• ObliviousEnlightenment@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Let us hope their wine integration is up to the task. They’ll be gone just as fast if too much of the software doesn’t run with a double click, or MAYBE from the context menu

  • sunbeam60@lemmy.one
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    10 hours ago

    Yes! Yeeeesss!

    Let the distribution flame wars begin. Strike Zorin down with all your heart and forget that it is Linux and a move away from Windows.

    Let the snake eat its own tail!!

  • unknowing8343@discuss.tchncs.de
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    14 hours ago

    I’ll never understand how people recommend Zorin or Mint instead of the, much more Windows-like, and HUGELY supported Kubuntu or Fedora KDE.

    KDE Plasma is the way to go.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      I’ll never understand how people recommend Zorin or Mint instead of the, much more Windows-like, and HUGELY supported Kubuntu or Fedora KDE

      I rebuilt an old Windows PC as a host for a Jellyfin server and used Mint because that’s what the guide recommended.

      Easy setup. Everything works great. So I told my friends about it. And, naturally, they went with Mint, too, because we all know that setup works.

      That’s it. That’s the only real reason why. I have a simple need and Mint got the job done.

      • unknowing8343@discuss.tchncs.de
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        4 hours ago

        I’m not saying that Mint is bad. But with Kubuntu or Fedora KDE you get more overall support, and KDE software is much more used, developed, tested and supported than Mint’s self-mantained things.

        There is a much higher chance of KDE thriving in the next 10 years than Mint.

        This is my opinion, of course. And based mostly on my subjective observations.

    • nieminen@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      100% agree. Don’t get me wrong, zorin looks nice and I’ve considered trying it a couple times. But kubuntu is where it’s at. My brother is old school though, and has a Gentoo install he keeps going, but he gets the latest plasma, kubuntu is a major release behind.

      There are options that get you latest, still on a Debian base, but it wasn’t as stable as kubuntu so I switched back.

      Linux is the only thing that will really revive an old apple product, even if it runs macos pretty well still, you can’t get any of the apps to run because they’re no longer offered, and then if you can install an old one, it auto updates to a non-functional version. (This just happened to me)

      I still can’t quit Windows entirely, visual studio is important to what I’m working on.

    • Phegan@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Been a Linux user at work for decades, windows at home for gaming. This week I am 100% a Linux user full-time.

      • nieminen@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        I wish I could get steam to run on my Linux OS, it’ll only play like 3 of the games I want, and none of the VR ones

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        1 hour ago

        I have a sneaking suspicion we’re going to see a rash of system vulnerability start popping up in Win10 over the next few years. And we’ll get deluged with national news announcements that boil down to “Win10 is unsafe!! Your data is compromised!! Only 11 will save you!!”

  • DupaCycki@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    This is just wonderful news.

    I’ve never used Zorin. It doesn’t seem to match my preferences and needs. Regardless, anyone switching from Windows [and Mac] to any Linux distro is fantastic for all of us, including remaining Windows users (probably not Mac users though).

    Let’s hope more keep switching, leading to a surge in Linux, and open source in general, funding. More people becoming interested in Linux development, potentially turning into more and more open source devs. I think we can be quite optimistic about this.

    • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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      2 days ago

      Switching to linux has been the best decision i’ve made all year.

      Just wish there was a good one-click-setup virtual display option for Sunshine that “just works.” It’s my white whale of features.

      • djdarren@piefed.social
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        2 days ago

        I setup Sunshine on my Kubuntu machine last night. Took me fucking AGES to figure it out. Recently set it up on my M1 Mac mini, which took me a couple of minutes.

        • cholesterol@lemmy.world
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          23 hours ago

          I went through the same on Fedora, and it was never quite right. On Bazzite it was preinstalled and worked perfectly, just fyi.

      • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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        2 days ago

        …and just to be clear, this is a multiplatform problem. There’s a single mediocre ‘easy’ option in windows land and a very tinkery option in linux land.

        Doesn’t seem like any OS has caught up to the idea of fast streaming desktops quite yet. I’m convinced it’s the future of computing though. Way better than old VDI options from days of yore.

        • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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          24 hours ago

          I’ve seen this but I don’t really want the docker part.

          I think it could be phenomenal for some kind of beefy VDI implementation for low demanding games or some kind of monster server with multiple GPUs, but it just feels wrong for an individual who wants to remotely stream their desktop on demand and has no plans on having others share the host.

          Maybe i’m overthinking it, or haven’t thought it through enough - but my gut says this has more drawbacks than i’m realizing.

      • Serinus@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I need my Omnissa Remote Client (VMWare) to work on Wayland with multiple monitors and I’d be good to go.

        As it is, I have to use Windows for work.

        Ubuntu didn’t work, but PopOS with Nvidia drivers built in works great.

