So i really wanted to ditch windows once and for all so iāve tried Linux for a week trying different distros (debian, manjaro, ubuntu, opensuse, mint) and first of all why? Why are there so many distros out there? Whatās the difference between debian + kde and manjaro + kde? They look the same, they work the same. I donāt get it. Also why do things have to be complicated? Iāve installed debian, installed calibre to manage my ebooks, created a library from an existing library on my hard drive (not the one with debian installed), ERROR! All the files are read-only. What??? Iāve followed multiple guides on how to change permissions and finally solved the problem. Now letās restart my pc. files on the hard drive are read only WHAT??? Fuck debian, letās go on manjaro. No problems at all on calibre. Managed to create the library as easy as i did on windows. My question is: whereās the fun in this? Itās just problems, after problems, after problems and i didnāt even start gaming. I mean i tried installing retroarch and importing my saves but of course nothing works. Read this guide, read that guide. Nope. Nothing works. Ok, fuck retroarch letās customize the appearance of my desktop: move some icons on the panel, center this, adjust height, move this on the left, spent 30 minutes tweaking, very niceā¦ kde crashes, all back to default. Letās download some apps. I want as many apps that i already know as possible. Letās see if jdownloader is available for linux. Yep thereās one. Nope, not for manjaro (officially). Thereās a AUR package available. Nice. What do i need to do to install a AUR package? A wall of text on the wiki, 20 minutes videos, yay. Ok letās call it a day. Do i need to live another life to make linux work?
Why are there so many distros out there? Whatās the difference between debian + kde and manjaro + kde? They look the same, they work the same. I donāt get it.
They visually look similar because both are running KDE with pretty much all the defaults, as it happens both Debian and KDE donāt diverge too much from the recommended defaults as long as they work well. But under the hood, Debian and Manjaro work completely differently: one uses
apt
, the other usespacman
. The way those packages are maintained, compiled and distributed is vastly different, with different kinds of QA testing.Ubuntu is a derivative of Debian, so it doesnāt look that much different but Canonical does tend to provide newer packages than Debian does. But Ubuntu also has a lot of flaws so spinoffs like Mint and Pop_OS! take on Ubuntu as a base and āfixā it to their liking and hopefully the userās too, which, given how popular Mint is Iād say theyāre pretty successful in that goal.
Also why do things have to be complicated?
It doesnāt, but the amount of options and choices in how to do basically anything on Linux can certainly look very overwhelming. You can click on it in your file manager, you can add it to
/etc/fstab
, you can use a systemd mount unit. Theyāre different ways of automating and configuring what ends up being mostly the same: mounting a filesystem and setting permissions on it, and they come with different defaults.Youāre running into the particular area of trying to mount an NTFS Windows partition on Linux, which is nothing like what Linux expects to it fakes a few things to make it work, and that makes everything owned by the same user by default. If you do it from your file manager, itāll get a temporary mountpoint in like
/run/user/1000/media/YOUR DRIVE
but is mostly intended for when you plug in a USB or something. You probably found/etc/fstab
but then that made all the files owned by root, and you can temporarily change that withchmod
andchown
but once you reboot and it gets mounted again, itāll revert back because it doesnāt actually store those fake permissions as to not break Windows.Itās just problems, after problems, after problems and i didnāt even start gaming.
Yeah, some people end up particularly unlucky in that department. Eventually, over time, it feels as easy or easier than on Windows. Itās just, you have years of experience on how to make Windows do the thing, and Linux is completely new to you. I had a very similar experience a couple years ago when I was forced to learned macOS because the job would only issue MacBooks. Everything felt way overcomplicated and eventually you start thinking the Apple way and it goes more smoothly, you understand better how it works. I mean, how alien is it to just open disk images and copy
.app
files to/Applications
and thatās how you āinstallā things?? And you get used to it and now I wield the macOS terminal like I do on Linux.What do i need to do to install a AUR package? A wall of text on the wiki, 20 minutes videos, yay. Ok letās call it a day.
