After creating a fresh installation of Ubuntu 24.04, I installed DEB Firefox from APT by following Mozilla’s instructions from here. But I noticed that it was secretly replaced with Snap Firefox. I was able to verify this by checking the About Firefox page. This is the third time I noticed this.

  • N.E.P.T.R
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    11 month ago

    For work, you could also try Fedora Workstation or Linux Mint Debian Edition. Debian is pretty barebones, but if that isnt a bother then do whatever.

    • fmstrat
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      1 month ago

      It’s not barebones. I use it as my main desktop and barely notice any difference from Ubuntu, it has every package I’ve ever needed. I think that mentality of Debian being “bare” is outdated.

      @beeng@discuss.tchncs.de this is for you, too.

      • N.E.P.T.R
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        21 month ago

        I had a friend jump ship from Windows and they said that Debian felt barebones. I personally dont have any problem with it, I use it all the time for VMs, server, and I used to main it. I still think it is missing a lot of user-friendly small things that i never noticed on my own because I am very comfortable with Linux.

        • fmstrat
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          21 month ago

          They do install less by default, but I’d love to pick their brain to understand what they meant. Oh well ¯_(ツ)_/¯

          • N.E.P.T.R
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            21 month ago

            Linux just isnt transparent about some things. Beginners most have problems when they use a GUI tool and then have to still edit a file. Like dirt example, adding a new drive using GUI disk utility and then sometime in the future disconnecting the drive and being forced into emergency mode.

            • fmstrat
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              11 month ago

              Uhh, that’s a thing in any modern distro? I plug and unplug SATA drives all the time.

              • N.E.P.T.R
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                11 month ago

                It depends on the fstab mount flags, specifically nofail.

            • @caseyweederman@lemmy.ca
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              1 month ago

              I’d suggest the KDE flavor of Debian, then. Its settings manager is divine, and its software management platform ties every other package management system in (apt/dpkg for Debian, yum for Redhat, pacman for Arch, plus flatpak, nixpkg, and even snaps if you absolutely must). By default starting in Plasma 6.0.

              More to @fmstrat’s point, and to suggest a possible cause your friend had that impression: if you install the Minimal flavor of any distro, you’re going to get a minimal experience.

    • @beeng@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 month ago

      I like gnome, but i guess i could look at fedora.

      I would like to stay with apt as package manager so the package names stay the same to what I know, or is yum/dnf/etc gonna use the same for most?

      • N.E.P.T.R
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        31 month ago

        Mostly the same, and if not all it has taken for me to figure it out was searching “fedora $pkgname”

      • @caseyweederman@lemmy.ca
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        11 month ago

        You can get Gnome on Fedora. It won’t have Apt.
        Packages will have a different naming scheme based on the maintainers’ preferences, even between Debian and Ubuntu (though those are usually pretty minor).
        Your muscle memory is gonna trip you up for a while though.