Hello fellow linuxers

I am kinda confused as to why certain Linux distros are mentioned in in every others post while others seems to get litten attention or are being bashed at worst. People advertise for Mint because it’s so easy to use, while I personally miss it’s benefits over Ubuntu.

Personally I used KDE Neo for some time and switched to Fedora 42 a few weeks ago. It has all the same tools as basically every other distros. What is missed is not necessary or available. I can also seamlessly manage my proxmox server through ssh and fish and take up minor programming tasks on python or arduino.

Am I missing something important, or just seeing a loud minority with very specific requir?

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Why are there so many different types of bread at the store? Or mustard, ketchup, milk…etc.

    It’s mostly personal preference and reputation. Ubuntu has a shit reputation right now because of some poor decision making, and Fedora has a solid reputation and doesn’t cause problems.

    That’s pretty much it.

  • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    A lot of it is momentum / inertia? (I can’t think of the right word).

    Basically, Ubuntu was the distro for years. It was the one that just worked and was easy for new users. It built on Debian’s stability and made everything easier. All the beginner guides and how to guides were written with Ubuntu in mind, so lots of new users switched to it too.

    Mint built on Ubuntu’s success, and made things even easier for people switching from Windows, by doing things like putting the start menu in the same place, and making everything look familiar. Because it’s based on Ubuntu, the guides all still work too. As Canonical started making unpopular decisions with Ubuntu, Mint took the lead as the distro to switch to.

    Now, other distros like Fedora, and DEs like KDE have caught up, and even passed Mint for ease of use, that history is hard to overcome :)

    • Willdrick@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Old school user here, back in 2005ish Ubuntu was straightforward, even had “wubi” to install it as a windows app, the site was friendly and easy to navigate (compared to Debian’s). Another big plus, they shipped the distro CDs for free worldwide, which was a big deal while I was stuck on a shitty ADSL connection that had constant drops.

      Mint came a bit later and the big plus was OOTB codecs support. Back in the day that was one of the first walls most users came across, while Ubuntu pushed for a paid mp3 codec (fluendo?) Mint had most audio and video codecs working right after setup.

      The UI wasn’t that different between the two, considering Ubuntu was running gnome2 (what mate immitates nowadays)

  • MynameisAllen@lemmy.zip
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    3 months ago

    Honestly the difference on the whole is preference. Maybe the availability of things in the repo but with flatpak that feels less important than it did a few years ago. I run Fedora on my laptops and bazzite on my Ally

  • Nima@leminal.space
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    3 months ago

    usually mint is focused on because it’s a simple enough ui for those new to linux. it doesn’t mean other distros are forgotten. it’s usually just for those not familiar with linux or coming from a different OS.

    • Foofighter@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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      3 months ago

      But that’s kind of my point. I don’t understand/know where the simplicity comes in. My experience from Fedora and Ubuntu is: Install is straightforward and almost identical between both distros Login Done

      To me, mint is a bloated Ubuntu (no offense for those who appreciate it)

      • imecth@fedia.io
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        3 months ago

        Fedora doesn’t enable non free repositories by default, and that’s a big deal for new users. Telling someone they need to run commands in the terminal to get their nvidia drivers, or even get youtube working is a problem.

        • grinka@lemmy.zip
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          3 months ago

          Fedora have “Enable 3rd party repositories” button in post-installation user setup which enables NVIDIA, Steam, Google Chrome and Flathub repositories. Then all of these can be installed from KDE Discover or GNOME Software, no need for terminal