

Yea, it seems like keeping the peace is a tough job
So many interests, so little time and money. Always interested in talking to more like-minded people!
Where you can find me on the internet: nathanupchurch.com/me
Keyoxide: https://keyoxide.org/31E809FAEA1532AC91BBDCF1EC499D3513F69340


Yea, it seems like keeping the peace is a tough job
Mint, Manjaro, Fedora, Bazzite… there are plenty of beginner friendly distros these days!


Unless you’re printing just a sheet or two at a time, it’s unlikely that you’re going to be able to print stickers for less than buying from a commercial printer.
Yea, this is an absolutely unhinged price point for a device like this
“I could never leave the cave, climbing is just too inconvenient.”
Everything everyone else said, but also it literally has more features. KDE Plasma and apps like Dolphin make Windows look like a toy.
They’ve had a few embarrassing slip-ups that are largely irrelevant to users of the distro. I used it for years and my partner still uses it. It’s a perfectly fine distro.


I agree that the learning curve is surmountable, but the fact is that many people are unwilling to use a CLI, which is valid. It’s also very easy to bork your install with EOS, which is terrifying for people who don’t have the knowledge to even begin to troubleshoot issues and who just want their system to work. IMO new GNU/Linux users, unless they specifically request a more advanced distros that will help them learn how things work, should always be recommended a distro with the lowest possible learning curve in order to keep their data safe, their confidence high, and minimise downtime. They can distro-hop later if they want to learn.


I love EndeavourOS and I use it myself, but inflicting CLI package management and pacnew files on someone fresh from Windows is like throwing a baby into shark-infested oceans to teach it to swim.
My recommendation for new users is Fedora KDE:
Mint is what I’d recommend for an elderly person who just needs to browse the internet and reply to emails, but for someone who needs to get work done it’s Fedora KDE all the way.


Fedora is a great distro. IMO it and Mint are the “it just works” distros.
Hard agree:
IMO it’s overblown. If you even have an issue at all, 99.99% of the time it’s user error. And to mitigate that, you just use timeshift with BTRFS and snapshots on GRUB.
Those are photographs…
This. Based on my (elementary) understanding of laser printers, you have to have a laser zap a transfer belt to charge it so that it will elecromagnetically attract the toner, then precisely lay down a fine layer of toner onto the belt, then lay the microplastics + iron filings from the belt onto the page, repeat this four times, then roll the page through a tiny oven to bake on the thin, shiny layer of plastic. It’s very complicated, and have you seen the price of new fuser units or transfer belts?
I mean, toner is also made out of microplastic and iron filings.


“The machine that makes the food hot”


I used to work in a Mexican restaurant. I always forgot the Spanish word for oven, so I’d say “La máquina que hace calor la comida.”
Oh Lord, yea, I try to keep to the official repos for that reason. If not there, AUR, else Flatpak, else AppImage.
Nothing like that, no. Arch (and Endeavour) are advanced distros. I’d recommend Fedora KDE if you want something easier. You could safely run updates with Discover on Fedora.
Read up on Pacman on the Arch wiki or by using the man command to learn how to update and install software. With Endeavour there is also the eos-update utility.
How? Most people here are one missed paycheck away from having their lives upended; they have no time, money, or power. Look into the stats on poverty, healthcare, etc. in the US. The state of affairs is abysmal.