Great! I'm a paying customer of mail and drive.
Please do Linux now. Please.
Great! I'm a paying customer of mail and drive.
Please do Linux now. Please.
In Midwest USA gas is so ridiculously cheap that it still beats total cost of ownership. Plus the new electric to install. Even central heat pump is hard to justify (on price alone I mean).
Pop! all the way for me. I think Mint was second, but something about Pop just felt so much more natural and smooth. And it had remote desktop option out of the box, whereas all the others I would have had to install something.
I installed mint, kubuntu, and pop on a 3060 laptop, and 3080 desktop, and none had issues with GPU, drivers, or gaming. I am brand new to this, starting 2 weeks ago, I'm not experienced for sure.
Lutris gave me a command line to update vulkan, or similar, but otherwise mostly CLI-free too.
Pop specifically has an Nvidia iso as well.
THAT SAID- I still agree this is a "hobby" and if you don't have time to mess with it, then Linux still isn't "it just works!!" Like people will claim.
as I keep chatting to you on a windows thread...
remembering I started linux 9 days ago, hopefully that's the biggest adventure I go on for awhile. I wonder if there's some place I should post my story, but maybe it's too specific to be wildly helpful.
Ok wow.. did I jinx myself with this post. Immediately after posting here, I began the install/config phase of a fresh reformat. Encountered a weirdness that the system couldn't sleep/suspend - immediately woke up. 8 hours later... After installing 5 different distros to confirm it was ALL linux versions (even debian)...
I spent the entire day, 8 hours, searching and referencing and troubleshooting. FINALLY one very random corner of the internet, on an ARCH-LINUX forum, a small comment mentioned that my Gigabyte B550 "had a problem" with sleep. SO THEN I had to start cross-referencing those words (couldn't "use" the Arch guide, since I was on Pop), and my dude/dudette... I was up to 1am.
Ultimately, I had to COMBINE the "solutions" of FOUR different results, across 2017-2020 (none actually on Ubuntu 22.04) to get the fix to work. Like one taught me the script, but the locations were wrong, one taught me the service I needed, but it was outdated, and then another taught how to fix a service, etc etc, cascading solutions.
SO at close to 2AM - after documenting my own guide, another raw metal install of PopOS, wrote my script & service... and... "it just works!" (pun intended). It works. It sleeps. Have to disable the Gigabyte B550M "GPP0 and GPP8" device, which are bridges to the NVMe drives.
Funny enough though, as much as this is "yup, thats Linux!" I feel like it's not fair, and not Linux's fault. This is a random, and really unlucky, issue with my specific board. I am typing this to you, while on my new PopOS install, and sleep/suspend still works.
What a ride!
It's "easy" - but that is very subjective, depending on how much you've down outside "turning Windows on". You DO need to make sure your router allows assigning a DNS ip address. Some ISP-supplied units are rather locked down.
I recommend a "kit" from somewhere like CanaKit (amazon has them), to make sure you get the parts you need. It can run on smaller/cheaper kits, but I say get a Pi3 or 4 variant.
Then following the link above, there is great documentation on install. Install "Putty" on windows, which will log into your Pi and allow remote command line, and then the entire process is copy-paste from guides.
After you finish, you may feel "oh that was easy!" - but there's still some stuff to learn and get used to along the way.
I spent the last ~10 days "playing" with many distros, including testing some current games, and I am literally right now backing up my files and about to reformat my main PC to linux (full drive, no dual). This is after only having experience with copy-paste Raspberry PI guides for my pi-hole.
Don't totally believe "oh it's so easy, nothing to configure" - those people are lying, especially if you've not used Linux before. But several flavors of Ubuntu are quite pleasant, and I appear to have found a home with PopOS. I can't find anything that "doesn't work", and the worst fixes were just quick searches for help. PopOS won due to nvidia compatibility and a nice, snappy desktop. It also was the fastest in overall reformat cycle time. My wife's computer is still Windows, if I do have any microsoft emergencies.
Oh! That makes it close again!
Maybe I need to look into arch/Manjaro, unless it's not new-friendly.
I think it's also an issue of selection between the bases.
Yes, arch is on top, but Ubuntu, mint, pop (maybe more?) Are all "Ubuntu", so their representation is divided.
Completely agree I was surprised to see Arch on top still! Plus I'm very new at all this...
Does credit karma still at least post transactions? Can't check myself until I get home from work.
Interesting to see Ubuntu for headless? Since it's such a desktop-focused choice. What are your thoughts?
I ask because right now my desktop and my headless are both PopOS (because I liked it on my desktop), but I was thinking of changing the headless to something lighter.