So, this is why people donāt like recommending Manjaro. Itās ArchLinux with a coat of paint, but still relies on Archās infrastructure for the AUR. ArchLinux is well into advanced Linux: itās a box of legos you have to assemble in the shape of a Linux distro yourself. So yes they do expect you to do a fair bit of reading, but Manjaro doesnāt, and itās a real problem that has caused a fair bit of drama at its time. The AUR is great, but to make another analogy, the AUR is more like a recipe book: you donāt download premade meals, you have to bake them yourself (compiling source code into binary) to have your meal (the generated package file). Sending beginners that route is a recipe for a bad experience.
Ironically,
yay
is the name of one of the tools that helps install AUR packages.Do i need to live another life to make linux work?
No, but it does take some initial commitment to get to the nicer part of the learning curve. The first install is always pretty rough, you will destroy it, thatās fine, you have to learn first.
Ok letās call it a day.
Honestly by the post you should have done that earlier. As with anything, when youāre frustrated with it you stop learning, you start making it much harder than it needs to be.
Itās fine to take a step back and reboot into Windows and try again the next day. It doesnāt have to be all or nothing, plenty of people have started by using Linux for just one task thatās easier to do on Linux, and eventually you start thinking of migrating more workloads to Linux over time. Youāre restarting your computer learning journey from pretty close to the start, give yourself a break, computers arenāt worth getting pissed off at.
wow ! Not OP, but thank you for such a dedicated answer ! š«¶š
So, this is why people donāt like recommending Manjaro. Itās ArchLinux with a coat of paint, but still relies on Archās infrastructure for the AUR.
I have another question about this. Iāve tried Arch but realized was too much so iāve chosen Manjaro because i thought i could learn about linux faster than using another beginner friendly distro. Letās say for example i decide to hop on Mint. Would that be that easy that i donāt learn anything important?
Iāve been on Ubuntu from 7.04 to 11.04, and only then went to Arch out of desire for more control.
Some people like to dive headfirst, and itās doable and those people are successful with Linux, sometimes. But you also have to factor in the morale factor in there, are you trying to learn the deep ends of how Linux works or are you just trying to migrate from Windows?
Itās totally fine to use the noob distros for the sake of, you know, getting used to using Linux things in general instead of trying to take it all in at once. Things are so vastly different than on Windows, thereās so much to learn, focus on learning how to use it the easy GUI way before you worry about whatās under the hood.
Thereās nothing about Ubuntu or Mint that really stops you from popping the hood open and having a peek every now and then either. You can change whatever you want in
/etc
the same on Mint as you could on Arch, the default configs that will be there will be just different but you donāt have any less control. The only real difference is a distro like Arch is hands off and ships the bare default, whereas in the Debian family it will usually come with a reasonable default ready to go. Oh you install Samba to share files? Done, on Debian it will automatically start and you can just log in and access your home folder. On Arch, nothing happens, you have to configure it, enable it and start it, open firewall ports if enabled, and so on. Debian, again, all done automatically. Best case, you donāt have to change it. Worst case, you have to read the manual anyway but the default got you a base to start off of. As an Arch user, I see it more as crap thatās in my way that I have to delete because I will provide my own config. The difference here is perspective and expectations.Kind of ties back in the why so many distros: because thereās users for all of them. You pick a distro that works best for you, not the distro everyone else says is the best. The best start with Linux is trying a few distros and see which you vibe the best with. You, personally. Itās called a software distribution because thatās what it really is: a distro just takes a whole bunch of software from many projects, compile it all and bundle it all into nice packages and then make an installer to install and configure all of it. You can just download and install all the little pieces yourself, thatās what Linux From Scratch is. Distros are fundamentally opiniated, their take on how to mash all that software together such that everything works correctly.
Circling back to Mint, nothing there stops you from compiling your own kernel, or your own packages. You can strip out all the Mint parts to the point itās bare Ubuntu and then strip out the Ubuntu parts until it becomes bare Debian. Youāre just changing your starting point. You get to see how they made it work, you can to see and explore how the magic works. You can always install Arch in a VM or container, or slowly build an LFS yourself in a VM just to learn it without it blocking you.
