Common Mistakes Linux Users Make: th-cam.com/video/mkrN4uAcDGk/w-d-xo.html How to Choose a Linux Distribution: th-cam.com/video/iox7fr7p5Hc/w-d-xo.html Customize your Terminal and Make it Look Awesome: th-cam.com/video/iaXQdyHRL8M/w-d-xo.html
also, 5:27, they just recently have updated the sync functionality, and it is as simple as typing your passphrase, and everything will be synced up quickly
I'd used Arch for about four years, fell off the wagon and went back to Windows for a few years, and then came back home to Arch after seeing one of your videos a few months back - it reminded me how much I loved Arch and I really missed it. I guess that makes you my sponsor or something? "Hi, I'm Jeremy, I'm a former Windows user but I've been "clean" for three months."
I'm new to Linux and got a ubuntu LTS based distro. I plan on moving to another distro for sure, but havent got to the partition thing to not lose data
"the distribution doesn't matter" While this is very true one thing that is a complete game changer for me is the AUR. I can't imagine living without it now.
AUR is so important!! It makes installing things so much easier, 99.9% of the time. That moment when you install fresh and forget to turn on AUR and you're like but why can't I find any of my software?!
@@thecaretaker0007 AUR Stands for Arch User Repository. Essentially it's a very well maintained repository or software, because they allow any one to post software install scripts and dependencies. Makes getting most software a breeze. For example, I recently wanted a what's app of some kind. I saw many listings of ways to do it from the official to most custom ones. Click install, bam builds and installs. It's how canonical apt get wishes it was
I made my first attempt at editing a video a couple days ago. Never used a video editor before so I had no clue what I was doing. I fired up Kden and within seconds I'd crashed it. Great first experience. 😅
This would remove the need to watch the video, and reduce watch-time significantly. This sounds like it has a negative connotation to it, but Chris also has to earn something of his videos, and i respect it.
@@teel3651 I think it's common courtesy to leave links to stuff one talks about but, that's just me. If I wrote a blog post about a bunch of apps I use and didn't link to said apps in the hopes that people would stay longer on my site and maybe I'd get more ad views or something, I'm fairly certain people would stop reading my articles and never come back. It's not a perfect analogy being that this is video we're talking about and not blog posts but, I hope you get my point. Now, I do realize there may be some truth to what you're saying, and of course Chris needs to make money to continue to provide content (and why I don't blame him for plastering his description with affiliate links) but, there is also this thing called loyalty and one way to build a loyal base is to go above and beyond for your viewers and this by providing them with the best content and making their lives easier as the same time. Since watching this video I've instead Googled these apps and have since found other people who have offered articles and videos about them so, instead of coming directly back to Chris after checking out a link Chris provided me, I'm off watching and reading these other people's stuff instead. Had Chris linked to the apps, I'd have checked them out, one by one and come back to Chris for each app until the video was over. That back and forth, Chris' video, app, Chris' video, app, Chris' video, app would actually have a powerful affect on me and I'd probably be more likely to remember about Chris going forward. Of course, it's his show and he can do what he wants but, now he has competition he didn't have before and this due to not linking to the apps he's talking about in his video.
I tried to find the game platform he mentioned as well as steam. I can't find it. I don't know how it is spelt. My ears are not good enough to tell from his speech. So I vote for links in the description.
I think Endeavour OS is a really good alternative to Manjaro. It s much more close to stock Arch . For productivity, I recommend i3wm environment (+ rofi, i3-expo, clearine ) , Suckess terminal, lf/ranger file manager, mail client neomutt, cmus for music. For content creation etc Gimp, Krita, Blender, Maya, Kdenlive/Natron. I ' m still looking at Clearlinux developpement, but it is not ready to production. Good video as usual!
EndeavourOS is a much cleaner alternative to Manjaro with a lot more flexibility and without the bad decision making. You'll also be able to use the AUR without issue.
