• BurnedDonutHole@ani.social
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    6 hours ago

    Try to install Fedora 43 everything goes perfectly installation finished without any problems. Restart and bam I’m in my bios. Restart thinking it’a fluke, bam back to bios. Try again with a different setup USB bam bios… Ask around try what people are saying bam back to bios… This happened to me on old MSI laptop from 2015 and the new Asus from 2024… I’m beginning to think Fedora is allergic to me.

    • marzhall@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      That’s a weird-un. I moved to Fedora specifically because I wanted a no-nonsense distro, and for the last 7 years it’s delivered on various desk- and laptops, knock-on-wood.

  • mlg@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    “btw can you please install the latest nvidia drivers?”

    “latest?”

    switches back to Fedora

    • percent@infosec.pub
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      2 hours ago

      I’m still kinda surprised to hear that people are still having trouble with Nvidia drivers. I would have thought that Nvidia would have decided to improve that because of the AI boom. I wonder why they continue being so bad at this 🤔

      • GenosseFlosse@feddit.org
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        28 minutes ago

        Have 2 Monitors with different screen resolutions. It crashes more often than windows 95 when I try to alt tab between applications.

      • Ashelyn@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 hour ago

        That is because nearly all of nvidia’s revenue comes from AI datacenter hardware now, and before that from crypto miners. As long as CUDA works without issue, their main clients by dollar volume are happy

      • mlg@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Someone I personally knew almost gave up on Linux because their mint install would have screen tearing issues due to an outdated driver module and kernel, since Mint follows close to Ubuntu’s kernel releases which are slow.

        Cutting edge and bleeding edge kernels is one of Linux’s biggest strengths because 99% of driver modules are in the kernel, so keeping it up to date will significantly reduce the chances of issues with your hardware, especially if its anything new.

        You dont need to know the version, but knowing that your updates are based on cutting edge latest stable is what can save you from driver headaches.

        • Tingle@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          It’s useful to have updated drivers if a game or something isn’t working, otherwise it’s hardly a big deal, just need to keep the sysyem as up to date as it needs to run your sysyem, i’m on mint since October and never uad any headaches, even updates drivers recently to try to resolve an issue.

      • foreverunsure@pawb.social
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        10 hours ago

        NVIDIA drivers still suck on Linux, but each new update has been bringing massive usability improvements lately.

      • Gladaed@feddit.org
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        10 hours ago

        Since the drivers continue to be worked on after the release of the hardware. Some new functionality for new games may be developed. Or bugs may be fixed.

        Seems like a dishonest question. Unless you are only using GPU compute professionally with out of date software.

        • rockettaco37@feddit.nu
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          26 minutes ago

          Honestly…

          You’d figure people who go out of their way to buy a nice GPU would understand this.

    • Burninator05@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      Nope. I bounced through about 5 distros before settling on Fedora. I’ve been on a little over a year and no real complains from me.

    • lightnegative@lemmy.world
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      Nope, there are dozens of us. Dozens!

      I’ve been using Fedora for a long time because it’s actually up to date and tends to have the best of what the open source community has to offer, while still having some opinionated defaults to make things run smoothly.

      Never had a problem with WIFI drivers. NVIDIA on Wayland however… (not Fedora’s fault the proprietary drivers are garbage, its done what it can by at least making them easy to install)

  • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    Me: Btw how old are your packages?

    Mint: Its rude to ask the age of a distro

    Me: well are the maintained properly?

    Mint: uhhhh… Some of them are

    • Pat_Riot@lemmy.today
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      9 hours ago

      Mint us absolutely perfect for folks like me. I want to use my computer, not work on it. I have Blender, a couple of slicers, GIMP, a couple of DAW type programs and a few other things. Perfect computer. I have no interest in the bleeding edge. Now granted, I don’t game, which saves me some grief but I guess kinda marginalizes me these days, and I’m not even hobbyist level savvy in the console, but I do hate both Microsoft and Apple, ta-da!, Mint. If there’s a better distro for me, I don’t care, I like mint.

      • entwine@programming.dev
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        1 hour ago

        Mint us absolutely perfect for folks like me. I want to use my computer, not work on it.

        I know you’re not going to believe me, because you sound like the type of person who is “set in their ways”, but the only thing that makes Mint better for you than some other distro is that it happens to already be installed on your computer. That’s it. Mint is not the perfect choice for anyone, because it’s not particularly good at anything.

        Keep using it. If it works for you, great. I don’t care what you use. But we shouldn’t be misleading people new to Linux into installing a distro that might not work for them.

