I’ve been using Linux on and off for about 15 years, but was never able to make the leap to using it full-time until PopOS. It’s been painless to use and does everything I need with only minor tweaks. Thank you System76! I can’t wait until the Cosmic DE is released.
(too bad about the name, though…)
What about PopOS puts it over the edge for full time?
Pop just worked out of the box for me, which is a huge consideration.
I couldn’t get mint to display on more than 1 display and driver installation was a nightmare. So much so that I had to go recreate a windows usb to get back to having display out.
In my case it’s mostly that it works perfectly on laptops without any excessive power consumption or weird sleep-when-closed-lid problems. I still can’t get my fingerprint reader to work, but I can live with that. And it’s loaded with QoL stuff like the window tiling shortcut. But mainly, I just don’t have to fight with it, from installation to everyday use.
How did you like Linux Mint (if you tried it)? I thought that was supposed to be the easy one.
It’s been years since I’ve tried Mint! I remember it working well, but found it too Windows-like. That may seem like a weird criticism since that’s its raison d’etre, but I didn’t want to switch from Windows to get something that doesn’t feel different enough to be an upgrade. Mint is what I’d go for if I were installing Linux on my parents’ computer.
Speaking personally, it’s consistently done a great job of supporting the hardware on the laptops on which I’ve installed it without requiring any special effort on my part. (Ironically this wasn’t true for their own Oryx Pro laptop, but that was more because the laptop itself was barely functional and not because there was anything wrong with PopOS itself.)
I also really like its “Refresh Install” feature which reinstalls the operating system while keeping all of your non-system files in place, which I’ve used in a couple of unfortunate cases to go from a borked unbootable machine to a working machine in under 30 minutes. I mainly use this laptop for gaming so because Steam installs everything in my home directory my downloaded game library was fully preserved by this process.
When I used it, it was the ability to switch window tiling on and off on the fly, and for each of those tiles to have tabs. I’ve switched to another distro but I keep using GNOME because of that specific shell extension.
Do you remember what that extension is called? Switched to fedora but I just can’t seem to find it and didn’t take note of what it was called
Yep, it’s Pop Shell. It’s in the Fedora repos so no jumping through hoops: https://support.system76.com/articles/pop-shell/
Thanks!
Every day I have to use Windows at work makes me long to get home to Pop OS. It’s so much faster and cleaner. The amount of advertising windows hurls at you, even on Pro, is ridiculous.
I had sort of the reverse situation. For years I was 100% linux only for work but “stuck” in windows because I likes gamez. Round about the time the steamdeck came out, I swapped to linux/popos full time and it was like coming home from a bad business trip.
At home I started running Linux Mint years ago in a dual boot setup and rarely use the windows partition anymore.
For work I’ve threatened to do the same a few times but never actually got that far.
I think it helps with all the software going cloud based so the reasons of needing windows only apps are slowly disappearing even if that’s another can of worms.
PopOS was my first “full time no Windows”-Linux. I still like it and use it on my laptop but my new daily driver is NixOS.
But I also want to say thank you to System76 for this great distro.
I hope Cosmic is gonna be as great as I believe it’s going to be.
And I really hope they are going to rename their distro to Cosmic Linux.
Good for you! Pop!_OS is where I got my start as well about a year ago. 12 distros later I’m a happy EndeavourOS user. Learning an arch based system was a bit of a jump from “easy” distros like pop and mint, but it’s significantly snappier and issue free so far, so long as you get handy with the terminal.
Pop is great, but don’t be afraid to branch out and play around at some point, I have as much fun fiddling with my system as I do gaming now.
Endeavour was my second-favourite during my last test drive of various distros but I had some reservations about using an Arch-based distro for my work machine compared to the generally more stable Debian/Ubuntu. I’m also not sure I can live without the PopOS window tiling feature.
I use KDE with EOS and I’d argue that the tiling is better. Super+t opens your tiling layout, you can split your desktop up into a preferred format, split up any way you like, shift+click and drag to pop windows into the tile spaces. I’m sure there’s other hot keys for it I haven’t bothered to learn yet. Pull up a video on it sometime.
By EOS do you mean the new EndeavourOS tiling?
No. EOS is short form for EndeavourOS. The tiling is not a function of a distro, but a function of the desktop environment running over the distro, in my case KDE Plasma, which has the excellent tiling system I referenced in my prior comment.
I just switched from Pop!_OS to openSUSE, but not through any fault of Pop. I really liked it in fact, and it was great to have a distro to show me out of the box what was possible on other distros after a bit of configuration. It’s certainly tempting me to get a System76 laptop.
Same. Tried Linux Mint years ago on my laptop, but had weird Bluetooth issues with my headphones and keyboard, so stopped using it. Recently put Pop!_OS on my gaming rig and it works perfectly! I’m not a power user, and mainly just use Firefox & Steam. A couple windows programs I’ve been able to use with Lutris. I’m super happy with it
It’s the best choice :)