Does it mean Nvidia support on par with that for AMD?
I'm probably not the right person to answer this, but my immediate thought was no. I believe AMD allows for open source drivers on Linux, which this specifically states Nvidia won't be doing.
Does it mean Nvidia support on par with that for AMD?
I'm probably not the right person to answer this, but my immediate thought was no. I believe AMD allows for open source drivers on Linux, which this specifically states Nvidia won't be doing.
Fair enough... It's been nearly a month since I commented here so I don't remember the exact situation, but if having a lot of updates was an issue, then yeah maybe not EndeavourOS. There may be LTS versions, but since it's based on Arch, I'm not sure. I personally don't mind it, and have yet to have a single issue with an update "breaking" something (though I have Timeshift set up to take a snapshot before updating just in case), but I guess
I could see someone being annoyed by having the little thing pop-up to tell you how many things you could update, but I kind of like it I think. It kinda feels like I'm very slowly, incrementally, making my laptop better, albeit usually in ways I can't even perceive at the time.
But hey, everyone has their preferences. That's why there's a billion distros to choose from.
I second EndeavourOS. My first distro and it's been a great experience. I've felt no desire to switch.
Steam/games have worked great.
Have you tried using reader mode in Firefox? Or did they fix that one? Still works for me on other sites like New York Times.
You can do all of that with most basic file explorers. I use Dolphin on KDE. Change the view to "details" and right click the top and choose which metadata fields you want to show up. Then you can sort or filter using metadata.
A true agent of chaos
But regardless of what distro they use, they're probably going to have to Google stuff every now and then. If they're not ready for that, then maybe they're not ready for Linux.
I switched a few months ago, and EndeavorOS is the only distro I've used and see no reason to switch. It's been fantastic.
I will add that, after getting my first Pixel as my previous phone, I've found the Google vanilla Android experience is better than Android on other carriers that fill the phone with bloat that you can't get rid of without rooting.