Reply 120 of 141, by gerry
Blavius wrote on 2025-06-17, 14:23:My laptop is pretty old and I can't upgrade to Windows 11, so I moved to Kubuntu a couple of months ago. I am very much a 'compu […]
My laptop is pretty old and I can't upgrade to Windows 11, so I moved to Kubuntu a couple of months ago. I am very much a 'computer person' so I thought this would be a reasonably easy switch, even as a linux noob. It wasn't. There is always this emphasis on the install, and indeed, that was very slick. Everything worked out of the box. But then you have to use it.
Example:
There is this thing 'Discover' that looks like an app store, and when I install something with that it appears in the start menu - great! Only problem is that half of the stuff I want isn't in there. Well, let's get an installer directly from the website then! So - I can download all kinds of files - some are kind of installers, some just run the program. There are instructions to install via the command line with apt that don't work because the repository is too old or not for my kernel, or some other piece is missing that is its own whole story to track down. None of it puts a shortcut in the start menu. There is no option in the start menu to add anything that isn't put there by discover. How do I even run the thing I just installed? How do I un-install it?Now-all of these things are solvable, but none of it is intuitive. I have to do a web search and land on some ubuntu forum that says I have to edit some config file 10 layers deep. And yes, it works, but three weeks later I have to to the same thing and of course I forgot where to find the file, or what kind of hermetic language to use. So every time I have to do anything but use the machine, I have to go and find some forum post. It's such a waste of time.
I'm sure this is laughable for a lot of you guru's, but from the perspective of a new user this stuff is so opaque. It really gets in the way of using the OS to just run stuff.
i understand it totally. I like and use Linux Mint on a couple of older machines and it installed well, even recognising all hardware. If i only use the default OS and software its fine - keeps itself updated (incessantly) and mostly intuitive interface.
but then, now and then, i might try something not handled in the software manager or hit a dependency and soon enough, like you, i'm 10 layers deep with various terse forums and how to's that may as well read "to do this you just dkjf /--jmsd87 /kjjghd ./ ff6" (never explaining why, its just endless commands)
so basically, left as vanilla with a few installs managed through the interface: pretty good. Anything too unusual: its obscure commands that don't quite work all the way down