• desentizised@lemm.ee
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    6 hours ago

    I’ve been a “heavy” user(/admin) of Linux in the server space for about 12 years now, but only recently through a new employment opportunity have I become a daily Linux desktop user. Last weekend - slowly coming to the realization that Linux can really satisfy all my personal needs (including gaming that supports DLL injection) - I thought I’d like to see how feasible this would now be for the kind of end-user that I encounter as customers and friends, family members etc.

    Having chosen CachyOS for myself a lot of my needs are now met brilliantly by the AUR, but of course I don’t see this being a realistic proposal for an end-user. Flatpaks on the other hand I am now (and previously through my Steam Deck) encountering as a super straightforward way of covering a lot of ground in terms of the kinds of apps people may need, and having them remain usable across system upgrades and such. I agree with a lot of what you’re saying, but with Flathub I feel that there’s not just everything there that probably covers 95% of non-tech-savvy people’s needs, there’s even stuff in there that you can’t get anywhere else with a simple install button. Like a youtube-dl UI for example.

    Anyways this isn’t even the story I’m trying to tell, sorry for the tangent. So I thought if I’m ever going to recommend any distro to someone it’s gonna have to be an immutable one, but based on what I just said I’d say any distribution (immutable or not) is going to be dead in the water if it doesn’t come with Flatpak support out of the box. And so the choices in terms of popular ones (according to ChatGPT) were VanillaOS and Fedora Silverblue/Kinoite. (Personally I use KDE now but I think the most approachable DE is always going to be Gnome hands down unless you’re talking outdated hardware.)

    So I set up VanillaOS in a VM, latest ISO from their website, went through the installer, all went fine until the reboot where I was basically just met by a lengthy splash screen and then some GTK error saying it failed to launch or whatever and then the screen just remains black indefinitely. Obviously this isn’t supposed to happen, it’s probably something to do with my virtualized setup, but if there’s any chance of this happening on the physical machine of a person in need of a digital revolution in their life then this is certainly not what I’m going to recommend to them.

    Next up, Fedora Silverblue. Went through the installer, the Fedora one is already a great starting point in terms of simplicity. Rebooted into a working Desktop Environment, so already winning on that front. I had one minor problem there where the last step of the Initial Setup process would just hang if I wanted it to enable Third party sources straightaway. If I left that off I could finish and finally get to my Desktop. Then I would open the Gnome “Software” app and it would basically ask the same thing in a more convoluted manner but basically that means there’s a second “chance” to enable third party sources without having to find something in a settings menu. It’s a little more fussy than if the checkbox had just worked on the Initial Setup but I guess I could see many people work through this if I told them “don’t check that last checkbox and then check it in the Software app”.

    It’s weird that both avenues I tried came up with problems that seem way too on the nose to be overlooked. Or who knows what factored into those problems, but really they shouldn’t even be within the realm of possibility. For a setup process to yield a black screen or hang itself if the wrong checkbox is clicked are the kind of things that (imho) are going to define when the “Year of the Linux Desktop” meme will stop being a meme. If you can give me an immutable Linux with Flatpak support out of the box which can be booted on a SecureBoot enabled computer and which will reliably install to a working Desktop then we’re talking. For now, my recommendation is Fedora Silverblue. Slap that onto a USB-Stick and you have a somewhat attainable Linux installer that mere mortals can make use of.

    • flatbield@beehaw.org
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      30 minutes ago

      Keep in mind you choose basically uncommon niche distributions. Go to distrowatch and choose one of the top 5 or so and use the distro repos and security updates. No flatpack is not needed for a well supported distro. That is especially true for one of the common Debian based distros.