    • io@piefed.blahaj.zone
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      24 hours ago

      me: Btw how old are your packages?

      fedora: this was committed by some random guy this morning and not even on the main branch, have fun

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    2 days ago

    Distro hoping is fine. But there is a certain feeling you get when you can fix your own problems by reading the arch wiki

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    2 days ago

    Usual suspect, the Wi-Fi/Bluetooth card. Milk spoils? Wi-Fi/Bluetooth Card! Freshly divorced? Wi-Fi/Bluetooth card!

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    2 days ago

    I tried basically every distro on my laptop and fedora worked all hardware 100% out of the box + printer + fingerprint reader + all day battery life

    Fedora gnome is so good it makes Linux boring

    • Dharma Curious (he/him)@slrpnk.net
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      2 days ago

      I wish my fingerprint scanner worked D:

      Honestly, the only two problems I have had at all are fingerprint scanner (like, lowest priority for me), and the battery continues to drain quickly even when I close the laptop or put it in sleep mode or whatever it’s called

      • gustofwind@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Ah I’m sorry to hear that all I can suggest is trying to look up what your specific hardware is and see if there are any solutions on archwiki or something

        I did make sure to get a thinkpad because I heard they have excellent Linux support so it is possible your hardware just doesn’t have a proper solution yet 🤷‍♀️

        But I am not a coder so I don’t really know how to do anything but google and try

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      2 days ago

      Unless there is an update and you have to wait for a couple of months to get all the extensions back

      • Wispy2891@lemmy.world
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        And then you just go to extensions.gnome.org and tell to run the extensions anyway by ignoring the GNOME version

        Don’t have much experience but I run extensions designed for 45 on 49 without any problem

        Unfortunately for me GNOME without extensions it’s unusable and I don’t have the patience to stay 3-4 versions behind to ensure compatibility

        Edit: I wrote the wrong URL, it was .org and not .com

    • GreenShimada@lemmy.world
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      Fedora gnome is so good it makes Linux boring

      Is this a workflow thing? I was looking at Fedora last week and I’m interested to hear what you like about it.

      I’m on Cinnamon and made everything look like OSX, but it seemed like gnome would have a learning curve. And as much as KDE looks like Windows NT, something a touch more modern does seem nice.

      • NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        Lol KDE looks like windows NT? Uh… No.

        Wobbly windows is best thing ever by the way.

        KDE looks like whatever you want.

        • GreenShimada@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Well, I’ve only seen KDE on TW, so maybe it was just the default theme color scheme that gave me NT flashbacks. Though I did actually mean that as a compliment. Maybe I also don’t remember NT well enough.

      • dil@lemmy.zip
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        Gnome extensions can look pretty much exactly like kde or better depending on your taste, kde is easier to customize and more intuitive. I like that gnome is extension based with each extension being something you pick, many having their own customization and settings.

        Some extensions I like: Arcmenu: start menu like windows, kde, etc. lots of layout options, replaces the hot corner big icon search menu thing

        Dash to dock: use on handheld, perfect touchscreen menu customizable or (use one at a time) Dash to panel: use on desktop, even more customizable, basically gives you a panel since gnome by default has the hot corner android like app menu (which I also use mostly on the handheld, love the hot corner for moving stuff around)

        Windows thumbnails (pip any window, monitor downloads or chats)

        I use a lot more but forget the names, nothing really breaks if you toggle use incompatible addons or whatever it’s called. You can also edit the addon and change the version since that is what the devs do 90% of the time to update it.

        • dil@lemmy.zip
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          2 days ago

          I really like the top bar, hot corner, workplace swapping on mouse scroll, control center, etc. Kde is a close second for me, and I may be swapping back soon just because I get bored using the same thing. Prob not if you can’t backup your layout, really like what my gnome desktop looks like and its functional/productive.

          Tophat is great for quick resource monitoring. Ddterm for a dropdown terminal. Campeek to quickly check webcam. A timer for self timing some online work I do that is self reported. It’s just perfectly setup and not crowded at all while having so much. I do miss the pop out tab sticky notes on kde.

      • gustofwind@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I used to use KDE but so many small visual inconsistencies and oddities would annoy me that I was definitely already feeling like trying something else. Also I really like fingerprint login which kde had trouble with.

        Switched to gnome just to try and once I setup my extensions it just felt right. (Extension manager downloaded from regular App Store)

        Fedora has a great gnome implementation that is preconfigured much better than any other distro I tried. Fractional scaling was available without configuration and gnome’s online account login + fingerprint login also worked out of the box.

        Everything just works but my thinkpad is also linux certified which could explain why everything is so easy. Still, other distros required more gnome configuration work and I’d have random problems with sleep mode, Bluetooth, WiFi, etc.

