Except for most “tech illiterate” people, they just need a browser…
…which works identically in Linux and Windows. With the bonus of not running random exe files.
Except for most “tech illiterate” people, they just need a browser…
…which works identically in Linux and Windows. With the bonus of not running random exe files.
Still ass though.
Just install/update App Installer and use winget.
Np++ has tabs, plus it autosaves so it can pull out old unsaved text upon reopening. Plus, it has syntaxes highlighting based on the selected coding language. And all the plug-ins for extra functionality.
Notepad is simple no frills for basic text, but np++ is great for coding (it can sometimes be even better than IDLE for Python coding).
At least depending on the district, users can be sent directly to the store page.
Windows, however, needs a choice screen.
Which is why beginners don’t use Arch.
Including a trial to incentivize users into paying for the software doesn’t make it “built-in”.
And JDownloader is the more useful one for easier download from file hosters.
Material UI is pretty good, nothing in GNow was reliant on the UI, they could have worked just as fine with Material UI.
Command line in general, not just Linux.
Forgetting to quoteblock spaces in Windows won’t be pleasant either (especially when Windows has a Sydtem directory called “Program Files”.
Not my Kubuntu experience, and sounds like something broke.
Which can happen with Windows too.
OTOH, the longer support and less bugging about upgrading might be a positive to some.
How long ago was it? Latest LTS is 22.04, don’t think just one year would make cause any major compatibility issue (but well, if it did, just one year for 24.04LTS).
I mean, makes sense that people would rather get a new phone that costs the same as a repair.
That said, had been using a S5 myself for five years before the phone died. As I ain’t that big on mobile gaming (and the ones I play don’t demand much), the phone did all I needed to. Currently using a S10+, because that’s the last Galaxy S model with both headphones and SD support.