I used to use ArcMenu back when I ran Gnome on PopOS and I remember you could switch the layout between a lot of different menu styles.
Wasn’t just the Win7 style one.
He/Him 🏳️🌈 🏴☠️ 🇬🇧
I used to use ArcMenu back when I ran Gnome on PopOS and I remember you could switch the layout between a lot of different menu styles.
Wasn’t just the Win7 style one.
If you don’t already know what desktop you’re going to use I’d suggest KDE Plasma. It’s pretty close to Windows out of the box, and as another comment pointed out there’s Tiled menu for it which is basically a clone of Win10s menu.
I’ve seen quite a few people rocking NixOS with Hyperland. And I thought the whole idea of Nix was to be more stable than most rolling releases?
I don’t use either so I’m far from an expert on this.
‘I’m turning into a penguin’
Good onya mate!
Luckily the laptop doesn’t use Nvidia.
Hopefully soon my own desktop won’t either >.>
You can change the core count AFTER making the VM which I agree is really annoying.
Besides that everything else has worked more reliably than others options I’ve tried.
I hate to say it but having a full desktop is becoming more and more of an enthusiast setup.
Even laptops are becoming somewhat niche as people more just use their phone for all web browsing.
I understand having updates go south on you, I do use a rolling release on my own PC, Annnnd Windows 10 before that.
But I’m paranoid about security, increasingly so in recent times. So I at least want him on an updated web browser.
I am a KDE enjoyer and use it on my own desktop. But Gnome works really well for touchscreen devices and my dad has already gotten used to it so.
Gnome Boxes has worked pretty well for me.
I honestly forgot Debian had a none stable version.
He’s not too picky with web browsers as long as it…well browses the web.
I’ll give it a go and hopefully get 4 years away from being tech support. Thanks!
That’s what I’ve heard just wanted to see if anyone on here had experience just letting it update in the background.
Videos of the Steamdeck showed me how good gaming on Linux had gotten and that’s when I started looking into switching.
I already hated using Windows 10 so didn’t take me much convincing to look at alternatives.
I’m not a programmer or work in the I.T. field in anyway. But I have been messing around with computers since I could remember so I’m no stranger to tweaking, breaking and trying to repair things.
To add to the software point, STOP buying hardware that requires some shitty software to fully work.
I did this back in the Windows 7 days years before I even knew anything about Linux. But Razers rootkit managed to load in before the Win7 login screen then crash it. After that I avoided any peripherals with mandatory software and it made my transition to Linux a lot easier than most people I know.
Pretty sure LibreWolf will ship without the Ai. They normally remove invasive stuff before compiling rather than disabling it in a config later.
As far as I’m aware there’s currently no way to setup drives in RAID without wiping both of them.
I also haven’t tried encrypting my home/boot drive but normally if I want to make a complete backup of a drive I use Clonezilla. It’s saved my bacon many time including recently copying a HDD that was in the process of dying on me.
It might be easiest to just backup your home directory and reinstall Nobara to the drives after you’d set them up in RAID.
I don’t have any NTFS drives and didn’t use that drive for Steam games
My main backup drive is internal/Sata but I cloned it to an external USB one after I started noticing issues with it
As long as they keep supporting the framework for Firefox we’ll still get working forks like LibreWolf.
Hopefully Ladybird starts picking up more in the next few years…