        Also, it brings me a little personal peace of mind knowing the distro is supported by fedora and red hat. That is serious institutional support and I think is just a good thing for Linux generally but also could explain why fedora has an edge to me

        • Redex@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Interesting, my experience was the opposite. I tried multiple gnome based distros, but I always hated it. Was ready to try and accept it to use Linux, but then I finally tried KDE and it felt like such a breath of fresh air. Granted, I haven’t used it much yet, but from the little I did, I love it so much more than gnome in every way.

        • GreenShimada@lemmy.world
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          14 hours ago

          Thanks for the details here. Fedora is a bit more secure than Mint, so I was hoping to jump over there if everything worked. But I didn’t do my research about gnome extensions beforehand, so customizing the UI was a hill I didn’t expect.

  • daddycool@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Me: Oh and Mint, could you also add my old printer that I can’t get to work on any other OS I’ve tried?

    Mint: Sure thing.

    • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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      Ha. On Windows I had this ancient Ethernet Canon IP printer. Windows hated it, even with the supplied Canon drivers and network Utility. It always needed messing with every time to get it to show up as a printer on the network.

      When I moved to OpenSUSE I went into YAST2 printer discovery. It found the printer right away, and suggested a model, and asked if I wanted to install the GutenPrint driver for it. Yes please. And do you want to announce this printer to others on your network (via CUPS) Yes. Done. Worked 100% with no Canon utilities.

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      2 days ago

      me: hey mint, suspend automatically.

      mint: no.

      me: suspend manually then.

      mint: no.

      me: shutdown

      mint: no.

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    2 days ago

    My experience has been the opposite. I built a new PC last year, and only Fedora and Arch recognized the Radeon GPU and the Intel Wi-Fi. Mint was shipping a kernel that was too old to recognize either one.

    • SatyrSack@quokk.au
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      Agreed. Out of all the distributions I have tried, Fedora (and its various spins and derivatives) are what tend to have everything actually work out of the box.

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        2 days ago

        My first distro has been Nobara after swapping off windows.

        It really is dummy proof.

        For those on the edge. Just do it. Windows 11 is free to go back to. You risk nothing by giving Linux a try.

        • danielton1@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          The guy behind Nobara does a LOT of important work to make Linux usable at home, especially when it comes to gaming. And in case anyone doesn’t know, he is a software engineer at Red Hat, the company sponsoring Fedora, the distro that Nobara is based on.

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      On new hardware it’s generally easier to use a rolling release distro in my experience.

      You’re more likely to have a newer kernel and drivers that support things like wifi cards.

      • danielton1@lemmy.world
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        IMO, you shouldn’t have to learn Arch just to be able to get a new PC. Eventually, people who like Ubuntu and Mint are going to want to upgrade to a new computer, and they might be in for a shock once they do. That kind of thing is what pushes people back to Windows.

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          1 hour ago

          If you can’t install something like EndeavourOS or tumble weed then you likely were not going to be able to reload an os anyway.

          Installing vanilla arch is a very useful activity to do at least once so you know how the system works but don’t have to use vanilla Arch and can use any of the derivatives so long as it has the latest kernel / drivers for your hardware.

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      Yeah when I first booted up, fedora didn’t see my ethernet port, but I was able to connect via wifi no problem. And then, after updating, when I returned to figure out how to get it working, I saw it already was.

      Audio was similar. I use the digital optical out for my main audio device, and at first it wasn’t working. I could get audio via other ports (and temporarily plugged my soundbar in via USB, but didn’t like how that unified the system volume and device volume instead of being able to control each independently). I go back later to debug it only to find it just works now.

      Or more recently, I switched to KDE and the first time I enabled my TV output to watch something, it wouldn’t enable the HDMI audio for that port. Fiddled around with it for a bit but gave up because I was in the middle of making dinner and just turned up my PC soundbar. Go back to have another look the next time I enable the TV display and it just works.

      Though I did discover bluetooth doesn’t work while trying to connect to my TV’s sound system that way. It can see other devices but won’t connect with them stably. Not a big deal to me because I don’t rely on BT normally, but hoping it also just works when I next go to debug it specifically instead of just checking if it will work around another issue.

      Sounds a bit janky but I’ve also had multiple windows laptops suddenly just lose the ability to connect via the connection method that was previously working. Sometimes disabling and enabling the adapter fixed it, sometimes enabling then disabling airplane mode did it, sometimes I’d have to switch between ethernet and wifi, sometimes it wouldn’t resolve without a reboot.

      Also, just yesterday, I was trying to use a USB external drive to move a file from my old windows box to my fedora box, but windows wouldn’t recognize the hdd anymore. A USB stick worked (on the same port I was plugging the drive into) and fedore recognizes both of them no issue.

    • SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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      2 days ago

      Thankfully Ubuntu will focus on shipping the newest kernel each release and Mint’s gonna profit of it. Also there’s newer kernels you can switch to optionally.

    • chunes@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      First thing to do on most linux distros, but especially mint, is turn off everything sleep-related forever.

        • randint@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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          10 hours ago

          My openSUSE works without issues on my ThinkPad, including sleep. Back when I used EndeavourOS on a 2015 MacBook Pro putting it to sleep caused various problems (don’t really remember what).

        • Billegh@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Sadly, MacOS is leading the pack with sleep working as expected. This is the most cursed timeline.

          • Takios@discuss.tchncs.de
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            If I had to guess it’s because Apple controls both hard- and software. Sleep is a delicate business where both the OS and the hardware have to work together to get it right. Linux and Windows run on an endless combination of different hardware components whereas Apple knows exactly on what hardware their OS will run.

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            And in true macOS fashion it only works if you stay within the Apple ecosystem.

            Applications and sleep are intimately tied to native macOS workspaces, which are themselves cursed af.

            If you use an alternative manager, like Aerospace (which reimplemented workspace/tiling), then applications cannot sleep properly, leading to severe battery drain.

            https://github.com/nikitabobko/AeroSpace/discussions/1008

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            I’ve never really had problems with it on windows either. I use it 95% of the time as I want to continue where I left off. This includes leaving huge videogames on like Witcher 3.

            EDIT: Now that I think about it, I don’t remember the last time I used shutdown function. It’s always sleep or sometimes restart after installing something

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              1 day ago

              My newer laptop from Lenovo freezes up in Windows 11 everytime it goes to sleep. The only solution is to do a hard power down by holding the power button for 10+ seconds to get it to reboot.

              I have Linux Mint installed dual boot and it sleeps and suspends fine. Don’t ask me why this is.

        • Ascend910@lemmy.ml
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          2 days ago

          Feren OS on a ThinkPad L390 sleeps and wakes perfectly. Probably because of thinkpad

      • SkabySkalywag@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Ha! It’s the one issue that’s been giving me the biggest headache through multiple distros. To be fair I believe most of my problems originate from Nvidia hardware and software.

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        2 days ago

        God yes, it was fucking with my partners graphics drivers, and killed most games I have running.

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      2 days ago

      I’ve been having this exact same problem. I don’t have a fix, but hey, comradery.

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    2 days ago

    Been using Fedora on several laptops and desktops, and haven’t had issues with wifi. Or with anything else for that matter. For me, everything in Fedora just works and never breaks.

    The first bug I’ve seen was recently. Apparently an update broke the ‘shutdown and update’ function in Fedora Workstation. So now when you press it, nothing happens. Then when you try shutting down, the PC will shut down without updating. It’ll update and shutdown upon next boot. Can confirm Fedora KDE is unaffected though.

    • colourlessidea@sopuli.xyz
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      For me, everything in Fedora just works and never breaks.

      Apparently an update broke the ‘shutdown and update’ function in Fedora Workstation.

      Hmmmmmmm

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      I remember this sort of stuff a long time ago. There were wifi drivers that were either linux, but closed source, or horror of horrors having to resort to ndiswrapper…

      Of course, the Ubuntu derivatives made this easy enough by just including it, but Fedora was much more purist about open source and so wouldn’t even tell you about rpm-fusion, let alone enable proprietary drivers for basic network access.

      Now Fedora has edged a bit more practical and proactively let’s users know about how to add proprietary stuff and the wifi industry takes Linux seriously, if not for desktop use then for all the embedded use cases they would be left out of without good Linux support. Fedora is still a bit far on the ‘purist’ side still (try to play a lot of media using dnf provided software, it will tend to break), but not as hard as it used to be)

    • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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      And Kinonite by extension. I updated and restarted because I like fresh kernels.

      Don’t judge me, it’s my kink OK. In my sad, pathetic little white bread life in the middle of nowhere.

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    1 day ago

    Well. I have an issue and I’m just gonna drop it here as a last ditch effort.

    In my Mint Software Manager, I noticed that certain data won’t come through.

    Specifically the reviews are not displayed. All applications have 4.5 stars. No reviews whatsoever.

    How could I fix this?

    • Qwel@sopuli.xyz
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      Can you confirm that you are connected to internet?

      If you want people to help you, they’ll need logs. To get them,

      • close the software manager if running
      • type mintinstall in the terminal, then press Enter
      • copy the result with “right-click > copy” or “ctrl+shift+C”

      Send me that and I can give it a look. Can’t promise much though, I’m not a Mint user. When you have Mint issues, consider asking in the Mint forum