• @Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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    211 months ago

    Because advice like this is an enormous waste of time. Calling people dinosaurs for using Ubuntu instead of KDE is a pretty out there take. The only more modern option is arch based distros like Manjaro but since every programming tutorial assumes you have APT and are running Ubuntu I don’t see much of a reason to deviate from that.

    • @tubaruco@lemm.ee
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      411 months ago

      it seems you should be using debian or distros based on it. ubuntu, as far as i know, uses apt as a mirror to snap, so as long as the tutorials youre following letter for letter arent too recent, you really should be using debian for actual apt packages, since ubuntu used those a couple of years ago.

      you can also use fedora or arch, but it seems you dont want to check what package youre downloading at all, and just want to follow tutorials blindly.

      • @Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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        111 months ago

        People here are under the illusion that a DE changes nothing about the base OS. It seems like those people have never actually been using their OS.

        • @tubaruco@lemm.ee
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          211 months ago

          the DE doesnt change anything in the base os unless you count its packages and rare incompatibilities as noticeable changes.

          what it does change is the visual experience.

          • @Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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            211 months ago

            No it installs and uninstalls a ton of packages and often relies on specific versions of certain packages. This is like saying Ubuntu isn’t different from Debian.

            Some DE’s even use Wayland which will break a ton of software such as OpenCV.

    • TimeSquirrel
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      11 months ago

      Dude…I build my desktops from a bare Debian text only terminal by installing it piece by piece and only what I need. This current install has bee running fine for three years and I have no issues installing and configuring anything you can on Ubuntu.

      This is a skill issue on your part, not an OS issue. At a certain point, if you’ve been using it enough, the distro literally doesn’t matter anymore. Linux is Linux is Linux.