My first impression is not liking it. But I haven’t dug into it much. I did like the old one. The design of Hong Kong’s is more to my taste. My criticism is purely visual at this point.
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cdzero@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Windows 10 refugees flock to Linux in what devs call their "biggest launch ever"
2·11 days agoSeconding this because I have had that issue. Switched over to an AMD card and life was good.
I wouldn’t be so sure about that. The state government of Queensland, Australia just lifted a 12 year ban on IBM getting government contracts after a colossal fuck up.
cdzero@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•I just found out my fiancee wants to switch to linux, lets start a distro war, what should be her first? + other questions
2·20 days agoShow her some pictures or videos of DEs and see what she likes. If she’s someone who likes to make it look the way she wants, she might get a bit more out of KDE than Cinnamon for example.
cdzero@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Mobile Linux OS PostmarketOS finances smartphone audio & Call reliability projects
1·23 days agoAh that makes sense. Thanks.
cdzero@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Mobile Linux OS PostmarketOS finances smartphone audio & Call reliability projects
4·23 days agoWhy is that? (Genuine curiosity)
Tried dual booting Ubuntu and XP back around 2006, didn’t really see the point because gaming on Windows.
2020 got a Raspberry Pi and set up Retropie which gave me a good intro to Linux. Tried to get away from big tech in 2021 and was dual booting Mint and Windows 10. Ended up spending more time in 10 because gaming.
Got an old laptop from work and it was perfect to throw Mint on because no way it was going to handle gaming. Then I set up a media server, initially with the the Pi and then bought a cheap mini for it - and ran it on Mint. I’m primarily a console gamer now so gaming is far less of a concern for me on PC. Mint everything now.
I could distro hop or at least try something else, and maybe I will at some stage. But I’m too happy with Mint/Cinnamon to bother.
That was an enjoyable read. Keen to see more. And the website looks great both in terms of design and content.


I have my old 10 install and my Mint install on different drives. I just unplug the one I don’t want and swap them physically to change.
It was a great point of friction when I switched to Linux because booting Windows meant actual physical action which acted as a deterrent.