@@shamrock- This is just my personal experience but Manjaro only does bulk updates every 10 to 14 days on average, but it is still Arch and a LOT changes. I have found that GUI only updates can potentially break the system because so much has been changed. These days I don't even use terminal, which is still attached to the desktop, I prefer to go to TTY (usually Ctl-Alt-F2) and then just use the same commands as per terminal. If you're not using TTY (and maybe sometimes even if you are lol), it is probably better to check in with the Manjaro website before you update in case there are specific things/approaches they want you to take with that update. Still, I'm sure everyone has their own individual approach. My approach has seen me safe on Manjaro for over 12 months now. I'm not a total beginner, but I'm definitely not a computer and/or Linux advanced user either. Good luck :)
I'm soon making the change to Linux, after all these years. Your channel and these videos really helped me. I want the customization and the free stuff that are just for linux. Thanks!
I think Krita is pretty awesome and I also love working with Atom as my PHP IDE at work, I refuse to touch VSCode out of stubborness but from what I've seen of it I'm pretty happy sticking with Atom.
You helped me learn how to install arch linux on a vm. Then I used that knowledge to install in on my desktop. Now it's my daily driver at home, and I love it. I use enlightenment for my desktop environment, and terminator as my shell. You've been a big help.
I used shutter for my screenshots, I'm used to that for quite a while during my time working in Linux. It has all the feature you need including editing the screenshot in one app (maybe simple, but useful for quick edits)
Like your nonsensical approach in the video. Your audio is great where you are understood and no other audio distractions. Thanks and I'm a new subscriber 😉
@ItsAllUnity I have found the learning curve isn't as steep if you keep 2 rules in mind: "You can do everything in normal mode, except insert text" "Everything" includes moving around, selecting text, moving text, deleting text, replacing textwhich sends you into insert mode), copy text, pasting text, saving, opening file and more xD Which is why rule #2 is always return to normal mode whenever you finish inserting text, for accessibility you can map tab to escape or use alt combinations(in the terminal) Don't enter a new line with enter escape and press o :p
Regarding to Discord and privacy, it is not what you say in chatrooms and private messages. Discord reads directly on your system and what processes you run on your computer, It is for showing other Discordusers what games you playing and what music you listening to. You can turn this off in configuration, but it runs anyway. That is not a good policy, sadly.
I use Manjaro XFCE on my Acer Swift 3 and my GPD Pocket 2. XFCE is harder to setup but once done, you are setup exactly the way you want it to be. I use firefox everyday for browsing, kdenlive for video editing, libreoffice suite for my office work
I’ve used Gnome , KDE , Xfe and LXDE but always go back to Mate and looks as though it’s really been improved recently in stability and it works very well with apps native to other desktop environments which I feel other desktop environments don’t do as well. The other desktop environments are not bad but Mate is really great for someone who likes to mix and match.
My use is: browser=Firefox because I like it, I use WPS as an office suite, and gcc and clang for compiling c, c++. I watch many youtube videos for learning and relaxation.
If debian had a official rolling release I feel like debian could be the main distro for development company's don't want to make apps for linux because they say its fragmented but if we had a LTS one that is every 6 Months like Ubuntu and a rolling with the support arch has debian could take up 80% to 90% of distros
debian is by far the best distro in terms of stability and security, but software availability isn't that great since using PPA will just break it, but that is getting better with snappy, flatpak and appimages.
What I’m expecting before watching the video: Terminal. I web browse in the Terminal, I listen to music in the Terminal, I terminal the terminal in the terminal, I access my pornhu-important documents in the terminal. Jokes aside 8:36 I’ve been using discord for years and I don’t really worry about privacy as far as that is concerned either. I really enjoy using it and it’s on several of my devices. Mac, iPad, although I honestly didn’t know Discord supported Linux so that’s cool.
Re MATE: I really like the Gnome 2 style. I gave up on Ubuntu after the switch to the TERRIBLE UI. Now if it's Ubuntu I use Xubuntu. Xfce for the win. Also Raspbian on the Pi is excellent.
