Let’s not reach for the “this guy doesn’t want to learn” excuse because that’s you shifting the blame on me, and instead focus on the “this experience has been more frustrating than it needs to be as a first step in adopting an OS and growing the user base”. If I didn’t want to learn, I wouldn’t have bothered to look how to fix the USB after simply cancelling the installation. In what world is that normal? That bug has been around for ages. Also, your installer fatally errors out without a clear cause. Not only was it frustrating, but my time and effort were also wasted. So please…
Why would you cancel the install half way through, is that something you normally do?
If you don’t have the time to install it properly, don’t start the process. If you do have the time see it through.
If you think you have made a mistake and can’t simply back up to the step you think you messed up, just continue. Most things can be fixed after install. Worst case scenario, you will just have to reinstall.
If you backed out because you were afraid of messing up your windows partition, I highly recommend backing up all your data before you install in the first place.
In what world is that normal?
The world where the vast majority of people don’t cancel installing an OS halfway through the process.
You do realize that there is more than one reason why a person would need to cancel an installation that doesn’t necessarily have to do with not having allotted enough time, right? I had the whole afternoon. And that if the button exists on the UI, it’s reasonable to conclude that the feature is in working condition and would not do the one thing antithetical to what we’re trying to achieve.
I don’t know why you’re talking down to me, but I’d rather not engage further if that’ll be the case.
If you order pieces from people who are mostly doing carpentry as a passion and make furniture. Sure it’s frustrating and you have to put in work. But you can’t compare it to buying stuff from IKEA and telling everyone those carpenters need to do more of that.
What flavor of Linux were you trying to install? My experience on endeavoros has been pretty plug and play. I imagine it would be similar on mint, Ubuntu, fedora, Debian. If it was Linux from scratch, yeah that’s likely going to be frustrating.
It was Mint, which is why I found it odd. I’ve also used Ubuntu years ago, but that wasn’t plug-n-play either from what I remember. I spent too much time getting my sound and video cards running, and then spent twice that time getting Compiz to work so I could have all the cool effects. 😅
Honestly, just try something else. If you’re trying to do gaming, I’d recommend Garuda Dragonized from personal experience. It’s Arch based, but comes packaged with everything you’d need for gaming, and a utility to install a bunch of extra stuff you might want, like launchers, controller drivers, etc. I think it even comes with the Nvidia drivers that you’ll need to install manually for most other distros.
I my opinion it’s really ugly out of the box sadly, with a horrible “gamer” look. It’s KDE though, so it’s really easy to customize.
Truth is windows has plenty of bugs too, the main difference is that it comes pre installed so you don’t have to deal with the install bugs, and you’re already acclimated to all its quirks so you don’t notice them as much.
As for Mint, it gets recommended a lot because it’s stable and looks a lot like windows, but it’s old and slow to update to modern standards, you can always go for a more bleeding edge distribution like fedora.
Let’s not reach for the “this guy doesn’t want to learn” excuse because that’s you shifting the blame on me, and instead focus on the “this experience has been more frustrating than it needs to be as a first step in adopting an OS and growing the user base”. If I didn’t want to learn, I wouldn’t have bothered to look how to fix the USB after simply cancelling the installation. In what world is that normal? That bug has been around for ages. Also, your installer fatally errors out without a clear cause. Not only was it frustrating, but my time and effort were also wasted. So please…
Why would you cancel the install half way through, is that something you normally do?
If you don’t have the time to install it properly, don’t start the process. If you do have the time see it through.
If you think you have made a mistake and can’t simply back up to the step you think you messed up, just continue. Most things can be fixed after install. Worst case scenario, you will just have to reinstall.
If you backed out because you were afraid of messing up your windows partition, I highly recommend backing up all your data before you install in the first place.
The world where the vast majority of people don’t cancel installing an OS halfway through the process.
You do realize that there is more than one reason why a person would need to cancel an installation that doesn’t necessarily have to do with not having allotted enough time, right? I had the whole afternoon. And that if the button exists on the UI, it’s reasonable to conclude that the feature is in working condition and would not do the one thing antithetical to what we’re trying to achieve.
I don’t know why you’re talking down to me, but I’d rather not engage further if that’ll be the case.
The way I see it…
If you order pieces from people who are mostly doing carpentry as a passion and make furniture. Sure it’s frustrating and you have to put in work. But you can’t compare it to buying stuff from IKEA and telling everyone those carpenters need to do more of that.
Right, and I accept that from any other part of the OS that isn’t the very first step when trying to use it.
What flavor of Linux were you trying to install? My experience on endeavoros has been pretty plug and play. I imagine it would be similar on mint, Ubuntu, fedora, Debian. If it was Linux from scratch, yeah that’s likely going to be frustrating.
It was Mint, which is why I found it odd. I’ve also used Ubuntu years ago, but that wasn’t plug-n-play either from what I remember. I spent too much time getting my sound and video cards running, and then spent twice that time getting Compiz to work so I could have all the cool effects. 😅
Honestly, just try something else. If you’re trying to do gaming, I’d recommend Garuda Dragonized from personal experience. It’s Arch based, but comes packaged with everything you’d need for gaming, and a utility to install a bunch of extra stuff you might want, like launchers, controller drivers, etc. I think it even comes with the Nvidia drivers that you’ll need to install manually for most other distros.
I my opinion it’s really ugly out of the box sadly, with a horrible “gamer” look. It’s KDE though, so it’s really easy to customize.
Truth is windows has plenty of bugs too, the main difference is that it comes pre installed so you don’t have to deal with the install bugs, and you’re already acclimated to all its quirks so you don’t notice them as much.
As for Mint, it gets recommended a lot because it’s stable and looks a lot like windows, but it’s old and slow to update to modern standards, you can always go for a more bleeding edge distribution like fedora.
tbf mint had a few rough edges last i tried it.