this post was submitted on 19 Mar 2025
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Speed, privacy, old hardware support, benefits from community modifications (gaming performance kernels etc).
Yes
I still dont understand what you were trying to achieve that you couldn't have done, at worst, in Synaptic package manager (a GUI program).
I don't mean to say you're doing it intentionally, just that when you state Linux can't do these things it's not exactly correct.
Speed is relative to the task. On my window's machine, I'm running a 7 year old gaming computer and never thought that my computer is super slow. Also, after installing Mint on it, the speed is barely noticeable at best.
Old hardware support? Shoot, Mint could barely get new hardware working properly. I had trouble with both my nvidia card and my logitech steering wheel working correctly. I eventually got the Nvidia card working using chatgpt. It took me a few days, but the steering wheel finally started working after reinstalling Windows.
Also, as far as gaming is concerned. You performance might see a few fps faster on Linux on some games, but if you enjoy games like Rocket League or Fortnite or many multiplayer games, it flat out doesn't work.
Good, I can check it out. Mint and PopOS and Ubuntu does not have this feature.
I'm trying to snap my windows to different ratios or tile out of the box. Mint, PopOS and Ubuntu does not have these features and I was trying to install it first from Flatpak and then in apt-get. Both failed.
What is inaccurate? That I had a hard time trying to install a very basic feature on Mint and failed? Seems pretty straight forward.
Don't get me started on installing Tailscale. While I was ultimately successful doing this in terminal, I would not want my mother in law trying to figure it out.
I was more talking about lower power computers, not gaming PCs.
This is because hardware manufacturers regularly never release the specs for their devices, so the drivers have to be reverse engineered first (or the manufacturer's proprietary drivers installed in whatever weird way they dictate). Old hardware has already had this done, so it absolutely works. New hardware is irrelevant to this.
I still don't understand what you were trying to install? You can't install features, you install programs. This is the same for all operating systems, it's not unique to Linux-based ones.
Kubuntu is the KDE spin of Ubuntu and it should work too.
That you're saying Linux can't do these things.
Why would your mother in law be installing Tailscale?