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Not a fan of Ubuntu. Last time I tried it out, there were ads/suggestions in the search window and I hate the idea of having to remove stuff from a fresh install.
[–]Sir_Ebral0 points
2 points
2 points
(+2|-0)
ago
If you want APT as a package manager, try Mint. It does have systemd, but if you're new to linux it's not a huge concern, especially coming from windows.
I prefer an arch-based distro for Pacman, works better than APT and is less annoying to use.
If you do Mint, snag something older than 19.3, or at least install an older kernel. 19.3 comes with the 5.x branch, which is beholden to the tranny CoC. AFAIK, if you go back to something like 4.15 or 4.17, that predates the madness (and Mint tells me that the 4.x kernel I'm on is supported through 2023).
And for new users installing 19.3, getting a non-pozzed kernel (well, non-tranny-pozzed, but sysdemd is still a thing) is pretty simple. Just open the update manager and there's a "show kernels" option. A few clicks, type your root password, reboot, and done.
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[–] Gingercuntfirecrotch 0 points 4 points 4 points (+4|-0) ago
Not a fan of Ubuntu. Last time I tried it out, there were ads/suggestions in the search window and I hate the idea of having to remove stuff from a fresh install.
[–] Sir_Ebral 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
If you want APT as a package manager, try Mint. It does have systemd, but if you're new to linux it's not a huge concern, especially coming from windows.
I prefer an arch-based distro for Pacman, works better than APT and is less annoying to use.
[–] uvulectomy 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
If you do Mint, snag something older than 19.3, or at least install an older kernel. 19.3 comes with the 5.x branch, which is beholden to the tranny CoC. AFAIK, if you go back to something like 4.15 or 4.17, that predates the madness (and Mint tells me that the 4.x kernel I'm on is supported through 2023).
And for new users installing 19.3, getting a non-pozzed kernel (well, non-tranny-pozzed, but sysdemd is still a thing) is pretty simple. Just open the update manager and there's a "show kernels" option. A few clicks, type your root password, reboot, and done.