Reasons to Abandon Windows For Linux

Discussion in 'all things UNIX' started by guest, Apr 7, 2019.

  1. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    What does it do?
     
  2. shmu26

    shmu26 Registered Member

    Chrome doesn't appear as a PPA, it is called an Additional Repository.
     
  3. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    Makes sense.
     
  4. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

  5. Gringo95

    Gringo95 Registered Member

    This is the whole point of Linux - choice. Admittedly there is too much to the point of frustrating many potential Windows migrants but just a tiny bit of pre installation research will identify the specific distro types likely to have less stable updates. Worst case scenario is a blown system that the user can reinstall with total basic functionality in around 10 minutes, something you cannot do by a mile with Windows 10.
     
  6. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

    The first command tells you whether google-chrome is installed & the version. The second prints lines from your /etc/apt folder containing the string "google".

    With the second command, I have:
    Code:
    /etc/apt/sources.list.d/google-chrome.list:deb [arch=amd64] http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb/ stable main
    /etc/apt/sources.list.d/google-chrome.list.save:deb [arch=amd64] http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb/ stable main
     
  7. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    xxxxxxxxx:~$ apt policy google-chrome*
    google-chrome-unstable:
    Installed: (none)
    Candidate: 75.0.3753.4-1
    Version table:
    75.0.3753.4-1 500
    500 http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb stable/main amd64 Packages
    google-chrome-beta:
    Installed: (none)
    Candidate: 74.0.3729.61-1
    Version table:
    74.0.3729.61-1 500
    500 http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb stable/main amd64 Packages
    google-chrome-stable:
    Installed: 73.0.3683.103-1
    Candidate: 73.0.3683.103-1
    Version table:
    *** 73.0.3683.103-1 500
    500 http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb stable/main amd64 Packages
    100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
     
  8. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

  9. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    Thanks for the info on sudo commands Vasa. I'm filing that under stuff that might be useful about Chrome. lol
     
  10. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

    Neither command needed "sudo" and neither are limited to Chrome. It just so happened Chrome was the subject.

    I keep a (growing) list of "diagnostic" commands handy. Beats posting images when a line or two of terminal output would suffice.
     
  11. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    OK thanks. I meant 'Terminal' commands anyway lol. Loads of people told me Chrome needed a ppa to update. But when I switched from Chromium to Chrome I just went to the Google Chrome site and there was a version specifically coded for Ubuntu. So installing it was a no brainer. It updates with other updates, like Firefox.
     
  12. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    Here's the funny thing. According to the same browser sniffer site, my Chromebook's always out of date. :eek:

    Screenshot 2019-04-08 at 19.24.48.png
     
  13. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

    IIRC when you install Google Chrome via its web site, there's a small bit on the screen which advises you to check some box (?) if you want automatic updates. And doing so is what adds the repository (not ppa as I wrongly stated). Once that's done Google Chrome will indeed update just like any other software from the repos. I think the Opera browser installation does something similar.
     
  14. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    I must have checked the box. :)
     
  15. shmu26

    shmu26 Registered Member

    I did an installation today of Chrome on Linux, they are not currently displaying a box, instead they tell you a script to run if you do not want the automatic updates.
     
  16. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    That's interesting because I don't recall checking a box, but the script thing sounds familiar. I think I swapped Chromium for Chrome on Ubuntu about a couple of years ago.
     
  17. EASTER

    EASTER Registered Member

    Thanks on that. Making some moves to see how Mint 19 might fit. If it takes hold for me on one well enough it might be transition time.
     
  18. Stefan Froberg

    Stefan Froberg Registered Member

    "Smoother update process for the OS and software"

    This. zillion times this.
    I don't even remember when I last time saw kernel panic on Linux after update.
     
  19. EASTER

    EASTER Registered Member

    Have had some experience with MINT starting at series 14 and actually liked it's ease of use for starter ups.
    First time doing an install though and it will be in a SSD. While I don't expect much in the way of issues it's reassuring enough members are already well grounded here and can point you to the right place if or when then happen.
     
  20. guest

    guest Guest

    Mint is made from Ubuntu which is from Debian.

    Mint is the starters distro by excellence, great and helpful forum with detailed tutos.

    Then when you masters it enough then you can choose a distro a level deeper.
     
  21. shmu26

    shmu26 Registered Member

    Don't know which distro(s) you use, but this is true of Ubuntu and its forks such as Mint. Unfortunately, it is not the case with all distros.
    For instance, lots of people on the forums have complained about things breaking after updates on Manjaro. I had breakage after updates on Parrot. There is something they call "bleeding edge" distros, they have much more update issues. They are basically in a perpetual state of alpha/beta testing, if I understand right, with those distros.
     
  22. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    This is a good reason to use LTS releases as they are usually more stable.
     
  23. Hadron

    Hadron Registered Member

    I've been hearing people and reading articles with predictions of Linux to replace Windows for decades. Seriously. I have. :isay:
     
  24. vasa1

    vasa1 Registered Member

    I moved to Linux in 2011 with Natty Narwhal. So not yet a decade ;)
     
  25. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    I've replaced Windows with Linux.
     
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