      • Gerudo@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        Is sunshine not compatible with Linux? Or is it just the virtual display feature?

        • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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          2 days ago

          It cannot generate a virtual display. It only uses attached displays which by default are real powered on monitors.

          I’ve gotten around this on windows with parsec and a virtual display adapter that someone keeps updated on GitHub which can spawn backup displays if none are present, but I find still sometimes fails to spawn them. Parsec is fairly reliable at spawning them when the windows solution fails but it’s not perfect either.

          A hack job virtual display on Linux will be more difficult to work with. It’s going to eat my desktop and be fairly hidden.

          Dummy plugs exist, but I specifically don’t want to put dummy plugs in all my remote hosts. Seems like an unga bunga solution to something which should be software.

          Something with VNC or simply ssh with some scripting could be the workaround I use to get back in when a virtual display fails to work as expected, but I am lazy and want something effectively bulletproof.

          • GrapheneOSRuinedMyPixel@sh.itjust.works
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            2 days ago

            Well, dummy plugs are also kinda useful on windows - can’t seamlessly switch to client’s resolution without setting up the resolution profiles first, and that requires a device to apply the profiles to.

            Also, you can create virtual displays fairly easy on Xorg, but yes, the entire sunshine setup is infinitely easier on windows.

            • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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              1 day ago

              non-arm-Windows client to Windows host you can use something like parsec where you can adjust resolution on the fly. You can install a fallback virtual display for when the display is off from right inside the app in a single click + UAC prompt. I really don’t like parsec though because I know the enshittification will come, and I don’t really trust them to be secure or to not abuse their backdoor accesses.

              This project allows you to create virtual displays that are persistent, and you can configure them so that when the primary monitor is off the backup one is enabled in windows, just by using the default windows display manager options. You can change the resolution freely… because this is using the same vd driver parsec created https://github.com/nomi-san/parsec-vdd - this works pretty well overall with Sunshine

              Ultimately though, Sunshine and Parsec are the only two things i’m aware of with great low latency and high fidelity remote capabilities, aside from niche implementations like what the PS5 has. If something like Xorg had similar quality and latency parity i’d be interested, but i’m under the impression everything is like old school vnc or rdp where it is functional when necessary but not very pleasant overall.

  • emb@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Year of Linux on the desktop. Why not say it? It’s been true for decades now.

    • Canaconda@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      So I’ve mucked around with ubuntu… gonna switch over to linux. Ideally something more user friendly at first.

      Can someone TLDR Zorin OS vs Mint?

      For now I just want something I can swap out my main device until I have more time to finish learning ubuntu.

      • odelik@lemmy.today
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        Zorin has a commercial license for additional GUI front ends, installation support, and a bunch of “professional” apps. It’s not clear if they’ve done something to make adobe/Autodesk/pro audio stuff work on Linux, pre-bundled their FOSS alternatives, or have made software themselves.

        Personally, if I was looking for something “professional”, I’d go PopOS!. But if I were a small or mid-sized business I’d consider Zorin Pro if I could get license to include additional support outside the installer… Or just buy System76 computers with PopOS! pre-installed and support built-in to their sales pipeline already.

        That said, Mint is also very Windows (classic)-like in their GUI experince (intentionally). It also has one of the largest Linux communities focusing on GUI usability.

        Depends on your use case on which flavor you should go. But for $50, I’m curious what Zorin’s software suite is and might dive in.

        • AmanitaCaesarea@slrpnk.net
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          I have the pro version, aaaand it’s convenient… But honestly all applications can be downloaded without much work. Zorin is also so stable that I’ve never had to contact support. The extra layouts is pretty nice tho.

          This is more of a “donation” option imo. If you love foss you should definitely financially support projects that you endorse!

          • woelkchen@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            The amount of contributions to FOSS from a downstream Ubuntu remix are very limited. Better donate to Debian or buy a Steam Deck.

        • popcar2@programming.dev
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          2 days ago

          and a bunch of “professional” apps.

          It is in fact a bunch of pre-installed free software. I like Zorin, but Zorin Pro just seems like a way to trick businesses into paying for the distro. I guess having access to a support team is nice, but otherwise it’s not worth it at all.

        • artyom@piefed.social
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          1 day ago

          Or just buy System76 computers with PopOS! pre-installed and support built-in to their sales pipeline already.

          S76 (and all Linux PCs) are all just insanely expensive and overpowered for the needs of most people. I wish they would just offer a barebones model with an N100 or something for $500 that normal people could afford…

          • psud@aussie.zone
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            16 hours ago

            You can buy nearly any budget machine and load Linux off a USB stick, but most people just take whatever they have and their last windows action is to download a boot image and write it to a USB stick, then boot off the stick and tell it to use the whole disk

            Then use your backup system to restore your documents, pictures, web and mail configuration, and game settings and saves to your Linux machine

          • odelik@lemmy.today
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            1 day ago

            I mean, that’s kinda the cost for low volume sales + computer support.

