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Joined 10 months ago
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Cake day: September 12th, 2023

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  • You seem stuck on me supposedly not recognising he was a beginner.

    I’d encourage you to re-read the two examples I gave as to what perhaps the questions he might want to ask were. I clearly did recognise that was the mostly likely scenario.

    When they ignored the suggestion and came back with their “boil the ocean” response I responded with the only answer possible to an unanswerable question and pointed them to ground zero for linux knowledge. Install Arch and read everything you don’t understand.

    Doing that process will force them to ask specific questions that can be answered.

    Of course if you think there is any answer to the question of where someone should go to instantly learn everything then I would love you to post it. I certainly will be bookmarking it.


  • Yeah no it’s not, I offered some gentle prompts to help him refine his question into something that could be answered. As did several others.

    He ignored that and tripled down with “I want to know everything”

    That’s not an answerable question.

    You have to want to learn before you can be taught. If you can’t listen to the prompt of “ok cool, you’re keen but pick a thing” then there’s no point me trying to help.


  • One of the first lessons to learn is how to ask questions.

    The doggedness on tripling down on “I want to know everything” is remarkable but it is not going to get you a result.

    Your best starting point until you are able to articulate a more focussed question is the Arch wiki as already suggested.

    Do a bare bones arch install on a PC you don’t care about breaking (a very old one with limited hardware perhaps) while following the arch install instructions on the wiki.

    If you’re a noob then you’ll constantly run into terms you don’t understand look them up as you go.

    Ciao and good luck.

    End of lime




  • Good call, just be aware that while you can (pretty much) install any DE on any distro. Many distros will have a ready prepared install that may feel quite different to you adding the DE later.

    If that’s not clear, Ubuntu with cinnamon DE is very different to Mint Cinnamon. Same with Kubuntu (KDE Ubuntu) and KDE Neon (Debian KDE).

    All of the differences are of course replicable, they’re themes and tools and configs. But for example it took me literally most of a day to get Arch with cinnamon to feel like Mint cinnamon.



  • Ubuntu is doing an annoying attempt to generate lock-in and profits by forcing snap on everyone and making it annoyingly difficult to avoid.

    Consider one of the ubuntu derivatives (there’s a number of them, Mint, Pop etc) in preference to ubuntu itself, a debian derivative (KDE neon for example) or go with Fedora if you’re a business orientated user.