To me thatās whatās truely so cool about Linux. Itās not a singular thing or product. Itās an ecosystem and a community, Itās a collection of independent software, in all shapes and colors, all coming together to give the end user experience we have. People can help eachother and make distributions that does one thing well (Kali, Dragon, Ubuntu Studio, SteamOS, Bazzite) so you donāt have to set it all up yourself. Freely replace any component with another. You can collect patches you like that the author wonāt implement in the official release. A lot of people spent a lot of time on all of this, so might as well appreciate all the effort and enjoy the easy mode until you itch for more.
And also, we learn so much better when we enjoy ourselves doing so. All youāve learned so far is that Linux can be really frustrating very quickly, and no reward for it.
Hereās another post of mine going into the ridiculous amount of choices that are made just to get to a desktop: https://lemmy.max-p.me/comment/3554906
Yeah, i think thatās it for me for now. Canāt create a simple shortcut to an .appimage in two steps. I need to manually look for the icon. Going back to windows 10 until they discontinue it. Itās been a pleasure (not)
I would avoid AppImages and use Flatpak instead. Theyāre pretty notorious for their lack of integration, and the author of AppImage is severely against progress and is actively sabotaging Wayland support in them which leads to other bad experiences on Wayland desktops. The shortcuts is merely the surface of the problems with AppImage.
I wouldnāt give up so easily, just come back to it every now and then even if you spend most of your time on the Windows partition.
I doubt this is a real post, but on the off chance it is, sorry youāre having issues, but Linux probably isnāt for you.
Youāre obviously very enraged and not really interested in actually getting help for any issues youāre having. You started your post screaming at Linux for not making sense to you, you havenāt described what hardware you are trying to use.
You only described your issues with Debian and Manjaro, neither of which are beginner-friendly distros and arenāt often suggested to brand new Linux users.
If you want to describe your issues in more detail, one at a time, with info about your hardware, your distro and version, and what the exact errors you are getting are, you might get some folks chiming in to help. But coming on here, posting a rage-filled wall of text ranting about how angry Linux has made you, thatās not productive for anybody.
If that seems like too much work, then sad to say, Windows will be your home for the time being.
Definitely sounds like it could be real. If I had to guess their mounting a drive (or another partition) and itās defaulting to read only. When restarting it resets the original permissions as they only updated the file permissions, but not the mount configuration.
Also reads like some of my frustrations when first getting into Linux (and the issues I occasionally run into still).
I promise that is my experience in the last 2 days. Frustrating. Iāll try to stick with linux for the rest of the week and see how it goes.
It gets better!
I took a deep dive on fonts my first week(they were fuzzy). I now know a lot about things I almost never use or set, but every win will give you a piece of the whole thing.
Eventually you figure out the ācoreā (that stays the same everywhere and you donāt have to do near as much work to tack on the extras.
Itās big and complicated because youāre replacing windows with the hundred individual things windows does, each were made by someone else, in some cases decades apart.
Somehow it all works pretty well, but we stand on the shoulders of some giants.
Edit: I also donāt like manjaro, but someone here has covered why better than I would have. I run endeavouros and would recommend if you want arch with less config, but it is arch. Mint is where I have been pointing people to start recently.
Do i need to live another life to make linux work?
No, but do bear in mind that switching to Linux will have a learning curve, and it sounds a bit like youāre expecting to be able to do everything you did on windows on linux without having to change your behaviour.
My advice is to start off with all the defaults of whatever distro you are using, and only installing packaged software for it, and just getting to a point where it is comfortable.
Most problems on linux (that Iāve found) either come from hardware being faulty ir unsupported, or that the user doesnāt understand how it works, but is trying to force it to work how they want it to. Both can be fixed with becoming more familiar with how Linux works.
This would also help you to understand why there are so many different distros (I do recommend distrowatch.com to quickly look up details about distros), as most differ in ways that require a bit of Linux knowledge to understand.
so tldr just stick with it and try and learn how it works meow :3
First of all, welcome.
Donāt try to install many different distros in a short span unless you are a distro-hopper. Just pick one and do everything on that. Manjaro would cause problems especially if you enable AUR. If you want cutting-edge and still want to use GUI for management, I suggest OpenSUSE Tumbleweed.
For hard disk read-only situation, that happens with NTFS partitions for safety reasons. You can change that with Gnome Disks by setting auto mount and user options. Know that NTFS is a Windows file system and runs on a compatibility system on Linux.
