall in love with MMOs, a genre which I still love (though no game holds me today quite as WoW did - still hope for one though). And thanks to it I got to know people I'm friends with to this day.
Everyone has whatsapp and not signal is pretty much the gist of it