I've been using Linux since kernel 0.99. I have always been efficient in Linux, even when it was just in a shell. And with X it was completely a no brainer. What really helped was that in early days you had DOS and Windows 3.1x which both SUCKED MONKEY BALLS! So when I saw Minix at school I already liked the ease with which I could develop in C and assembler (that;'s what it was used for in college). When Linux came it suddenly was also multi user! I had a "big boy" development system and server. My dad who was using OS/2 at the time and was a VMS sysadmin couldn't believe that speed and functionality and was not convinced that it was free :D
As a Windows user i've realized that in Linux you can't do pretty much anything except hacking, programming and science stuff. Gaming - Not all games are supported and those who are is pretty much hassle to setup or run ( Wine, Lutris ) and on top games stutter or doesn't perfom as good as on windows even after the Steam Proton. Production / Content Creation - You partially can do some design work and 3D Graphics, but major applications aren't supported such as: Photoshop ( yes there's alternatives but Photoshop has many specific workflows and plugins associated with 3D ) , Cinema 4D, After Effects, 3ds Max, Maya is barely supported ( insanely hard to install ), many middleware is also not supported such as xNormal which is must have for every 3d artist. Basically there's alot of Industry Standard stuff that's not supported, but since Blender is pretty damn good right now i think some ppl can live without these missing softwares. As an OS itself i think Linux ( e.g. something like Manjaro KDE Plasma ) might be better, only the support/compatibility kills it.
Heck Chris, my first distro was Ubuntu 7.04 and then I switched to Debian because someone recommended it to me and I managed to install it and get all my stuff installed, etc and it has been my go-to distro for a long time for running my server, but as I started to advance over the years I did my first Arch install a year ago and I love as a daily driver!
Pretty informative video, im a super noob with Linux and had just experimentally put it on an oldish laptop i had given to me that was super slow with windows 10, originally thought it was the hard drive but after installing Ubuntu (I know you and some others dislike it, but I'm new and it was an easy start), the laptop became very snappy and I've been able to actually use the computer for stuff. Once I become more confident with how linux runs as a whole I might try something like arch but for now ubuntu works for what I needed and I've been learning alot with it.
I like a mix of KDE/XFCE, leaning towards XFCE with some KDE applications(Kate, KDEnlive, etc), mainly use Manjaro because I'm too lazy to setup Arch but have done in the past. for File managers I like Dolphin although some of their choices in recent times have annoyed me so yeah... Gimp is awesome. OpenShot is also cool for basic video editing.
Thanks for sharing Chris! Took LinuxMint 19.3 beta MATE out for a skeptical spin... and it is now my home base! Wow! Super duper fast and light! Vivaldi is my fav too! :)
6:25 Chris, you ought to try the Fish shell + byobu combo, it's quite amazing and yo can do all the neat tricks you do on Terminator everywhere, be it a TTY, SSHing to another machine, etc. Also, "Oh my fish" with a powerline based theme like Agnoster. 7:20 gedit is more that meets the eye, check the preferences menu, you can have gedit with a "minimap" scrollbar, grid and numbered lines for easier code browsing
i love arch 2 , arch + gentoo FTW :) unlike a lot of distributions that shove all their fancy bloatware(not necessarily crapware though) in your face right off the bat, Arch and Gentoo are pretty much designed to just get out of your way and i like that a lot.
@@kasperspangejensen5496 that fine really , as long as you don't mind removing the packages you don't want or whatever. i just personally like starting 'from scratch'
Natron is DEAD dude.. both of the original developers have left the product.. get away from it. Cinelerra is actuallyy a decent program, however.. I honestly just use Blender. :)
@@-Insert_Name_Here.- I agree Natron is no longer being developed but it's still available to download and unlike the others it uses a node based editing system.
Even though Linux can be customized, I'd recommend totally new users to use Zorin OS. It will give you the smoothest transition from Windows to Linux ever. One really cool thing I found is how Zorin automatically get's the latest stable version of Wine when you download Lutris from their store. And I recommend Telegram for chatting. Open source, encrypted, cloud sync and 1.5GB for files, has more features than Discord, transparent as hell and they recognize that absolute anonymity can't be accomplished with mainstream apps but they still try their best to protect your privacy. The only thing it needs is group and video call support.
THank you, Chris. btb me pop shebop. EDIT: A while ago I found that I can run two instances of Gedit tiled, with tabs in each, and also group tabs so that they run together in a split-screen. This tremendous for writing and translating and having reference texts immediately available. I had started with Gedit, then used Geany, Leafpad etc etc. At one point Gedit couldn't display Chinese or Japanese characters properly so I dropped it. But that cleared up a few years ago. Now I use Gedit almost all day, every day. That said, my version of "gaming" is trying to use Vim and Emacs from time to time.
