I have been distro hopping for about 2 weeks now, there’s always something that doesn’t work. I thought I would stick with Debian and now I haven’t been able to make my printer work in it, I think I tried in another distro and it just worked out of the box, but there’s always something that’s broken in every distro.

I’m sorry I’m just venting, do you people think Ubuntu will work for me? I think I will try it next.

  • Vinegar
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    04 months ago

    When I install Linux for friends and family the only distro I use anymore is Fedora. I have used just about every major distro, and Fedora is the only one that has “just worked” on every computer I have tried it on.

    Love them, or hate them, Red Hat is by far the single biggest company in the Linux community, and their Red Hat Enterprise Linux is renowned for being stable, performant, and very well supported. Fedora is where most of the updates that make their way into RHEL are initially available, so with Fedora you get a cutting edge distro with the backing and resources of a massive corporation that employs many of the top Linux-desktop contributors.

    If you want a distro that “just works” I strongly recommend you give Fedora a try.

    • @1984@lemmy.today
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      4 months ago

      Naah I think it’s super useful to know a bit about all popular distros. This makes you able to actually take part in conversations about what distro to pick for example.

      I’ve ran them all at some point in my life, which makes me able to understand that it’s not just “different package manager” as some people say.

      • wuphysics87
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        04 months ago

        Conversations about what distro to pick are often the biggest reasons it is hard to pick a distro.

        • @1984@lemmy.today
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          04 months ago

          I mean, people say that, but for me it wasn’t a problem, I just picked one when I got started. Didn’t feel like a major decision since you can just switch again if you are unhappy.

          • wuphysics87
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            04 months ago

            I feel ya. I was the same way. They said don’t distro hop so that was the first thing I did 🤣 I guess the thing with a lot other people is they are used to the thing that “just works” (whatever the fuck that means).

            For them, I just tell them use PopOS. Good distro. Little fuss. Maintained by a company with interest in keeping it going.

            That said, I’m teaching a class this afternoon to CS majors and the first thing I’m having them do is install Arch in a vm 😉

  • @DannyBoy@sh.itjust.works
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    04 months ago

    Ubuntu in my experience works best out of the box and has the best support reference online. Ubuntu works out of the box save for the webcam where Debian doesn’t even boot on my MacBook.

  • @baggins@lemmy.ca
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    04 months ago

    Just gotta learn to fix stuff yourself. Highly unlikely for any distro to be perfect out of the box.

  • @Trent@lemmy.ml
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    04 months ago

    I’ve found ubuntu distros to be pretty good for 'stuff just works". My daily driver is xubuntu. That said, I’ve never tried using a printer with it. Good luck OP.

  • @MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    04 months ago

    Linux requires putting in some work to get everything working, just how it is right now.

    Pick a distro you like, and stick with solving the issues!

  • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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    04 months ago

    You will get tons of distro recommendations, so here is one more: OpenSUSE, then use the YAST GUI GTK application select Yast Printer it has a GUI tool for all kinds of printer setup options and will show recommended drivers based on printer type, it then installs them via that GUI. Not to be confused with the regular printer settings app you see in most distros.

      • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        04 months ago

        How long ago? Everyone has an opinion and preference, but SUSE and RHEL are the only two certifed distros for corporate/ enterprise use of Teamcenter PLM and NX CAD…so it cannot be as “badly” built as you feel it is because it has to perform everyday with the least amount of issues.

        • stevecrox
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          04 months ago

          I suspect they mean around packaging.

          I honestly believe Red Hat has a policy that everything should pull in Gnome. I have had headless RHEL installs and half the CLI tools require Gnome Keyring (even if they don’t deal with secrets or store any). Back in RHEL 7, Kate the KDE based Text Editor pulled in a bunch of GTK dependencies somehow.

          Certification is really someone paid to go through a process and so its designed so they pass.

          Think about the people you know who are Agile/Cloud/whatever certified and how all it means is they have learnt the basic examples.

          Its no different when a business gets certified.

          The only reason people care is because they can point to the cert if it all goes wrong

  • Lettuce eat lettuce
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    04 months ago

    For first time plug-n-play distros, I either go with Linux Mint or Fedora, for me they have the best results for just working.

    And make sure when installing them, you always check to use proprietary drivers and codecs if it’s an option, that will save you a bunch of trouble down the line.

