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Cake day: April 2nd, 2025

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  • Both Mint and Fedora are community projects licensed and attributed as such, and neither corporate entity could take ownership or close either one.

    I wasn’t suggesting that they would. Rather, I was referring to the strong influence that Red Hat has over Fedora. It might be fine for people who love Red Hat’s design choices, but not so much for people who don’t. That’s why I mentioned Mint as an alternative.

    there is functionally no difference between RedHat<>Fedora and Canonical<>Mint.

    There is, because Debian is upstream of Canonical/Ubuntu. This means Mint can easily sever ties with the latter. In practice, Mint has opted out of Ubuntu-isms more than once, and already maintains a distro based directly on Debian.















  • who@feddit.orgtoLinux@lemmy.worldWhy I'm breaking up with Windows
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    21 days ago

    the development experience for native software has sucked for a long time.

    For as long as Windows has existed, I have found its APIs to be noisy, awkward, and generally unpleasant to use. It was a major part of why I switched my development focus to Unix a long time ago. I guess this is a matter of personal taste; I wonder how you’ll feel about the APIs more commonly used on Linux after five or ten years of using them full-time.

    Despite a few niggles (I don’t care for Bourne-style shell syntax or Windows shell syntax) I have found my productivity to be better and more enjoyable since the switch. Nowadays, benefits include everything that comes with an open-source ecosystem, like the software install/update model of Linux distros, and the ability to solve or work around library/OS problems myself if I can’t wait for someone else to fix something.

    And, of course, having a privacy-respecting platform for myself and my users is important to me.

    In short, I’m happier here. Welcome.

    By the way, if you do cross-platform desktop app development, give Qt a try. It does an excellent job overall.