Newbie Post: I have gone "all-in" with Linux Mint 22.1, wiping Windows completely. All good...with two nagging problems.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Distro hopped for years and got to a point I just wanted to use an OS and not screw around with it. I also didn't want to spend time troubleshooting odd problems. Mint's been installed on my machines for years and it works flawlessly.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Mint's default desktop is Cinnamon. The default file manager is Nemo.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
correct. but i have hard time suggesting that to a noobie.
with that being said, if OP is interested in Cosmic DE, which is very much an interesting DE.
OP could install PopOS based on Ubuntu 24, throw KDE on it until Cosmic is baking
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I absolutely agree. I use it at home for lots of different tasks and put it on my parents laptops as well. It might not be the hottest, most modern disto for the cool kids but it's a great experience.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
For what it's worth, I actually had a lot easier time with NVIDIA graphics on Ubuntu and Fedora than Mint. And Kubuntu with the Plasma desktop was the easiest to get my partner converted from Windows without much tweaking.
You could try the booting the live CD and see if you're able to get the graphics working more easily. And I've never seen that second issue on either Ubuntu or Fedora, so not sure what's up there.
I'm not too happy with the direction Canonical is taking Ubuntu right now, but it typically has the most documentation for when issues come up and has a very healthy development cycle, so I still recommend it to most people as a starting place. To me, Mint has always been a little too opinionated and catering to the less technical and thus harder to tweak. Ubuntu kind of does it in a way that makes it easier to override the default easy-mode kind of stuff. Just a general observation from decades of Linux use, and may or may not be as true for the current versions.
I use Fedora with Plasma desktop on my other desktop/laptop devices because I prefer RHEL to Debian based stuff, probably just got used to it using CentOS and now Rocky for all my servers over the years.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Working. I had reset my BIOS and "safe boot" was back on. Turned it off, reinstalled the driver from "Driver Manager", Used your commands and followed your instructions and found that the Nvidia driver was working. Opened Nvidia X server settings and it looked the way it should. nvidia-smi showed the whole shebang.
I knew you guys could help me. I could cry.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
This turned out to be key, along with another comment. I went BACK to my BIOS and sure enough, with all the changes I had left secure boot enabled. Disabled it and everything went so smoothly I felt a little embarrassed.
Thanks friend!
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
correct. but i have hard time suggesting that to a noobie.
Why? It's just "apt install kde-standard". It's one of the benefits of most linux distros that you can switch desktop environments trivially.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
a test showing me how little I know, and a time-eater that causes my wife to wonder what happened to her husband.
Worth mentioning, but this gets much better with time. Part of it will go away as you learn new things, and is the same as learning any other new thing, be it using Linux, picking up an instrument, or learning another language. Hand in hand with this, you'll also just get better at knowing where and what to look for to find answers to your problems, and how to ask for help in a way that includes all the relevant info and is more likely to get you a reply that sorts out your issue sooner.
It can definitely be overwhelming initially, but it's always helpful to get familiar with the man pages and info pages, which are two forms of documentation that come built-in with your Linux install (along with other systems like the BSDs, if you ever wander over that way. OpenBSD man pages are amazing, fwiw, and may be more helpful at times for finding example commands). You can usually run
man command
to get a man page for most commands in your terminal, though not all. Info pages exist for GNU software, and can often be more thorough in their documentation.
man fstab
for example, will give you a general overview of how fstab works, and also include a list of other man pages at the bottom, under the heading SEE ALSO, that can be helpful in understanding related systems. If one of those entries is followed by a number in parentheses, you type the command slightly differently to access that section of the man page. For example, the fstab page suggests looking at mount(8), which you'd find with the command
man 8 mount
info info
in a terminal will get you a helpful primer on how the info system works, which is good, as it can be somewhat more complex to navigate than man pages and uses a lot of Emacs keybindings.
Both can be a bit daunting when you first start out, but it's worth at least being familiar with, as you can access them without any internet connection, helping you to do things and troubleshoot issues when you're unable to go online, for whatever reason.
Finally, don't overlook the utility of the various wikis out there. For Linux Mint, the Debian Wiki should be pretty decent, and the Arch Wiki is also generally pretty helpful, though may not always work for Debian/Ubuntu-based distros, since it may reference features in newer releases of packages than are available elsewhere. They'll often include basic setup and configuration guides, as well as a troubleshooting section that outlines how to solve commonly encountered issues.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Good to hear!
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
mint uses Cinnamon
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
It seems that you are not aware in what format you installed your apps.
Before you install an app, be aware what format it is, that you are installing. Is it a debian package installed via the apt cli or via some store gui? Is it a snap package? Is it an appimage? Is it a flatpak?
All of these are different and can have different issues (advantages/disadvantages). Often the same app is available in multiple formats.This is a great video explaining what formats are out there:
https://youtu.be/1lLZ-59xH3Y -
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Try Bazzite.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Can highly recommend
tldr
as a companion toman
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I'll watch it, thanks
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I bought 4TB of cloud storage and I'm uploading to it now, I'll format both drives in a day or two.