I tried many other distros first, and had a period of going back to Windows for a time, then trying Linux again, until finally making the full switch. Practically everything was better on Linux Mint, and these days even games for the most part work. The transition from Windows (7, in my case) was very smooth. Opening Terminal doesn't give me a heart-attack any more, but there isn't any need for it either. Which is a good thing, because I'm not one of those Linux geeks that knows everything inside and out. Stuff simply work out of the box, and there is no need to fiddle with anything. Have never really had any problems with it. I have run Linux Mint for many years now, since version 17 or thereabouts. Other than that, still happy after many years of using Mint. They need to add a warning that the partition size is too low, or even refuse using ones that arent bigger or used for such things. As a result of that, I could not install new software because it wanted a newer version. Had to install it twice because I carelesly accepted the partition that it takes by default for snapshots, which makes it so there is no room for kernel updates. I had an install of LMDE5 but it is still lacking some of these features. I usually go full AMD for support, but it was too much of a gift horse to refuse. Our FAQ page has tips on writing a good mini-review. Please include a few pros and a few cons, along with your overall impression of the operating system.
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June 2023
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