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35
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143
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Which version of Ubuntu you’re installing (including which flavour), Whether you have network connectivity, Hardware stats, including CPU, RAM, GPU, etc, Your device vendor (e.g., Dell, Lenovo, etc), Your country (based on the time zone you pick, not IP), How long your install took to complete, Whether you have auto login enabled, Your disk layout (how many hard drives and partitions you have), Whether you chose to install third party codecs, Whether you chose to download updates during install

    (According to OMG!Ubuntu) Most distros offer optional telemetry, but Ubuntu’s is opt out not opt in (for GNOME you have to separately install the telemetry)

  • I don’t hate Ubuntu, it used to be my favorite distro and I haven’t found anything that really replaces it. I hate Canonical for destroying my favorite distro

  • Don’t give them any ideas

  • Zorin or Pop OS, or reconfigure it

  • Not on Linux

  • Mint removes everything that makes Ubuntu bad and they have a version with the same features but Debian based and because Ubuntu is pushing snaps so much they have been thinking of making LMDE (Linux Mint Debian edition) the new default

  • Fedora is moving a bit faster than Debian(but it’s pretty unstable), the main selling point is in my opinion dnf/rpm, but on a server a rhel clone would be a better choice. Pop OS and especially Mint are great distros, Debian is great but very outdated, I would try them live and then decide

  • The joke is based on the fact that Ubuntu forces snaps and most people agree that they suck

  • A lot of terminal apps tend to skip windows, ungoogled chromium doesn’t have a official windows release

  • Discord was not made for Wayland and has failed to provide an update

  • The backend is proprietary

  • And then Canonical would control Linux apps, sounds like a good idea

  • Maybe they changed it, but when I tried it they didn’t setup a boot loader by default

  • qutebrowser, vifm, and keyboard plugins for all apps that have them

  • Snaps is Ubuntu/Canonicals proprietary package format which is mostly considered a worse alternative to flatpak (another package format) with no real advantages on desktops that Canonical is trying to force on users

  • It’s confusing if there are more than one version of an app and the fact that the command to install one installs the other doesn’t make it better

  • Snaps just create additional confusion