I really like Manjaro KDE. For some reason, it also seems to run better on my computer than Kubuntu or Neon. From what I've seen and heard, I like Ubuntu's implementation of Gnome more than plain Gnome.
can't agree more on most your recomends... I haven't tried flame yet and don't particularly love terminator but then again I spend minimal time in the terminal. For sure I can't do without Kdenlive though and I too have used a ton of other open source editors, I am also growing to be fond of Gimp but it sure is a learning process lol
You introduce me to "ncdu" instead of "du" and I still use that when I'm on remote ssh session. Recently I found this GUI app that does the same thing called "filelight" that is very intuitive and easy to use as well. With Plasma 5.18, "filelight" will be integrated as a tab on a folder property window.
Yeah, Kubuntu because of KDE! Kate, VLC, Audacious, Steam, Discord, LibreOffice suite. I tried Nautilus and I liked it but I will stick to Dolphin as it suits me better. Great video!
xfce is the sweet spot for me. Low memory usage, quick environment, stable releases, looks and feels good, and you type in "pacman" to install things. It's great.
0:05 - One of dudes at school saw my i3 setup and asked what Linux is this. Being an Arch user, I immediately thought of "I use Arch btw", but then realised it would give them wrong expectation what Arch is. So I just said I use i3wm with Alacritty as Terminal Emulator, polybar and rofi. When people think of OS, then think of what they see.
My favorite Linux-world piece of software: digiKam. Omitting that first library-building step that may take forever with a big file collection (like, a couple terabytes big) - it's just so awesome for image management it's hard to describe. Now I just need to learn proper darktable workflow to untie myself from the Adobe/Windows bundle.
i would use xfce instead of mate. xfce gives me more "power" to mold it in the way i want it to behave. Now i just usew kde with kvantum for some custom apereance and some light eye candy
I'm running Sparkylinux after a rather lengthy distro tour. Your videos really helped me with the software side and set up 👍 If there is ever a featherweight Arch distro in the future that is 32bit, plays DVDs without any hassle and has a browser that can handle Filmzie and Pluto TV let me know and I'll switch 👍
I second Vivaldi. I use it on Windows, Mac, and Linux. I also second Manjaro as a great arch district to learn on... I have it running on a super old 1.2 GHz dual core PC. I should probably put a different district on it but I have yet to find a lite district that is stable on it...
Probably worth looking at contributing to projects you love like Lutris if you can. Flameshot is pretty awesome imo. One other thing I'd point out is as far as I understand AMD GPU video encoding is behind Nvidia by a bit at least on Linux. Only reason I have not decided which route to go on my new build.
MATE is the best for beginners. The “90s” look gave me a familiar first impression. Especially if your 30+ yrs old. Still use MATE, even though tried many others since. And it was the only one that worked “out of box” on my old 2008 laptop. Just had to wire to Ethernet to update drivers. Everything else was either slow or much more difficult (or wouldn’t even work)
First thing I did after I installed Flameshot way back when, was add a KDE shortcut for print screen. It's so integrated for me that I don't even think of it as a separate app anymore.
I didn't know MATE was pronounced like that; I assumed it was just pronounced like "mate." I'm glad to hear you love it, as it's my favourite lighter weight GUI/window manager. I also think it's pretty intuitive and easy to get accustomed to coming from Windows; KDE is nice, too, but it's just a bit of a resource hog, I think. I straight up can't really stand GNOME and that would be my biggest gripe about Ubuntu. In terms of my second choice, I would probably go with LXDE or Cinnamon; maybe Cinnamon. I also love Nautilus, but am surprised in your choice of text editor and video editor. Why not Open Broadcast Studio? It seems pretty good. I hadn't heard of Kdenlive, so I actually thought OBS was the more popular video editor. Text editor...I never really thought of using a GUI text editor. I just figured I was supposed to launch a terminal and use GNU nano (though I kind of prefer pico, but nano's good too). Web browser...I hummed and hawwed for a year on switching from Chrome to either Vivaldi or Brave. On the one hand, I like Brave's ad blocking but I do like Vivaldi's tab tiling and stacking and the sync features. Screenshots...I like Greenshot. Cheers, Doug
My favorite software: +Distro/WM/DE Arch with Openbox. Lately, I'm using Deepin. It is so gorgeous and so bloated lol. (for hotkey I use sxhkd). +Browser Firefox for almost everything. Chromium for sites optimized for Chrome. +Terminal Termite +Text-editor Mousepad or Geany +Chat None, if necessary google duo on the browser. +Games +File manager Pcmanfm. Thunar and dde-file-manager are not bad. +Video taking/ editing / player Fffmpeg, Kdenlive, smplayer +Photo/images Gimp, Inkcape, Nomacs, Rawtherapee, Imagemagick, ImageJ
I recently watched your 30 days of Linux videos from last year. I remember you saying that on Windows you used Notepad++ and didn't see a comparable alternative.. It turns out there has been a replacement all along called Notepadqq which should be in most distros but if not there is a Flatpak. I wonder if you have discovered this yet. Keep up the good work, I enjoy your videos.
