this post was submitted on 11 Feb 2025
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I don’t see the Linux Mint gang in here yet, so here’s my input.
My work PC is a Dell laptop with an Intel cpu and a discrete nvidia GPU. My home PC is a DIY desktop build with an Intel CPU and a GTX 1080. I have the latest version of Linux Mint Cinnamon running on both.
Mint has a graphical driver manager that lets you switch between the FOSS driver and the official nvidia one. On 2D desktop either choice seems to work fine. I don’t think I’ve tried the FOSS driver in any games yet, but with the nvidia driver installed on my desktop, games with only Windows versions run pretty flawlessly using proton in Steam.
Another consideration with Mint, other than it being full-featured and easier to install than windows, is the popularity of it and the stuff it builds off of like Ubuntu and the apt package management system. It means that whether you are a Linux beginner or an experienced user trying to do something new, any time you google “how to do X in Linux” it is almost certainly going to have instructions relevant to your system.
Not that others are necessarily bad. For example, there’s the known high quality of the Arch wiki if you were thinking of something like EndeavorOS. And with SteamOS going Arch based, I could see such distros being in the majority after a while.
Yeah, I mentioned to them that if mint has the desktop they want it may be the best choice, thank you for sharing your experience
If they are used to Windows, the default Cinnamon desktop uses the same UI & taskbar layout by default.
But of course being Linux, you can customize it easily, or start with a different DE version of Mint (there are three) or just install something else. I've tried other DEs with different ways of interacting, like GNOME, but I think that having a single persistent taskbar on one of my monitors is the sweet spot for me.
I'm familiar with Cinnamon and mint, I installed the xfce version on a friend's laptop about a year ago and have used, albeit briefly, both the cinnamon and mate versions. I'm here on the Linux for noobs comm mostly cause I have no idea about this part of the process, and am not super technical (at least in the Linux world; I'm pretty competent for other spaces 😅), in spite of having used Linux pretty exclusively for ages now (I'm mostly an art and design person :)
GNOME is what I really enjoy personally but I'll help them figure out which desktop seems like the right fit for them and then go from there
Unless they pick gnome it seems likely I'll recommend mint since my impression has been its a pretty well run project, but I've heard installing gnome on mint isn't really recommended, so in that case I'll probably go with fedora. I'm mostly just hoping to give them the most trouble free experience possible while they navigate all the new stuff that Linux entails :)
It kinda sounds like I can just use the Foss drivers included in the kernel while test driving and figuring stuff out with them and then install the proprietary ones following a tutorial for whatever distro we end up with