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Depending on what you want to do with this laptop, it might not be necessary. A barebones Linux install on a binary distro is about 2 GBs, give or take. With a weak CPU like that, I'd forget about fancy DEs and compositors. JWM, IceWM or Openbox (what I use) are your friends, unless you want to use tiling WMs.Just think of all those PCs that are going to get thrown out because they can't be upgraded to Windows 11 due to their strict hardware requirements and mandatory TPM chip. Whilst some will have served their time and are at that point good enough for the bin, a lot of them could easily get a fresh lease of life as a Linux PC.
To be fair, Linux is not much of a barrier compared to how it used to be. The general web browser user could easily cope. If you are a gamer then as long as it's not fucked by anti cheat you can do it for the most part, compatibility is a lot better these days. Not everything is Linux friendly but it's better than how it used to be back in the day.
Looked into the craptop myself and seeing how there's been a few horror stories regarding the internal 64GB storage I have bought a 128GB SSD to go into it from eBay.
Why would they though? ext4 is supported basically only by Linux, FAT32 is supported by absolutely everything including your smart blender and you don't need files over 4GB in your EFI partition, nor do you need any of the shit that file systems like ext4 or NTFS offer. If anything, ext4 EFI partitions is the type of purposefully incompatible bullshit I'd expect people accuse Microsoft of. Imagine if Microsoft forced it for ReFS to be the standard for EFI partitions to cut Linux out of the market.I'm not sure if any new computers can now handle a ext4 EFI partition yet.
The primary difference is that in the end Linux Mint isn't really its own distribution, it's built off stable releases of other distributions. If you're using a full distribution like Devuan, there should be testing and unstable branches that let you use the latest software, like Arch, but more coherently.Agree with the assessment on Mint, it's darn good and probably the most flawless of all the Linux distros out there. I think Linux tards who move on to Arch or Fedora do so out of boredom, you can modify the hell out of Mint just like any other distro. You can always put Gnome or JWM or whatever on Mint and run it using those Windows Manager/environments. Change the kernel if you wish.
Yeah. Btrfs isn't worth using in my opinion. Nothing it offers, makes dealing with it worth it. And the snapshot thing. Isn't completely worthless, but using it to revert changes to the system to fix problems, at least when I tried using it. Was just a waste of my time, disk space, and CPU cycles. While getting worse performance.I fucking hate btrfs so much it's unreal - thinking of reformatting to exfat4
They may be stable, but they aren't necessarily user friendly and sometimes even makes user hostile design choices like Gnome or snaps. Linux Mint takes that stable base and strips out the garbage like snaps, then maintains their own desktop environment Cinnamon which was forked from Gnome but then actually made user friendly.The primary difference is that in the end Linux Mint isn't really its own distribution, it's built off stable releases of other distributions. If you're using a full distribution like Devuan, there should be testing and unstable branches that let you use the latest software, like Arch, but more coherently.
If you like your Cinnamon you can keep itThey may be stable, but they aren't necessarily user friendly and sometimes even makes user hostile design choices like Gnome or snaps. Linux Mint takes that stable base and strips out the garbage like snaps, then maintains their own desktop environment Cinnamon which was forked from Gnome but then actually made user friendly.
wdym? It's literally called "Better FS". How can you hate that?I fucking hate btrfs so much it's unreal
It won't. There'll be some marginal gains, that's all. People bitch about Windows, talk about trying Linux, and in the end, they'll install 11. Then they'll bitch about 12 or whatever marking number/name comes after and talk about how great 11 was in comparison. Which, with all those pajeet code monkeys, will be true, but won't change anything. Hardware-wise, it doesn't matter at all. Cheap computers people replace when windows stops working anyways, and more expensive ones will work with 11.I do wonder how much more popular Linux will get in the desktop scene once Windows 10 reaches its end of life in 4 months, especially considering the amount of hardware that won't work with 11.
Its already not happening, people are just tossing out older machines that don't support 11 and buying new ones that can.I do wonder how much more popular Linux will get in the desktop scene once Windows 10 reaches its end of life in 4 months, especially considering the amount of hardware that won't work with 11.
I want to be hopeful that more people would dump M$'s bullshit but we both know the vast swathes of niggercattle will accept Win11.I do wonder how much more popular Linux will get in the desktop scene once Windows 10 reaches its end of life in 4 months, especially considering the amount of hardware that won't work with 11.
I look forward to the X11 wars. Very excited to see who ignores this fork and who jumps in.https://youtube.com/watch?v=lNp4jjW_XgwThis is the kind of thing I'm worried about with the project from the beginning bringing in non-technical politics at all. I feel like it's going to add unnecessary hurdles. And I'm sure lunduke loves it. Because that means he can grift attention off of it. But for the project it's probably going to be a net negative.
Not by a lot. My take on it, most people who absolutely refuse to run Win11 will:I do wonder how much more popular Linux will get in the desktop scene once Windows 10 reaches its end of life in 4 months, especially considering the amount of hardware that won't work with 11.
First one is the most likely.Not by a lot. My take on it, most people who absolutely refuse to run Win11 will:
- stay on Win10, updates be damned;
- move to macOS.
These are the two big groups of Win11 evaders. Linux newcomers won't even register by comparison.
What? I thought it stood for "Butter FS" because sometimes it just melts and takes all your data with it.wdym? It's literally called "Better FS". How can you hate that?
There are still people using Win7/XP but not very many, the great majority of Windows users upgraded to 10. I admit that I don't really know what got people to upgrade, but we should not expect people to continue using Windows 10 forever just because 11 is 11.First one is the most likely.
Stay on 10 until their hardware gets too old/slow to run Chrome or whatever, then buy a new machine and deal with 11.
There's still people using Windows 7 and XP on the internet after all. I have a feeling people will still be seeing Windows 10 in a bunch of weird places in 20 years time.
Linuxcast uses btrfs. What more endorsement do you need?Do people actually use btrfs? I thought it was just a meme.
If I wanted to deliberately break a Linux system, would at least do something funny, like make PowerShell the default shell and NTFS the root filesystem.
Saar it is actually the default for:Do people actually use btrfs? I thought it was just a meme.
They're normies. Laptop breaks, buy new one, comes with newer windows, use it till it dies, repeat. A normal user never updates windows unless microsoft forces them to.I admit that I don't really know what got people to upgrade
Nicco is a faggot. That is all.