Just made the switch to Linux as a lifetime Windows user.
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Hell yeah!
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wine works without issues for me on mint 22.1. I use foobar2k, and most games I play are windose only. but I use proton on those, not wine.
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Once Revolt gets screen sharing.
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Like SteamOS, it boots into game mode and provides the option to switch to desktop. There are versions of it that don't have the game mode but I'm using my PC primarily for gaming. As an atomic distro the system files are read-only. It's called atomic because the entire system is updated in a single operation instead of just updating individual packages. This means that installing new software can be a bit tricky requiring things like package layering or DistroBox.
One of the big things is the ability to just rollback your system to an earlier version if the update broke anything.
Bazzite is a custom image based on Fedora Silverblue. If you're interested in non-gaming versions of you can look at Fedora Atomic Desktops.
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welcoms man
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While I love Elgato hardware from a design/price standpoint, it's a shame it doesn't all work on Linux. I had my Wave XLR for a year or so, but replaced it with a Scarlett Solo so I could use it on Linux.
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Been there lol. I think it's a common thing for privacy newcomers. Not focusing on threat level and instead trying to optimize every bit. It got me too.
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Welcome! So happy to see new converts, and even more when they have an "it went well" story!
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This is sometimes true, but I would rather have a slightly worse UI and/or have to use 2 applications for more specific tasks than trading off data just to have everything under one bloated umbrella.
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Welcome to a world outside of enshittification!
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I put mint on a separate drive over the weekend. My two outstanding issues are my already-niche pieces of hardware. My KVM doesn't pass USB devices to my other device for some reason. I'm reasonably confident I can figure that one out. My other issue is my HID NFC reader for my Yubikey. No official driver for Linux so I expect that one to be more tricky, though I'd appreciate if anyone can point me in the right direction.
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The secret of Linux is, if all your hardware works, it's actually easier to use for casual users. Most people nowadays use computers for web browsing and maybe playing media and light office tasks. A Linux Mint setup will have everything you need for that either preinstalled or ready to get fun the software store. If you don't need anything else, then it gets it of your way and just works. No viruses, little danger of malware, no crud to uninstall, no Microsoft account, no nagging apps, no ads, no attempts to upsell to paid cloud services or Pro, and no AI.
The problem arises when you want to go beyond that, and there's no obvious path ahead,v then people not used to the Linux way of doing things may run into trouble. But 90% of users, if someone sets it up for them, will do fine.
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I did not get hacked. My account credentials were intact. 2FA was instated. No emails were sent.