  • @1984@lemmy.today
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    4 months ago

    Why would you use the Debian, it has the oldest packages and kernel of all distros. I would maybe run that on a server, but probably just use Ubuntu LTS instead.

    For desktop you should try Pop OS. Really good distro from System 76.

    Stay away from Ubuntu, it’s very buggy for desktop. I tried it six months ago, fresh install, and the console app wouldn’t even open on a fresh install. No error message, just didn’t open. Great impression…

  • @rodbiren@midwest.social
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    04 months ago

    Linux Mint is where I always go crawling back to. I have hopped so damn much. Mint sometimes needs a newer kernel installed, but I’ll be damned if that Ubuntu base doesn’t help with printers, graphics drivers, and scanners. Getting that to work on Arch was a blast and a half, on Mint I literally just turned my network printer on and it found it. IDK, you can do anything and there is always some issue eventually.

  • @Grass@sh.itjust.works
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    04 months ago

    Linux is kinda like a 3d printer. You can end up tinkering and tuning more than printing.

    2d printers are just cursed and have been since the dawn of mankind though. Go to https://openprinting.org/printers/ and see if your printer is in there and if it is which functionality header it is under. I’m assuming it isn’t capable of driverless if debian didn’t work and the other distro just happened to have something preinstalled. Unless debian doesn’t handle driverless printing out of the box. I’ve only used debian headless for server stuff so I’m just making assumptions.

    Arch maintainers recommend against aur helpers but for quite some time I just did exactly that and got the drivers for whatever jank ass printer I had at the time that way. Most of the official ones I have encountered are rpm and I hadn’t used fedora or other rpm distros until recently, and the aur pkgbuilds would unpack the rpm and install the drivers the arch way. Incidentally, last I tried silverblue/ublue/kinoite etc can’t install the brother printer rpms via rpm-ostree so having a driverless capable printer was lucky considering it was just randomly given to me by a friend that moved away.

    If you share the printer model, someone here can probably also figure out what needs to be done without you having to go through a bunch of troubleshooting too.

  • @drndramrndra@lemmygrad.ml
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    04 months ago

    I thought I would stick with Debian

    There’s your first mistake. Don’t run a server distro on a workstation if you don’t want to deal with it’s downsides.

    I haven’t been able to make my printer work in it

    Read the CUPS Arch wiki page

    do you people think Ubuntu will work for me?

    Fuck Ubuntu. Use Mint if you want to try something Ubuntu based.

    I’ve recently went through a bunch of stable distros and Nobara had the best experience out of the box.

    • @digdilem@lemmy.ml
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      04 months ago

      (Looks at laptop I’m using to reply to this that’s running Debian)

      Server OS? Debian? Yes it is, but it’s also a Desktop and Laptop OS and many other things. Everything on this HP laptop just worked, including the function buttons. There’s a reason it’s such a well used distro, and it’s not just because it’s good for servers.

  • Eugenia
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    04 months ago

    Yes, there is always something that won’t work. This often happens with Windows (not too often, but it happens), but most often with Macs. Linux is quite buggy in the userspace area, I usually find bugs or crashes within an hour of using any linux distro. The one with the FEWER bugs is definitely Debian. But it does that by not using hacks or beta drivers or software. This creates a rock solid architecture, but some hardware won’t work (in my case, it was the sound chip for an intel J-series cpu that required a third party patch to work and recompile the kernel – while Ubuntu ships with that patch by default, but ubuntu has way more other bugs all around).

    So at the end, you will have to ask yourself if you want Linux because it’s the right thing to do and use, or you just don’t want to be bothered with ideology, and just use Windows and be done with it. I’ve asked myself that question and the answer is two fold: as a daily browser laptop, that doesn’t depend on third party hardware, I just use my Macbook Air. It’s a great laptop to have around in front of the TV, or traveling. For third party hardware dependency, and video editing, I use Windows with an nvidia card. For everything else, I use Linux. I have 8-9 computers, most run Linux. I create databases with it, I do some photo editing, financials etc.

  • NOOBMASTER 🍜
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    04 months ago

    Ubuntu actually worked for some people, who, for example, had trouble with PopOS! and getting highest refresh rate on multiple monitors. So yeah, if Ubuntu doesn’t work, try Zorin OS, and if that doesn’t work, try Manjaro, and if Manjaro doesn’t work, there so many more to try out!