Itās better to start with beginner friendly distros. Some people even settle with one distro and use it without changing ever. Unless you want to discover under-the-hood features, most distros will look the same.
Also, things work differently on Linux. Once you get used to them, youāll find them more straightforward comparing to Windows. However, getting used to them might be a challenge for some people. Get ready to read Wikis.
Donāt be hasty. Continue to use Windows until you feel ready while creating your ideal workspace.
Go for functionality before starting customization anything, you can do that anytime.
So i really wanted to ditch windows once and for all
Why?
so iāve tried Linux for a week trying different distros (debian, manjaro, ubuntu, opensuse, mint)
Why? Choose one and stick with it, preferably a beginner friendly one like Ubuntu or Mint.
and first of all why? Why are there so many distros out there?
Because different people like different things and have different opinions. Some people like to have the latest packages and so they choose Arch, while others prefer to have a stable system until they want to upgrade core packages and so they go with Ubuntu.
Whatās the difference between debian + kde and manjaro + kde?
One is Debian based and the other in Arch based. Debian uses apt, Arch uses pacman. Debian has a slower release cycle to ensure compatibility while Arch has a faster release cycle to ensure the latest versions of things are available. Like these there are thousands of small differences between any two distros. Itās mostly philosophical, so just pick something beginner friendly and stick with it until you find a reason to switch.
They look the same, they work the same. I donāt get it.
They donāt work 100% the same, thatās like saying that a car and a truck are the same because theyāre both painted black and have a steering wheel. Under the hood theyāre very different.
Also why do things have to be complicated?
Theyāre not, theyāre different. Doing stuff on Windows is also complicated if you donāt know what youāre doing, excepts youāve had years of experience, in a few years Linux will feel easy and Windows complicated.
Iāve installed debian, installed calibre to manage my ebooks, created a library from an existing library on my hard drive (not the one with debian installed), ERROR! All the files are read-only.
Is the entire hard-drive read only? How did you mount it? What format is it on? Youāre skipping a lot of important questions, that if you had answered (or asked about this issue) you would know the problem. My guess is that you donāt have ntfs-3g installed and the drive was NTFS.
What??? Iāve followed multiple guides on how to change permissions and finally solved the problem.
How? This might give us an idea of what was wrong with it.
Now letās restart my pc. files on the hard drive are read only WHAT???
Yes, makes sense, did you applied a permanent fix or a temporary one? Since we donāt know what you did we have to assume you did a temporary fix, so itās like asking why did Firefox not opened after I restarted my computer if I had open it before.
Fuck debian, letās go on manjaro.
Thatās a bad reason to switch distros, if you switch distros every time you run into something you donāt understand youāre going to run out of distros fairly quickly. Let me tell you right now, EVERYTHING one distro can do another one can, no exceptions. Something not working is a bad reason to switch distros unless you know why the other distro makes it work and are okay with the philosophical differences between distros.
No problems at all on calibre. Managed to create the library as easy as i did on windows. My question is: whereās the fun in this?
The same thing thatās causing you problems is an awesome feature, Linux is very modular, you can build yourself your system exactly the way you want it. That is very fun.
Itās just problems, after problems, after problems and i didnāt even start gaming.
Well, yeah, itās an unfamiliar thing, I feel the same every time I have to use Windows.
I mean i tried installing retroarch and importing my saves but of course nothing works.
Why not? AFAIK RetroArch should have cross compatible saves.
Read this guide, read that guide. Nope. Nothing works. Ok, fuck retroarch letās customize the appearance of my desktop: move some icons on the panel, center this, adjust height, move this on the left, spent 30 minutes tweaking, very niceā¦
Did you saved in the meantime? Let his be a lesson, save often, you never know when something will happen.
kde crashes, all back to default.
Thatās weird, I donāt remember last time KDE crashed, but then again Iām not using Manjaro so maybe the current version there is broken? What was the error? Did you submitted a bug report? That might be an important finding.
Letās download some apps. I want as many apps that i already know as possible. Letās see if jdownloader is available for linux. Yep thereās one. Nope, not for manjaro (officially). Thereās a AUR package available. Nice.
Not nice, donāt use AUR on Manjaro, you will break stuff.
