this post was submitted on 27 Apr 2026
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[โ€“] Rhaedas@fedia.io 5 points 1 day ago (1 children)

The key is how they introduce it. How many Ubuntu users (who are usually novice in Linux) read through an update notice? I'm guilty of just scanning through it. A vaguely named new thing isn't going to be unchecked.

I like Ubuntu's "feel" vs. others. I can't explain what that is, just know I test ran a few before I settled on it. I'm slowly weaning off Snap though, mainly because I've had many things be so out of date it made sense to go Flakpak or just find a .deb file. And Snap is obviously bloat if you watch what's using CPU and mem regularly.

I've also used some LLMs to diagnose computer issues, so I can see how a local version that walks through such thing would be helpful.

I'll give them rope, and I can always bounce to Mint if it gets too in my face.

[โ€“] grue@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago

How many Ubuntu users (who are usually novice in Linux)

Don't be so sure of that. I used to use Gentoo 20 years ago. I use Kubuntu today. Why? Because I don't care anymore and just want something that works with minimal effort.

The last time I reinstalled my OS, about a year ago, it was because I replaced the SSD. The time before that was seven(?) years earlier, when I built the system in the first place.

Snaps mildly annoy me though, so I might change. Eventually, after probably several more years.

I bet there are more people like me (long-time users picking boring, "basic" distros) than you think. We just aren't usually very conspicuous compared to the "I use Arch BTW" crowd who are new enough that they still feel the need to make distro choice part of their identity.