

Great post, thanks for your effort on this.
Great post, thanks for your effort on this.
Mainly the locked bootloader that GrapheneOS offers. It’s more secure, and GrapheneOS emphasizes security over all else, but privacy features are part of that security.
The Xbox 360 controller wireless adpater was a pretty big piece of shit 70% of the time.
Look guys, you don’t need to justify your piracy. There is nothing ethically wrong with pirating media.
Anticonsumer practices are justification enough. If someone has a childish response of “uR sTeaLiNg!!”, give them an equally childish retort and tell them to eat your farts.
This is super helpful, thanks for this!
Am I less human then they are?
Absolutely not, but neither are they.
Just illustrating that there is no good faith to be had here.
Why don’t you just move instead of complaining? I see you said you can’t afford to move, by have you even tried? What’s your excuse for letting your family down so much and forcing them to live in a such a dangerous area? Sure seems like you don’t care about your family and won’t even try, what’s the excuse?
Windows 10 when I made the switch last summer. A full year now on EndeavorOS and I’ll never go back.
Made the switch on EndeavourOS this morning and so far so good. I was hesitant to update to Wayland because I’m still a newb and heard there were issues, but my system is AMD based so no problems (yet).
I like it
Windows -> Mint -> PopOS -> EndeavorOS
I tried Mint for a few days, enjoyed it but wanted something a bit more gaming focused. Tried Pop, had issues getting it set up, got it set up and didn’t like it. Moved to Endeavor, and after a brief learning period, its been everything I wanted in an OS.
I fucking love EndeavorOS
I went from Windows to Mint, to Pop-OS, to EndeavourOS and haven’t left EOS.
My time with Mint and Pop were about a week each. I switch from Windows to Linux 2 years ago.
For my experience, jumping into Arch feet first has been a great learning experience. My desktop PC is a gaming PC first, so having the most up to date packages has been great. It’s helped ‘de-mystify’ Linux for me. I’ve had to troubleshoot issues, but thanks to Arch’s excellent and extensive documentation, with some light reading I’ve manages to make it work.
I’m now moving on to setting up my own Homelab/Server, which will NOT be Arch based (…unless…?), because the experience with learning how to navigate Linux with Arch has given me the confidence to tackle something I have absolutely no experience in (NETWORKING).