

The distro sucks anyway. They ship really fucking old packages, even more so than Debian or other stable distros.
The distro sucks anyway. They ship really fucking old packages, even more so than Debian or other stable distros.
KDE Plasma, I can’t go back to SDR
If I win the lottery, I won’t tell anyone but there will be signs.
If they brought up SELinux I’d assume they had no need to Google it.
Was trying to start a discussion, my bad.
That’s pretty cool that PowerPC was mentioned. I wish I still had my IMac G5 to run Linux on.
I don’t hate it. What’s SELinux?
I highly doubt this will work in WINE. This type of software almost never works in WINE.
Damn, I actually did not know that. I thought it was just an image file.
If I may ask, is there a rolling version of Fedora? I’ve never really used it.
Mint is great as long as you don’t care about HDR or Wayland. Seeing as you don’t want Arch and Ubuntu is being a pain in the ass for you I’d say give Debian Testing a try. It has the newest packages unlike standard Debian. You can choose KDE, Cinnamon, or something else. I hear people constantly reccommending OpenSuse but I’ve never tried it so I can’t comment. If you just want to game and don’t care about much else then Bazzite is pretty great. Nobara is also popular. PopOS kind of sucks in my experience, I’d avoid it unless you know you’d like it.
Edit: Forgot to clarify HDR support requires KDE Plasma or GNOME. Plasma has better support for it right now.
I used it on Mint. I liked it. I use Strawberry now because it can bypass software decoding and output audio directly to my DAC.
That’s actually fucking rad.
Not all of us use older PC’s. I really don’t care what other people use but I like being on the latest version of whatever software I’m using. Also, I used endeavourOS on a Thinkpad T-420 and didn’t have any issues with running the latest software on that laptop from 2012. I’m not saying you haven’t had issues but it isn’t exactly black or white. Older PC’s are not Linux’s target market. Everything is Linux’s target market. Linux will run on everything from a Pentium II laptop to a $50,000,000 super computer.