            They’re not selling computers for the average Linux user, they’re selling computers for independent professionals and businesses that need the support licenses to confidently run their operations.

            For the average Linux user, they have put out an incredibly stable version of their OS that has a professional in mind (docking station ready, highly optimized GUI workflow tooling, familiar OS styling, and more). We can then go grab a bare machine and toss their OS on ourselves.

            I get it though. I’ve strongly considered snagging one of their laptops in the past. Especially since I want to support them. I’ve even considered some other machines for niche purposes (HTPC, home lab VM host) , but always wind up snagging a Lenovo or IBM laptop or building my own desktop instead.

      • artyom@piefed.social
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        1 day ago

        Both are adequate. Both are based on Ubuntu. The biggest difference is going to be the interface.

        Zorin has a Gnome-ish interface. If you pay a few extra bucks, you can customize it to make it function like Mac or Windows or Ubuntu, etc. in one click.

        Mint has a (in my opinion) much less modern interface that I don’t like. But it’s also, I believe, the single most popular Linux distro so there will be endless amounts of community support for it.

      • Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 days ago

        I’d advise using Mint in place of Ubuntu as your training wheels/potential daily driver, since Ubuntu’s developers (Cannonical) have the habit of making features and restrictions absent in the rest of the ecosystem (Snap comes to mind).

        Mint has a much larger and more dedicated userbase, so you probably will have an easier time finding answers to questions (Mint’s forums are pretty good nowadays), and it’s been an established “Windows jumping-off point” OS for quite a few years now. Zorin is the new kid on the block (while they existed in the past, their quality was nowhere near on par with Mint), so I’d wait and see before checking them out.

      • SapphironZA@sh.itjust.works
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        Both have an Ubuntu base

        Mint develops their own desktop called Cinnamon which is like a cross between Gnome2 and windows 7 UIs. Its looks a bit bland, but some people prefer that.

        Zorin uses Gnome3, but is heavily customized to give people a choice between windows 7, windows 10 or MacOS type experiences. The UI does look a lot more modern than mint in the looks department. They also have a commercial support option.

        Both have a pretty good suite of software for customization and management.

        Personally I’m loving Bazzite, which is Fedora based with a lot of customizations for gaming and modern hardware. It’s also immutable, which makes it difficult to break.

      • AmanitaCaesarea@slrpnk.net
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        Zorin vs Mint comes down to; do you like the color green or blue? Jokes aside they are basically the same. I prefer gnome(zorin) over cinnamon(mint). I also find Zorin does a better job guiding newbs from windows. For example if you would download and run a windows exe, then Zorin will show a pop-up telling the user about alternative Linux apps, or it will handle running windows apps for you through wine.

        As a linux newb your choice of distro really doesn’t matter too much. Just don’t go for difficult stuff like Nix, Gentoo. Desktop Environment is where it’s really at for newbs. So try out Kde Plasma, Gnome, Cinnamon and pick the one that you fancy.

        • Canaconda@lemmy.ca
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          Interesting! This is exactly why I asked. I knew the general consensus would be go with mint. I’m looking for an easy OS cuz I don’t want a project car for my daily driver.

      • HubertManne@piefed.social
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        2 days ago

        zorin is more out of box and mint is lighter. so when you install zorin its going to put in libre office, disk burning, windows rpd, wine with play on linux, its a long list. So it comes down to out of box (I want a bunch of software I may use to be installed along with the os) or lighter and get what you want later. zorin is basically a lazier distro which is why I like it :) while some stuff may be a waste of space I just want it available right away or in a situation where im offline and did not think to install it previously for some reason (disk burning is a good example for this kind of thing)

      • the_q@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        Just go Mint and then you can get as deep or not as you want into Linux.

      • RmDebArc_5@piefed.zip
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        2 days ago

        Zorin and Mint are quite similar in philosophy, Zorin is more “fancy” but Mint is more reliable in my experience (not to say Zorin isn’t, just that it’s har to beet Mint). Any reason for wanting to use Ubuntu? Mint and Zorin are based on Ubuntu so pretty much everything that works on Ubuntu works on Mint/Zorin, most of the instructions for Ubuntu even transfer over

        • Canaconda@lemmy.ca
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          Nothing specific.

          Few years back I thought I might get into cyber security. Had an old gaming PC that I put ubuntu on for learning purposes. Had fun, eventually bricked the PC (it was a Frankenstein anyways).

          I figured everyone would say go with Mint. But its nice to hear everyone’s thoughts.