What do i need to do to install a AUR package? A wall of text on the wiki, 20 minutes videos, yay.
Thatās because AUR is not meant for people who donāt know what theyāre doing. Itās dangerous and unstable, the way to get an air package is to build it yourself, the way to get an automated tool to install them is to build the package for it yourself, this should prevent people who shouldnāt be building packages from doing so. BTW, Manjaro is especially unsafe because it has an AUR manager in their official repos IIRC, which btw is called yay, so not sure if that was a joke.
Ok letās call it a day. Do i need to live another life to make linux work?
No, you just need time to learn something new, instead of jumping around thinking that things would solve themselves. If you had started with Ubuntu you might not had either of those problems, and if you had learned what was wrong with the first problem on the first distro you would know how to fix it in every other distro and solve similar problems, just like you did with Windows before and now solving things there is intuitive for you.
Why?
Iāve used win11 and didnāt like it. Timeās ticking.
One is Debian based and the other in Arch based. Debian uses apt, Arch uses pacman. Debian has a slower release cycle to ensure compatibility while Arch has a faster release cycle to ensure the latest versions of things are available. Like these there are thousands of small differences between any two distros. Itās mostly philosophical, so just pick something beginner friendly and stick with it until you find a reason to switch.
Yada, yada, yada.
Theyāre not, theyāre different. Doing stuff on Windows is also complicated if you donāt know what youāre doing, excepts youāve had years of experience, in a few years Linux will feel easy and Windows complicated.
Things to do to install an app on Windows: download the exe, double click on the icon, follow the instructions, done. Things to do to install an app on Linux: check the package manager, if the app is not there go on their website, cross your fingers, copy and paste x lines in the terminal, cross your fingers (had problems with windscribe, enpass, spotify), wget command not found, install wget, retry, cross your fingers one last time, done (?).
if you switch distros every time you run into something you donāt understand youāre going to run out of distros fairly quickly
Man, there are hundreds (nonsense) distros out there, i need something like 3 lives to try them all.
Why not? AFAIK RetroArch should have cross compatible saves.
Apparently not. Iāve saved a copy of the saves folder and simply pasted it in the retroarch folder on linux but the game doesnāt read anything.
Thatās weird, I donāt remember last time KDE crashed, but then again Iām not using Manjaro so maybe the current version there is broken? What was the error? Did you submitted a bug report? That might be an important finding.
There were no errors. Screen went black and then everything was reset.
If you had started with Ubuntu you might not had either of those problems
This is actually fun: i have Ubuntu Budgie on my laptop and i was trying to create a bootable win10 on my pendrive with ventoy given that jesus christ woeusb is super complicated to install with all those manual dependencies installs and woeusb-ng gives problem with python. Installed ventoy, copied the iso, pasted it, nothing shows up in the drive. Copied the iso again, pasted it again, file already existing. ???. Iāve extracted the drive, plugged it back in, nothing. Extracted it again, plugged it in on my desktop, iso is actually there. Wtf is wrong with linux?
I see a common trend here. You seem to be very tech savvy and a windows power user, and get frustrated with Linux because youāre trying to solve problems with a windows mentality and failing.
Yada, yada, yada.
That yada yada yada is the most important part from my entire answer, choose a beginner friendly distro and stick to it.
Things to do to install an app on Windows: download the exe, double click on the icon, follow the instructions, done.
Nope, things to install an app on Windows: Open a browser, search for the program, click the wrong link, download a virus, go back, try again, find a more reputable site, download another virus, run anti-virus, discover your computer has been completely overrun by viruses, format, reinstall everything, find the right site, download the installer, click next 20 times, accept to have a new service running when you start your PC by accident, done?. You donāt do all of that every time? Thatās because you know what youāre doing, I certainly donāt do half the stuff you mentioned for Linux.
Things to do to install an app on Linux: check the package manager
Thatās it, if itās not there you shouldnāt worry with it until youāre a bit more experienced. This is why I recommend beginner friendly distro a, they will have more stuff and possibly have snaps/flatpacks by default which should cover most of your use ases and are installed via the same GUI.
Man, there are hundreds (nonsense) distros out there, i need something like 3 lives to try them all.
