

Here you go:
Where the good days began: @[email protected]


Here you go:
Work. Sadly Linux cannot run most Windows Store apps.
And there’s some niche software that runs, but crashes too much for my liking. So unfortunately in these cases: Windows.
Moved family mostly to Zorin. I stay with Tumbleweed.
Keeping Windows on dual boot for some edge cases. For the app or two that doesn’t run with Linux I keep Windows in a virtual machine (which sadly I need once or twice a day).
95% of my daily business runs on Linux.
Now I wish my phone would do that too.


I loved Mint. It’s still great. Recently I installed Linux on a family member’s laptop which is not upgradeable to Windows 11. Hate to say it (and I may be a bit petty here): Mint looks dated, Cinnamon needs a facelift.
That was a reason I went with Zorin. It clearly tries to transition users that come from Windows with it’s design (honestly, it’s modded Gnome looks awesome). Even running .exe files is as simple as just opening them. Zorin will either just run them or suggest a Linux alternative. Had no issues with that OS so far.
That said, Mint or Ubuntu are solid choices for beginners (and pros alike).
I truly hope they don’t retire it until there’s a true successor. Yast is in its own class of admin tools.


Too many to list.
Bonus:


Resolve to do better next time.
“Hey, how are you?” with a smile usually works. Even with your ex who you had a sinful breakup with. Sure, takes some courage, but it’s kind and leaves everyone ok and open for whenever we run into each other again.


There are so many examples for this. Some that come to mind:
Apart from that, try explaining to a learner why “Read” (present) and “Read” (past) is spelled the same but pronounced differently.
Or plural (or do I capitalize that here? 🤔) inconsistencies: one “mouse,” two “mice”; but one “house,” two “houses.” To be fair, other languages do that stuff too.


Personally I find that linking “making money” with “climbing the social ladder” is at the core of many of our issues.
Going even further, ranking each other based on factors like wealth, education, occupation, influence, etc. is degrading and leads to inequality, corruption and emotional/mental health problems, to name a few. The idea that success is measured almost exclusively by economic gain and social rank distorts human values.


I agree. It’s only that it could use a facelift. In my opinion it looks a little dated these days. In my opinion.
Came to say this. Has not failed me yet.