  • gnuplusmatt@reddthat.com
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    2 days ago

    I honestly dont know what would drive a Windows refugee to choose such a niche and likely unable to support them distro.

          • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            1 day ago

            No, it comes from people “souping up” (hopefully I don’t find out that’s also racist somehow lol) cheap Japanese cars that they called “rice burners”.

            • tiramichu@sh.itjust.works
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              The origins of the term undeniably are racist, yes, and I was also surprised that those using it weren’t largely aware of the fact.

              But it’s also true that meanings unavoidably change over time, and the intent of what you say is also important.

              The person you responded to isn’t wrong - there’s now a popular acronym people are using which is Race Inspired Cosmetic Enhancement

              And yes it’s a backronym. The pejorative term came first, and the acronym later, but it’s certainly part of redefining and reclaiming the term to free it from its origins.

              Like it or not, I think the term is very much here to stay.

              • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                Words change meaning, sure, but it doesn’t mean we need to keep using it here.

                Also, let’s not fool ourselves into thinking they made it into a bacroynm for any reason beyond wanting to continue using a racist term but now with plausible deniability.

                • tiramichu@sh.itjust.works
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                  Trying to ‘hide’ the use of a racist term because you’re a racist would be one thing, but using the term in a way that is not at all meant as pejorative is another.

                  In the automotive context, the term meant something like “Putting loads of pointless mods on your ‘shitty’ Japanese car that makes it look even uglier and doesn’t make it go any faster.” - and in that context it was unambiguously a slur, disparaging the Asian import scene in favour of the ‘superior’ western aesthetic and way of doing things.

                  But even in the automotive context, people can reclaim the term and say effectively “Yes - my car is ‘riced out’ - that’s the aesthetic I want, and I’m proud of it.”

                  In some ways it’s quite appropriate that this term would extend from Japanese cars into tricking out your operating system. Given the number of waifu wallpapers you see in screenshots, ‘ricing’ has quite a lot of overlap with anime aesthetic, geek cuture and ‘weebs’ (which is another term that was used as an insult, and now reclaimed by people who proudly describe themselves as such). People who have historically been looked down upon by most of society but internally wear their ‘weebdom’ as a badge of pride.

                  It’s hardly an insult when you are the one saying it about yourself, and doing so proudly.

              • kadu@scribe.disroot.org
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                23 hours ago

                I mean one of the most important pieces of software we always mention when converting users from Windows is called GIMP, I think “ricing” isn’t nearly the most concerning term in the libre software world.

                • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                  19 hours ago

                  GIMP isn’t a bacronym, it is an acronym.

                  Also, my understanding of BDSM indicates that gimps consent to their position.

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            Japanese people would trick out their cars to look cool.

            We call this ricing because Japan/Rice.

            I think the term today is completely unrelated to the original meaning and has no racial ties but some right leaning people always want to be offended.

    • DupaCycki@lemmy.world
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      That’s why it’s only ~70k downloads. Probably many more for Ubuntu, Mint, Fedora, Manjaro, Bazzite and so on.

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      I think Zorin is a pretty solid choice for people with no Linux experience tbh.

      It’s at least going to feel familiar

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        24 hours ago

        They charge extra for theming that people could get themselves for free. I don’t like that it’s taking advantage of vulnerable people.

        • bear_delune@beehaw.org
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          I don’t think that’s “taking advantage of vulnerable people”

          The options still exist for people to learn and theming is incredibly inconsequential.

          They’re monetising to support development in a minimally impactful way, that is completely optional, and I think that’s a good thing.

          • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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            They should advertise that everything is free and can be installed after installation if you choose not say $80 gets you a Windows like desktop and software replacements that will save you thousands (Blender/Xournal++/OfficeSuite)

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              24 hours ago

              The value proposition is ease of use and integration of these theming utilities.

              I honestly think this monetisation strategy of theirs is a non-issue.

              People who want a streamlined experience have the option of paying for that, people who want the option of doing it all themselves have that opportunity too.

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                  22 hours ago

                  Not communicating that there are alternatives to their services?

                  I don’t really think it’s their responsibility to spoon feed alternatives to their customers; they’re not being anticompetitive, they’re not being deceptive, they’re not blocking alternatives.

                  I think your requirements here are unfair and kind of irrational

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    2 days ago

    as someone that have been scrolling lemmy daily for 2 years, i am surprised i have never heard of this distro, i thought being a lemming made me a linux expert

    • tuckerm@feddit.online
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      It’s basically a linux distro that’s meant to appeal to Windows users who want to keep the Windows look and feel.

      In other words, blasphemy in this church.

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        blasphemy in this church.

        Indeed tis spoken oft as heresy in the Cathedral…

        …But perhaps opinions are more diverse in the Bazarr?

  • Xenny@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Did it three days ago. Took the windows partition out back and formatted it.