• hperrin@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    11 hours ago

    Haha, I managed to bork my wife’s Windows 11 install so hard the other day just by resizing the partition that not only would it not boot or recover itself, but it also lost a bunch of her files for some reason. Not all, but her entire AppData folder. Had to reformat.

    Anyway, an average user would just try a different distro. He should try a different distro. PopOS kinda sucks.

    • The average user just gets frustrated and tries to boot back into Windows. I’ve seen it first hand. Linux is basically all the same in their head so why bother distrohopping because if one is broken they’re likely all broken. They consider distros to be much more like the different Android variations, even though those are much more similar to one another than Linux distros are.

      Average users just expect things to work. They don’t want to tinker or do long setups or navigate 600 different distros, they just want a clear good option and for it to work. It’s part of why Windows has this huge inertia behind it; there’s always one upgrade path, setup is basically automatic and in the vast majority of cases any issues are handled either automatically or don’t show up in the first place (in large part due to manufacturers providing support for their model PC/Laptop, not because Microsoft is amazing at support). And because the majority of their friends and family also use Windows, there’s usually someone around who can fix what is truly broken.

      I genuinely think a user on a hypothetical Dell or HP or Lenovo laptop with Linux preinstalled would have a much better time on average than anyone trying to install it themselves.

      • hperrin@lemmy.ca
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        2 hours ago

        I definitely agree on the average user being more suited to a Linux preinstall. If they want something that just works, they should ask someone who knows. That’s what my parents did, which is why they’re happily running Fedora and have been for years. Fedora just works. I would never recommend PopOS to them.

        Honestly the only reason why PopOS is ever recommended is because rather than the “Install Nvidia drivers” checkbox being during or after install, it’s when you download the ISO. That’s a silly reason to choose an OS. I told my dad to go to the Software app and search for the Nvidia drivers after the install, and his gaming PC works great with an Nvidia card.

        The single biggest reason people don’t think Linux is easy is because they learned to use Windows when they were young and don’t remember that process. Since they don’t remember all of the hassle of learning Windows, the hassle of learning Linux seems unreasonable to them. Like seriously, no one is born with the knowledge of what the fuck C:\ means.

        In reality, people are fine making decisions about basically everything they do. If they weren’t, we would all be driving the standard car, eating the standard food, and watching the standard show. Oh and we’d all be using Mac, which is the standard OS. Mac is the only mainstream OS which perfectly implements the POSIX standard, so by the most literal definition, Mac is the standard.