Precisely my point, donāt. Pick a beginner friendly distro and stick to it.
Apparently not. Iāve saved a copy of the saves folder and simply pasted it in the retroarch folder on linux but the game doesnāt read anything.
Have you tried saving something new to see if we have the correct folder?
There were no errors. Screen went black and then everything was reset.
Thatās crashing, there should be some log somewhere, can you reproduce or is it random?
This is actually fun: i have Ubuntu Budgie on my laptop and i was trying to create a bootable win10 on my pendrive with ventoy given that jesus christ woeusb is super complicated to install with all those manual dependencies installs and woeusb-ng gives problem with python. Installed ventoy, copied the iso, pasted it, nothing shows up in the drive. Copied the iso again, pasted it again, file already existing. ???. Iāve extracted the drive, plugged it back in, nothing. Extracted it again, plugged it in on my desktop, iso is actually there. Wtf is wrong with linux?
Did you installed Ventoy properly on the drive? Did you unmounted before removing the first time? Otherwise you might have corrupted the file, remember how people always say to eject before unplugging a USB drive? This is the reason, the GUI that shows you copying stuff is just a FE to the calls to the kernel for writing, the kernel actual writing to the disk is done afterwards, so even after the GUI closes the file was not totally written. Again, regardless of OS, unmount/eject drives before unplugging them. Also is your desktop Linux or windows? Does the bootable drive works? You need to learn to provide more information if you expect help, saying āstuff doesnāt work, whatās wrong with Linux?ā Will get you a lot of answers of the type āthe problem is between the keyboard and the chairā.
I wonāt choose any distro. I chose to stick with windows. I spent 1,5 hours setting EVERYTHING UP. Apps, accounts, settings, everything. I spent the exact same trying to figure out why the fuck steam is not automatically downloading dependencies as it did on my laptop and didnāt even get an answer.
Iāve never, ever got a virus on any of my pcs. I grew up with internet, since the ADSL days, i know my shit.
Some of the apps i use are very important to me and some of them donāt have packages so i had to rely on commands in the terminal.
I was not expecting any help actually. The amount of problems i encountered is too much. The past 3 days dealing with linux have been extremely stressful. No wonder linux is still super niche. I can fairly say that iāve been reckless going for non beginners distros but linux has problems, huge problems.
Iāve never, ever got a virus on any of my pcs. I grew up with internet, since the ADSL days, i know my shit.
Therein lies the problem, youāre a windows expert, moving away from your comfort zone will always feel bad. Itās okay to stick to Windows, no one should be forced to use an OS they donāt like. But if you ever want to try again, I recommend taking a step back and accepting that for all your years of experience in Windows you are a noob here, and trying to jump into the deep end is more likely to get you drowned than learning how to swim.
Also I recommend dual-booting, so you have the safe heaven of a known OS to reboot into in times of need. Most of us started that way and dealt slowly with the difficulties in using Linux with a windows user mentality, until at some point we realized we were spending the majority of our time in Linux and Windows had become unusable because we were now thinking like Linux users. Iām sure that if I had tried to do what you did I would also be frustrated, so I completely understand you. But let me tell you something which you might not want to hear, and will possibly even get angry at me for telling you, but thereās a fairly good chance that the majority of issues you encountered were self-imposed. Linux has near infinite possibilities, but thatās like saying the ocean is nearly infinite, it doesnāt mean you should try to swim across it just because youāre used to doing it on a swimming pool, youāll drown fairly quickly and get nowhere.
the majority of issues you encountered were self-imposed.
How? Iāve installed Debian with KDE, downloaded the .deb from steam website, learnt to install that using sudo dpkg -i steam_latest.deb, opened the app and iāve been welcomed with a text inviting me to press enter to continue, pretty simple. The program downloaded stuff, steam is ready now. Not bad. Repeated the exact same thing on Debian with xfce, that apparently doesnāt come with a software installer, nothing works. An alert says i need to download dependencies (i know dpkg doesnāt resolve dependencies). Whereās the āenter to continueā? How is this my fault??