I've used MATE since the the launch of KDE5 which I found too bloated after updating from KDE4 to KDE5. I like the fact that MATE is light uncomplicated and doesn't burden me with bling.
I used to use Terminator, it's great if you spend a lot of time in a terminal. I found that I don't spend that much time in one though. I pop in, issue a command, then pop out. If you use Gnome, check out Guake. Hit F12, enter your command, then move on with things. It's life changing if you use Linux daily. Edit: I don't use KDE, but if you do, apparently Yakuake is similar. I'm sure there's a version for Mate.
You know, I used to be of the same mindset of "distros" don't matter but the fact I always keep coming back to Manjaro Gnome. With any other distro it takes a lot of work to get it close to my tastes. Manjaro's logo/accent colour is in green which is my preference, then all I really need to do is use the dark variant of their theme and I'm good. With their recent layout chooser it takes even less work for me to get the design that best speaks to me. Plus the AUR aids in almost any software desired is available. I had a random issue of blank screen with cursor the other day after unlocking my laptop with TTY not coming up. I was initially going to switch away as on top of other glitches it felt like Manjaro stable had gotten less stable. I just couldn't do it in the end because I realised I couldn't easily get my perfect Linux environment/setup. Sometimes distros don't matter. It really depends on how much you're willing to do and whether a particular distro speaks to you out of the box.
Chris, you haven't tried out Notepadqq yet? :surprised: How about Vim? Give it a chance, you will probably like it once you get used to it. At first you disliked i3, now you love Awesome. For me any text-editor is off the list if it doesn't have good support for dark themes.
I think maybe you’ve lost sight of how difficult some versions of “Linux” can be in the beginning. I found Mint Cinnamon to be the most acceptable (coming from a Windows platform) and that some distributions of GNU/Linux completely ludicrous for use by a newbie. I guess we’ll just have to agree to disagree on this one. Thanks for the video
Hi Chris, excellent video;s keep up the good work, I use ShotCut for editing and also OpenShot. ShotCut is updated regularly and has 4K support and hardware support
Common Mistakes Linux Users Make: th-cam.com/video/mkrN4uAcDGk/w-d-xo.html
How to Choose a Linux Distribution: th-cam.com/video/iox7fr7p5Hc/w-d-xo.html
Customize your Terminal and Make it Look Awesome: th-cam.com/video/iaXQdyHRL8M/w-d-xo.html
Have you seen the app-outlet application? is it something I can trust and install?
What would be your preferred code editor ... ?
Distro: @1:28 - Arch Linux (Manjaro for newbies); DE - MATE (KDE for newbies)
Browsers: @5:13 - Brave (Single device) ; @5:37 - Vivaldi (Multi device)
Shell: @6:05 - Terminator
Text Editor: @6:39 - GEdit & Kate
Chat Client: @7:32 - Discord
Gaming: @9:49 - Lutris & Steam
File Manager: @11:02 - Nautilus
Video Editing: @12:19 - Kdenlive
Photo Editing: @12:19 - Gimp 2.10
Screenshot: @16:21 - Flameshot
Thankyou
Gd
need to pin this
also, 5:27, they just recently have updated the sync functionality, and it is as simple as typing your passphrase, and everything will be synced up quickly
Man are u a angel or what 🔥
4:56 Start of the list.
0:00 Start of the video for normal people.
