Just install it and not have to care about anything system related. Just keep out of my way and let me do what I need to do. Linux, Windows, MacOS, the operating system should not be an end, but a mean.
If you need to update, just do it and don't bother me.
I plug something, just show it to me. Something is proprietary? I don't care, just want it to work...
Did you try out the immutable Linux systems (Fedora Silverblue / openSUSE Aeon)?
They look very promising, do updates in the background (So, you are one reboot away from updates instead of waiting for the package manager.)
Windows for you chap /s
For me and everybody else by a long margin. So this is a post where we can say what we expect from a Linux desktop so you can point us to Windows?
Ah, I mentioned it specifically mentioned that they are OS agnostic. Also, what he/she said sounded a lot like Windows, especially because vendors create a lot of software for Windows.
I'm a big proponent of Linux/*nix (BSD), and the previous comment was meant as a sort of joke, but I suppose I should have added the /s
Just install it and not have to care about anything system related. Just keep out of my way and let me do what I need to do. Linux, Windows, MacOS, the operating system should not be an end, but a mean.
If you need to update, just do it and don't bother me. I plug something, just show it to me. Something is proprietary? I don't care, just want it to work...
Did you try out the immutable Linux systems (Fedora Silverblue / openSUSE Aeon)?
They look very promising, do updates in the background (So, you are one reboot away from updates instead of waiting for the package manager.)
Windows for you chap /s
For me and everybody else by a long margin. So this is a post where we can say what we expect from a Linux desktop so you can point us to Windows?
Ah, I mentioned it specifically mentioned that they are OS agnostic. Also, what he/she said sounded a lot like Windows, especially because vendors create a lot of software for Windows.
I'm a big proponent of Linux/*nix (BSD), and the previous comment was meant as a sort of joke, but I suppose I should have added the
/s