I wasn’t sure about the state of Slowroll. In terms of stability, Tumbleweed ist absolutely fine. It’s the less frequent, but not super low frequent update cycle that’s interesting to me. I could always just ignore updates on TW, but I’ve got the urge to run the updates if there are any.
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It’s available, but still experimental I think.
I’m running TW and it’s great. If you don’t want a rolling release, OpenSUSE created Slowroll, that is supposed to release major updates every one or two months, which would probably be my go to if I were to start over.
tbh: she probably clicks on the thing that says “INTERNET” and thats it. I’ve been setting up a few computers in my family for people 50+ and they mostly don’t even know the name of the program they use and mix it all up. I then just install a program and prefix the shortcut with the service. Like “MAIL Outlook”, “INTERNET Firefox” so they know where to go.
I’ve been scripting pre update snapshot, update, restart, post update snapshot. Whenever I start my PC and there’s a update notification, I just run my script, have a look at Lemmy or get a coffee or have a piss, and then go on with whatever I was going to do. Or skip update for a day if I don’t wanna invest the time.
The only reason for a rollback was a fuck up on my side. Nvidia drivers from the official zypper repo is always up to date and has not failed me for as long as I had a Nvidia GPU
It’s really easy and comfortable to use.
xtapa@feddit.deto Linux@lemmy.ml•Distro recommendation for ease of use and up to date software71·2 years agoopenSUSE Tumbleweed. It’s not Arch based, but easy to install and configure, KDE Plasma is nice and the rolling release has you always up to date. Snapshots make it safe.
xtapa@feddit.deto Linux@lemmy.ml•Good news for AMD Linux users - fTPM RNG will soon be disabled1·2 years agoHave a look at Tumbleweed with KDE.
In 10 years of working with tiling WMs productively on a daily basis this has been an issue exactly 0 times…
…for you.
Different people have different needs.
xtapa@feddit.deto Linux@lemmy.ml•Fed-up Torvalds suggests disabling AMD’s 'stupid' performance-killing fTPM RNG1·2 years agoJust disabled it in BIOS/UEFI. Should I disable security device support too, or doesn’t it matter when fTPM is disabled?
xtapa@feddit.deto Linux@lemmy.ml•What are the main challenges in Linux adoption for New users, and how can it be addressed?English9·2 years agoI recently changed and could only do it because of ChatGPT. There are a lot of things that work different in Linux, like package managers, the file system in general, the focus on terminal, stuff that works different with different distros. For almost all questions, ChatGPT helped me within seconds. This is even more true, when I kinda don’t know, what my question actually is. Then it helps to give me some good buzzwords to Google for. If I would have done this with just reddit and forums and stack or something, I’d get so much non-helping, gatekeeping, belittling answers - if any.
Liftoff works best for me. Looks good, feels good. Tried a few and it just snapped.
I’ve been in your shoes a few months ago. I tried a few distros in VMs and ended up using OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. It comes with different GUIs and I decided for KDE. As a beginner TW helped me with the built in snapshots mechanism. So before I did anything, I took a snapshot, did it, and if I fucked up, I could easily rollback and try again. Since TW is a rolling release, I now make a snapshot before and after the system update So I always have some stable Rollback snapshots. Gives me so much safety to fiddle around and learn more about Linux. Been loving it so far.
Make heavy use of ChatGPT. I’ve been chatting about Linux with it for months now.
Habe Grade ein Update machen wollen, aber einmal mehr darf ich mich durch die Wolfi dependency Hölle arbeiten. Nur um dann in ein paar Tagen alles wieder aus dem OpenSUSE Feed zu beziehen. :(