@zizzy .... Yeah in their basement. I'll come out of the basement when the corona virus outbreak is over. th-cam.com/video/eCdRFMp8Xwo/w-d-xo.html
Thanks
Not the hero we wanted, but the one we needed, thanks
how we say literally in spanish: "hero without a cape". regards from Chile
I'd used Arch for about four years, fell off the wagon and went back to Windows for a few years, and then came back home to Arch after seeing one of your videos a few months back - it reminded me how much I loved Arch and I really missed it. I guess that makes you my sponsor or something? "Hi, I'm Jeremy, I'm a former Windows user but I've been "clean" for three months."
I've been clean for 2 weeks, got tired of the random updates when I was taking a timed test for school, Manjaro power wipe.
Hi, Jeremy! :-)
I have been clean for 5 years
I’m Jeremy and I’ve been window$ free for 14 years
I'm new to Linux and got a ubuntu LTS based distro. I plan on moving to another distro for sure, but havent got to the partition thing to not lose data
"Never assume this conversation is private" - best advice ever, I try to preach that to everyone
"Self-censor all the time"
It's a public chat, so yeah no kidding.
Yeah same here
But none of my friends listen to me
They think I am just crazy...
🤣🤣🤣
@@TheMax6808 Yeah, that.. we shouldn't give up the fight for privacy.
What about Telegram. I think they are pretty secure and private.
"the distribution doesn't matter" While this is very true one thing that is a complete game changer for me is the AUR. I can't imagine living without it now.
So true the AUR makes life sooo much easier.
AUR is so important!!
It makes installing things so much easier, 99.9% of the time.
That moment when you install fresh and forget to turn on AUR and you're like but why can't I find any of my software?!
What is AUR?
@@thecaretaker0007 AUR Stands for Arch User Repository. Essentially it's a very well maintained repository or software, because they allow any one to post software install scripts and dependencies. Makes getting most software a breeze. For example, I recently wanted a what's app of some kind. I saw many listings of ways to do it from the official to most custom ones. Click install, bam builds and installs. It's how canonical apt get wishes it was
@@DXTR420 thanks.
I've been using Ubuntu for nearly 20 years. Love it!
I've been using it for 8 years. At first I was missing Windows but now I would never go back.
Raspberry Pi 4 with Debian Buster is my daily driver now. This credit card sized computer is amazing when it is set up right.
I made my first attempt at editing a video a couple days ago. Never used a video editor before so I had no clue what I was doing. I fired up Kden and within seconds I'd crashed it.
Great first experience. 😅
Use Filmora x 😁
Chris, consider adding links to stuff you talk about in the video under its description.
This would remove the need to watch the video, and reduce watch-time significantly. This sounds like it has a negative connotation to it, but Chris also has to earn something of his videos, and i respect it.
@@teel3651 I think it's common courtesy to leave links to stuff one talks about but, that's just me. If I wrote a blog post about a bunch of apps I use and didn't link to said apps in the hopes that people would stay longer on my site and maybe I'd get more ad views or something, I'm fairly certain people would stop reading my articles and never come back. It's not a perfect analogy being that this is video we're talking about and not blog posts but, I hope you get my point. Now, I do realize there may be some truth to what you're saying, and of course Chris needs to make money to continue to provide content (and why I don't blame him for plastering his description with affiliate links) but, there is also this thing called loyalty and one way to build a loyal base is to go above and beyond for your viewers and this by providing them with the best content and making their lives easier as the same time. Since watching this video I've instead Googled these apps and have since found other people who have offered articles and videos about them so, instead of coming directly back to Chris after checking out a link Chris provided me, I'm off watching and reading these other people's stuff instead. Had Chris linked to the apps, I'd have checked them out, one by one and come back to Chris for each app until the video was over. That back and forth, Chris' video, app, Chris' video, app, Chris' video, app would actually have a powerful affect on me and I'd probably be more likely to remember about Chris going forward. Of course, it's his show and he can do what he wants but, now he has competition he didn't have before and this due to not linking to the apps he's talking about in his video.
@@teel3651 if he didn't talk so much and repeat himself, his long videos would be half the size, so we'd be more likely to watch the entire thing
@@teel3651 this just makes people close the video
I tried to find the game platform he mentioned as well as steam. I can't find it. I don't know how it is spelt. My ears are not good enough to tell from his speech. So I vote for links in the description.
