Honestly friend I don't give a rats ass about up or down votes. I'm just here to read, learn and converse. Some things I'll get right, some I'll get wrong. That's life.
I could stop using this tomorrow and it would make zero difference to my life, know what I mean? It's just some site. My real life is something altogether different.
As an IT Technician/Sysadmin I highly recommend you use the one your IT team told you to use. If you run into issues they'll be able to help but not if your using some obscure app they've never heard of.
It should be ok because nothing will run on your system without a permission prompt at least. So they that should ring some bells of system is asking for your password when you didn't try to install anything.
But best practice would be log in as a regular user and use sudo to do any admin tasks.
Definitely. I use Timeshift on Linux Mint Debian Edition and set it to take weekly snapshots. Saved my bacon about 2 weeks ago when a kernel update borked my system.
Lollypop. Simple interface that shows me album art. I can't always remember band names or artist names but I know what the damn album cover looks like 👍
The average Windows user doesn't know what a terminal is, let alone use it. Whereas in Linux every user knows what a terminal is and has used it at least a handful of times.
Some distros don't have an app store, just the terminal.
This is not the only way to install apps but as a Linux user there will be times when you will need to use the terminal. Might as well know that from now.
The instructions they gave are really simple and straightforward. If you struggle with that, you may want to learn a bit about the terminal.
But since you're on Ubuntu there is a much easier way: go to Mullvad downloads page and download the deb file. Double click it and the Ubuntu App Store should open and install it. If not, open the App Store and search for gdebi and install it.
Now right click the deb you downloaded, and click "open with..." and choose gdebi from the list.
It should check dependencies and give you an "install" button. Click that and wait for it to finish. Then simply launch Mullvad as normal.
In general on Linux you install apps by looking in the distro repo: either by searching the App Store or by using the terminal.
To do it from the terminal type:
'sudo apt update'. Enter your password.
After it's updated type 'apt search [name of app] and press enter. It will give you a list of apps with that name. Eg apt search lollypop (a music player).
Then if you see it listed, you know it's in the repo.
To install it type 'sudo apt install lollypop' and press enter. It will tell you how large it is and if you want to install it. Type "y" and press enter. It will finish it in a few seconds.
Done. Launch the app as normal.
There is also something called Flatpak's which you can get from flathub.com
You will also find instructions there on how to install flatpak on your system but typing a few commands.
Welcome to Linux. You'll either embrace and love it or abandon it.
Undoubtedly Wayland is the way forward and I think it's a good thing. However I wouldn't piss all over X because it served us well for many years. My LMDE 6 still runs X and probably will for the next 2 years at least because both the Mint Team and Debian team don't rush into things. They are taking it slow, testing Wayland to make sure no-one's system breaks when they switch to Wayland.
This is the best approach. Eventually it will all be Wayland but I never understood why this is such an issue. Like any tech it's progress, no need for heated debates. It's just a windowing system after all.
My Sony Xperia 10iii still has that light as well as a heaphone jack, SD card slot that can be removed by hand (no ejector tool needed) and full waterproofing. These are literally all the features missing on newer phones. Plus it has a genuine 3 cameras: wide, ultrawide and telephoto - no fake "macro" BS here.
Best of all it's successor the Xperia 10v can be bought on the UK Sony site for just GBP299! Incredible price. But alas I don't live there but if one had a friend there you could have them order it send it to you via courier.
Excellent. Being able to install a fresh OS at will is one of the many fun things in Linux. Theming is another. I would advise you do a backup of anything important on Windows and just erase the entire disk and do a clean install of Linux. If you still need Windows, install Virtualbox and install Windows as a VM. Best of both worlds. I do this to enable me to print to my Canon printer because the Linux drivers don't work ,it needs Windows to print, calibrate etc.
In the article someone mentioned Upnote (https://getupnote.com/) and it looks very good. Cross platform work sync. 50 notes in the free version and 99 cents a month for premium. Cross platform too.
As for me I wanted a more simple note taking app so I use Notesnook. I'm using the free version but there is a paid version. Includes sync on all versions and is cross platform.
Honestly friend I don't give a rats ass about up or down votes. I'm just here to read, learn and converse. Some things I'll get right, some I'll get wrong. That's life.
I could stop using this tomorrow and it would make zero difference to my life, know what I mean? It's just some site. My real life is something altogether different.