It’s not attitude they are giving you. It’s strong recommendation. It’s the strong recommendation of the entire Linux community.
Sudo is different than run as admin and is not intended to be used to do things the way Windows does them.
It’s not attitude they are giving you. It’s strong recommendation. It’s the strong recommendation of the entire Linux community.
Sudo is different than run as admin and is not intended to be used to do things the way Windows does them.
I don’t know that I agree with this for anything but GPUs. There are plenty of distros that are stable and don’t require constant fiddling.
That makes it sound more like it is Linux, but not GNU. Which is accurate
My money is on its not pushing Pro hard enough.
I just now discovered why people are hating on Ubuntu pro by receiving a note that Ubuntu will not provide security updates for some apps it came with unless you activate Pro.
I think I’m done with Ubuntu on any personal machines.
I believe the answer is no. I think it installs over Wi-Fi, fine, so long as the adapter isn’t a weird of brand or something.
I have one for work and I’ll say it’s high, sometimes. Can sounds like a jet engine.
My Darter does not have that issue, though.
I just took it favoring a daily driver for gaming and every distro it gave had either didn’t work, isn’t optimized for, or requires additional config for gaming.
On Windows and Mac, you are doing a number of things implicitly that you don’t realize.
When you download from their site, you are expected to verify the integrity and validity of the install file yourself. You also have to take ownership of installing any dependencies yourself.
With the instructions mulvad is providing you, you are connecting to a repo and apt does all that for you.
Some installs don’t require dependencies, but some do. Long term, this style of install tends to be a lot simpler, you just have to learn it.
But more importantly and as others have stated. Linux is different. If you aren’t interested in learning a new workflow, you should stick with something familiar. That’s a choice you should make not because others said it but because you want it.
That can depend on a lot of factors, though. From the bus of the enclosure to the speed of the USB port and cables you used.
I wouldn’t have expected a 40 percent drop on the modern USB standards, but I’d still expect a drop. I was thinking closer to 20 percent.
It definitely is, but likely comes with a slight performance sacrifice due to bus speeds.
I think Chrome OS did an excellent job of achieving what it set out to do. Which was be a low profile closed ecosystem meant for people who just need to surf the web.
I won a Chromebook in a drawing and used it fairly regularly until my wife co-opted it as her own.
It’s not that an Amazon instance can be a docker container. It was more that the behavior you are describing is extremely odd for a full Linux environment but normal for a docker container.
If you created the instance, it isn’t likely a container. But it also sounds like the base image might be poorly set up
Microsoft teams screen share for me. Doesn’t work at all with Wayland.
Well, the docker command wouldn’t exist inside of a container. You could use uname to check the system info.
How is it you don’t know this information about a system you’ve connected to?
Are you certain this isn’t a docker container you’ve logged into?
If everything on the machine is owned by root and does not provide global read or execute permissions then a new user would not be able to access it without being in the root group. Assuming the files have group permissions set at all anyways.
It’s more helpful to ask questions of OP if you feel their initial question is missing context.
They probably don’t know what to consider if they are asking the question to begin with. Asking gap filling questions can help guide to an answer.
This isn’t a helpful comment. OP is asking for ways to leverage their knowledge not suggesting that Linux itself is a career path.
Some things we would want to install aren’t in the official repos. Downloading the deb file is a solution to that for newer users.