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Linux Mint is behind in terms of patches and applications. People like it for being stable even if outdated. But I can't guarantee that switching to a distro that keeps up to date with patches and applications will fix what issues you're having since I'm not really sure what those issues are :p But if you want to try a distro that is "bleeding edge" in terms of updates/applications and easier for someone new I would suggest Fedora. If you have a use case that is more tailored to say gaming, content creation, coding, or something along those lines then we could throw out more specific recommendations of OS that come with pre installed patches/applications for that.Hiiiii, I swapped to Mint a bit over a month ago. Got sick of windows. Got even sicker of it when I replaced my laptop, because it came with 11 and I was lending the installation USB to a friend. Also installed it to play eroge that got ported to Linux, because it wasn't working on windows 11.
It...isn't really my cup of tea, if I'm being honest. The troubleshooting and things not just working (half the time I just give up) really puts a strain on me at times, even if I do really prefer it. Is this a Mint thing, or do all of them kinda have that issue?
They each have their pros and cons. You'll see people with their diehard favorites, and I think a large part of it is people who are passionate about the distro that worked for them. I used Ubuntu for a number of years, grew more and more frustrated with it, but really clicked with Arch.It...isn't really my cup of tea, if I'm being honest. The troubleshooting and things not just working (half the time I just give up) really puts a strain on me at times, even if I do really prefer it. Is this a Mint thing, or do all of them kinda have that issue?
I'm sure none of those users laptops don't have uefi locks
Lest we forget
The biggest issue is that it doesn't let me used my headphones. Both wireless (with a USB adapter) and wired (headphone jack and USB-C adapter) don't work at all, and the instructions on how to even attempt to fix it seem to assume I have knowledge on what I'm doing.Linux Mint is behind in terms of patches and applications. People like it for being stable even if outdated. But I can't guarantee that switching to a distro that keeps up to date with patches and applications will fix what issues you're having since I'm not really sure what those issues are :p But if you want to try a distro that is "bleeding edge" in terms of updates/applications and easier for someone new I would suggest Fedora. If you have a use case that is more tailored to say gaming, content creation, coding, or something along those lines then we could throw out more specific recommendations of OS that come with pre installed patches/applications for that.
With hardware/accessories Mint can be up to 2 years behind on drivers so a rolling release like Fedora/Arch might have the drivers you need already in the kernel for your headset. Though there are accessories that still won't have drivers in the kernel and might be fixable through user tinkering.The biggest issue is that it doesn't let me used my headphones. Both wireless (with a USB adapter) and wired (headphone jack and USB-C adapter) don't work at all, and the instructions on how to even attempt to fix it seem to assume I have knowledge on what I'm doing.
Possibly Fedora Cinnamon if you want to keep the same look and feel of Mint with more up to date drivers. Though the option does come up for Nobara that is a fork of Fedora that does come with extra patches/codecs for running OBS Studio just doesn't have a Cinnamon desktop option but the Official and KDE versions use KDE Plasma which is a similar desktop environment to Windows 10 and has HDR support.I'm not really invested majorly in resource intensive gaming, or anything else. At most, I'm entertaining the idea of turning essays I wrote for fun into videos, though I do still find that unlikely. I genuinely just did it out of a desire for privacy and pure hate for how windows is so horrifically bad. I chose Mint because I wasn't going to deal with decision paralysis with all of the different versions out there
Not working even via a headphone jack is really wild. Does Mint use pipewire? I wonder if trying that would help the audio issues.The biggest issue is that it doesn't let me used my headphones. Both wireless (with a USB adapter) and wired (headphone jack and USB-C adapter) don't work at all, and the instructions on how to even attempt to fix it seem to assume I have knowledge on what I'm doing.
Honestly even os passwords are overprotective if you know what your doing, problem is people are idiots.I'm sure none of those users laptops don't have uefi locks
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Lest we forget
Not working even via a headphone jack is really wild. Does Mint use pipewire? I wonder if trying that would help the audio issues.
It does, yeah. Been really busy and so only just checked, which is the reason for the late reply.Not working even via a headphone jack is really wild. Does Mint use pipewire? I wonder if trying that would help the audio issues.