The end of Windows 10 support in October 2025 presents a great opportunity for the Linux community to collectively help users transition their still-function...
I think Fedora is, GNOME is a much more intuitive and attractive DE to new Linux users than KDE Plasma, and GNOME Software is very simple to get started with for people that aren’t very tech literate.
Cinnamon, I would argue, is better than gnome (for new users). And while I wouldn’t suggest mint for the long haul because it doesn’t plan to implement Wayland for a while, it’s still the fastest and most compatible one out of the box
It’s very fast on older hardware. Leaves out a lot of the modern transitions. Very simple start menu style browsing. Minimal customization options. And mint itself is very stable and comes with a good set of default software. Almost no command line needed
It doesn’t have modern transitions? I know some people that would get a bad impression of Linux in general if the DE you gave them to use didn’t look modern, but I’m sure it will work well for some people, and older hardware.
I think Fedora is, GNOME is a much more intuitive and attractive DE to new Linux users than KDE Plasma, and GNOME Software is very simple to get started with for people that aren’t very tech literate.
Cinnamon, I would argue, is better than gnome (for new users). And while I wouldn’t suggest mint for the long haul because it doesn’t plan to implement Wayland for a while, it’s still the fastest and most compatible one out of the box
I haven’t actually used Cinnamon, what’s so great about it for new users?
It’s very fast on older hardware. Leaves out a lot of the modern transitions. Very simple start menu style browsing. Minimal customization options. And mint itself is very stable and comes with a good set of default software. Almost no command line needed
It doesn’t have modern transitions? I know some people that would get a bad impression of Linux in general if the DE you gave them to use didn’t look modern, but I’m sure it will work well for some people, and older hardware.
Well, it’s best for older hardware. I think a laggy experience is worse than a fast one with a simple DE
Yeah, I agree with you for older hardware, speed and performance trumps modernity and fancy graphics.
If you like gnome though, for newer hardware, you should keep an eye on COSMIC. It’s gnome-like, and has the potential to beat it.
It does look very similar to GNOME. What do you like about it that you prefer to GNOME?