Unless I can’t, Kebab.
No need to hold Shift.
私、気になります!
Unless I can’t, Kebab.
No need to hold Shift.
Not to be confused with OpenOffice.
(LibreOffice forked from OO back then.)
OnlyOffice.
No, the fact that it comes with ZSH (OOTB), period.
I think the thing I *adore* in MacOS is the fact that it comes with ZSH preconfigured.
If it’s on the same drive, after updates, Windows will try to ‘fix’ that you have another OS itself, and remove GRUB.
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Install Windows again, then install Linux.
Windows is annoying with it’s bootloader, but when you have separate drive, it would be way smoother experience.
The thing that makes me laugh/cry/be happy I switched to Linux, is that it’s in that state, but it’s a paid product.
If the license was free it was somewhat okay, but it’s not. People are still paying.
TIL you can do that with udisksctl. How can you do that?
I usually just use dd or Ventoy.
Like I said in the post on c/archlinux, I had more problems on ‘user-friendly’ distros, than I had on Arch.
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I’d recommend against it, but if you’d *really* want to try something Arch-based, you can try EndeavourOS.
Take something user-friendly, like Linux Mint, or Fedora.
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If you have NetworkManager installed (you should have), you can use nmtui
, TUI tool.
TUI is <u>T</u>erminal <u>U</u>ser <u>I</u>nterface, and IMO very user-friendly.
In Pop!_OS, you have the Pop!_Shop, and they added their own repos for software aren’t included in Ubuntu’s repo or exist mainly as Snap packages; they also included Flathub.
Under the app name you want to install, you’ll have a little drop-down box with option to choose (if there’s more than one option) where to download the package from.
OP, CentOS and CentOS Steam are two *very* different beasts, you don’t want Stream.
I wouldn’t go for CentOS either because you’ll have to replace it anyway.
I’m mentioning that because you can download the old CentOS, but like the commenter above me said, you can do Alma or Rocky.
I would go for Debian, but that’s a personal preference.