Yo linux team, i would love some advice.

I’m pretty mad at windows, 11 keeps getting worse and worse and I pretty done with Bill’s fetishes about bing and ai. Who knows where’s cortana right now…

Anyway, I heard about this new company called Linux and I’m open to try new stuff. I’m a simple guy and just need some basic stuff:

  • graphic stuff: affinity, canva, corel, gimp etc… (no adobe anymore, please don’t ask.)
  • 3d modelling and render: blender, rhino, cinema, keyshot
  • video editing: davinci
  • some little coding in Dart/flutter (i use VS code, I don’t know if this is good or bad)
  • a working file explorer (can’t believe i have to say this)
  • NO FUCKIN ADS
  • NO MF STUPID ASS DISGUSTING ADVERTISING

The tricky part is the laptop, a zenbook duo pro (i9-10/rtx2060), with double touch screens.

I tried ubuntu several years ago but since it wasn’t ready for my use i never went into different distros and their differences. Now unfortunately, ready or not, I need to switch.

Edit: the linux-company thing is just for triggering people, sorry I didn’t know it was this effective.

  • Captain Aggravated
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    52 months ago

    If I’m honest, it’s because Pop!_OS isn’t really that good. What does Pop!_OS do particularly well other than “download this one for Nvidia drivers”?

    • atocci
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      22 months ago

      I’m sure I’ll return to Pop eventually, maybe on the next release, but right now I’m struggling to get everything I want out of it with my hardware.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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      12 months ago

      Pop Shop is good, their updates are great and don’t break the system like a lot of other distros, and their version of Gnome is polished and sleek.

      • Captain Aggravated
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        12 months ago

        Praising Pop!_OS for their update process rings really hollow given they apparently don’t run an apt update when launching the Pop!_Shop. Remember when Linus Sebastian borked X11 trying to install Steam? That issue with Steam had been detected and fixed before that happened, but for some reason Pop!_Shop was trying to pull from an outdated apt cache. That and I can tell you from personal experience the way you check for updates is you open the “Installed” tab and…wait. Such Apple, very bullshit. Not borking things by applying updates is more of a factor of being a Debian descendant and using APT rather than Pacman.

        Pop!_OS’ version of Gnome is very trendily themed but it’s still Gnome, the user interface that hates interfacing with users. Every time I saw someone who tried and then immediately gave up on Linux saying something like “Linux is worthless you can’t even rename a file” I’m like “You used Gnome didn’t you?” Gnome is the second most user hostile UI I’m aware of after the FCC’s website.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 months ago

      My biggest point is that it works out of the box and that it feels more premium compared to Ubuntu. It also auto updates nowadays and they build special mechanisms to preserve your battery if used on a laptop. Soon they will come out with their own desktop. They specifically focus on people who develop. Just sounds like a good option for OP. Compared to more difficult installations.

      • Captain Aggravated
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        42 months ago

        It’s not hard to feel premium compared to Ubuntu these days. Canonical gave up trying to be an end-user desktop OS years ago. Look at their corporate garbagepuke website these days. Ubuntu is now merely the other Red Hat; it’s an enterprise grade thing that normies should ignore.

        Mint runs circles around Pop!_OS in the “just works, just keeps working” department.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 months ago

          What are the advantages of Mint then compared to pop os? In what terms does it run circles around pop?

          • Captain Aggravated
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            22 months ago

            In my experience?

            Mint has been around longer and has had more of the lumps smoothed out. Mint, and their flagship DE Cinnamon, has always been about actual usability. There’s a pragmatic streak that runs through Mint that isn’t there in some other distros.

            It has been my experience that Mint is usually the one that “just works” and the one that “continues to just work.” Cinnamon’s UI strikes a balance between KDE’s “ALL THE FEATURES! MAXIMUM CLUTTER!” approach and Gnome’s “Nuance doesn’t exist, implement as little functionality as possible so the window stays empty and beautiful” approach. You won’t find yourself asking “why can’t it do this?” the way you do with Gnome-based distros. You don’t have to start installing extensions just to get things that were considered basic features twenty years ago. You aren’t sent to the terminal particularly often, you can genuinely manage most of the system from the GUI.

            I would also say that Cinnamon is going to be more familiar to a Windows user than Gnome. Trying to use Gnome the way Windows users are used to handling things, say by minimizing and maximizing windows, is deliberately a pain in the ass on Gnome, and has a tendency to make newcomers think “Man this shit is unusable.” Cinnamon doesn’t have that problem; it’s still fun convincing people that I’m running Windows 9.