How? Iāve installed Debian with KDE
Mistake number 1, Debian is not beginner friendly.
downloaded the .deb from steam website
Mistake number 2, this is windows mentality, if itās not in the package manager itās too advanced for you for the time being. Beginner friendly distros would have had steam in their package manager.
learnt to install that using sudo dpkg -i steam_latest.deb
You could have also double clicked the Deb file, but this is a bad way, dpkg does not resolve dependencies, so you would need to figure those out and install them by hand, which can be tedious at best.
opened the app and iāve been welcomed with a text inviting me to press enter to continue, pretty simple. The program downloaded stuff, steam is ready now. Not bad.
You lucked out, your system had all of the requirements met.
Repeated the exact same thing on Debian with xfce, that apparently doesnāt come with a software installer, nothing works. An alert says i need to download dependencies (i know dpkg doesnāt resolve dependencies). Whereās the āenter to continueā?
No such luck therez remember when I told you to use the package manager? This is why. Possibly missing something stupid like an i32 library, which you could manually install, but you shouldnāt, youāre making things hard for yourself for no reason other than wanting to avoid beginner friendly distros.
How is this my fault??
Itās your fault because like Iāve been saying since the beginning youāre trying to use Linux as if it were Windows and getting frustrated because it behaves differently. Trying to do this will be frustrating and you will become angry because nothing works like you expect, but you must understand that itās not that things donāt work, itās that they work differently.
You might be thinking this is stupid, an installer should install everything it needs, right? Nope, thatās a windows mentality, in Linux the main idea is that an installer only installs what itās supposed to, any dependency should be system-wide. Why you might ask? Simple, imagine if every single GUI app had to include itās own copy of the full GUI library it uses, your system would quickly become bloated, not only that but each program would open itās own copy of the library using more and more memory, not to mention the interoperability problems between programs using different versions of the same library. In Linux the standard is for programs to use system libraries, itās the convention, just like how on Windows it is to not (which has its own set of problems). This is why package managers are important, theyāre not just downloading an executable and running it, theyāre doing lots of stuff behind the curtains, all of it can be done manually, but like you found out itās troublesome, so best is to avoid.
Mistake number 1, Debian is not beginner friendly.
If i got a beginner friendly distro how will i learn how to use linux properly?
if itās not in the package manager itās too advanced for you for the time being
So if an app is not a package manager iām fucked?
You could have also double clicked the Deb file
I tried, it did nothing, i went online to search for a solution.
which you could manually install
This is mental. This shouldnāt be a thing even for pros. I need 15 minutes to install an app? Sorry i wonāt go out this evening, i need to install an app and god knows what can happen.
You might be thinking this is stupid
Well, yes, of course. Also i read some contradictions in your post: the installer only installs what is supposed to, but it needs dependencies to actually make the app usable. But thatās what package managers do, right? Different apps could use the same libraries but also different ones, so the system could become bloated nonetheless. I donāt see how is this beneficial for the user.
Linux isnāt for you. Trust me, as someone who doesnāt really like using Linux all that much.
If you stick with it, pick one. Stick with it. Use its documentation, not online forums.
You canāt use online forums because CLI on how to do things varies from distro to distro. So a command for Ubuntu is useless somewhere else, most of the time.
That results in following guides and having it stop working part way through. You will never get anywhere like this. When you eventually do get somewhere, youāre going to take some time away, or youāre going to break something on accident. Then youāll have to set it all up again and likely will have lost some data if you werenāt careful.
I built a server PC for Plex and a few other programs, after a number of years running various temporary projects, like Raspberry Pi servers I felt semi-confident. It was going for about 7 months and now it is stuck in a grub menu and if I am able to get into the desktop everything is fucked up anyway.
Tl;Dr, you are having issues because you went with the most complicated distros. Run some normal ones like Mint in Virtual Machines, get a feel for the process to install a program ā 1) manually, 2) from the āLinux storeā (package manager) 3) from GitHub.
Anything else is just asking for a frustration headache
Yeah, totally not for me, for now. I couldnāt resist in that hell for more than 3 days.
If you ever try it again just go for ubuntu. That distro hides a lot of the complexity from the user.
What is the filesystem in that hard drive? Iāve used Calibre with multiple installs of different distros and never had any issues with it reading my library.
I donāt know man, i donāt care anymore. It worked in Ubuntu, it didnāt on Debian.