Linux should be a tool to get things done rather than us spending time on it.
it can be fun to rice the system though
Well that's one of many ways to use Linux.
@@agenttank Yeah, that's the biggest productivity issue with Linux, it's so much fun to tinker with.
Agreed, there is so many options but I am much more productive now once I figured out what works for me
@ i am done setting up my system with sway/i3 and now i can work very effiecient. it was fun too and i rarely really have to tinker now
Over the years, I have tried several different windows managers but always come back to Gnome. For some reason, I just love it.
I think Endeavour OS is a really good alternative to Manjaro. It s much more close to stock Arch . For productivity, I recommend i3wm environment (+ rofi, i3-expo, clearine ) , Suckess terminal, lf/ranger file manager, mail client neomutt, cmus for music. For content creation etc Gimp, Krita, Blender, Maya, Kdenlive/Natron. I ' m still looking at Clearlinux developpement, but it is not ready to production. Good video as usual!
EndeavourOS is a much cleaner alternative to Manjaro with a lot more flexibility and without the bad decision making. You'll also be able to use the AUR without issue.
just use base arch
I use arch btw KDE plasma
But MATE looking like something straight out of the 90s is part of the appeal.
I always thought it looked the cleanest. Now, the *buntu theme for it is not good; clearlooks looks classic.
I just downloaded manjaro kde iso.
After watching your channel, I am leaving Ubuntu.
Great!
I advice to update system using sudo pacman -Syu and not using a GUI.
@Jenna Talia For most of the people, Ubuntu is the only linux distro they know.
For others
" what's linux?"
Me: An OS
Them: what's an OS?
Me: 😕
@@igorthelight Definitely not GUI for updates... I personally use TTY for updates these days, just found it safer overall.
Please explain why command line over GUI?
@@shamrock- This is just my personal experience but Manjaro only does bulk updates every 10 to 14 days on average, but it is still Arch and a LOT changes. I have found that GUI only updates can potentially break the system because so much has been changed. These days I don't even use terminal, which is still attached to the desktop, I prefer to go to TTY (usually Ctl-Alt-F2) and then just use the same commands as per terminal. If you're not using TTY (and maybe sometimes even if you are lol), it is probably better to check in with the Manjaro website before you update in case there are specific things/approaches they want you to take with that update. Still, I'm sure everyone has their own individual approach. My approach has seen me safe on Manjaro for over 12 months now. I'm not a total beginner, but I'm definitely not a computer and/or Linux advanced user either. Good luck :)
7:56 I've learned something.
I really like manjaro, arch and mint those are just my favorite. Thank you for this video chris
"Linux apps".
Thumbnail is of an ipad, iPhone, and mac. Mac looks like it's running OSX. I lol'ed
Best file manager ever: Double Commander!!!
I'll have to try this out, thanks Igor!
Good joice. Because I use KDE I went for Krusader. Same thing but well integrated into KDE
Krusader is pretty nice too
my favorite as well, although I sometimes have to restart it because its not responding on mouse commands
Looks like Windows/Total Commander I've been missing all these years using Linux, will try this out
I'm soon making the change to Linux, after all these years. Your channel and these videos really helped me. I want the customization and the free stuff that are just for linux. Thanks!
"I use MATE" ... You're welcome Chris ;)
As long as he doesn't say "by the way, I use MATE". :p
lmao i was the other person telling him to use MATE, glad he did try it out haha
@Jessica Sinclair xD
i mint i love it
DigitalSparky love Mate
I’m using elementaryos, I love their politic and their design way..
me too. all HAIL the Elementary OS!
my mum is 75 years old, switched her to linux mint MATE on her old i3 laptop. No problems ever since. lol. she loves it!
Love it
I think Krita is pretty awesome and I also love working with Atom as my PHP IDE at work, I refuse to touch VSCode out of stubborness but from what I've seen of it I'm pretty happy sticking with Atom.
You helped me learn how to install arch linux on a vm. Then I used that knowledge to install in on my desktop. Now it's my daily driver at home, and I love it. I use enlightenment for my desktop environment, and terminator as my shell. You've been a big help.
I used shutter for my screenshots, I'm used to that for quite a while during my time working in Linux. It has all the feature you need including editing the screenshot in one app (maybe simple, but useful for quick edits)
Like your nonsensical approach in the video. Your audio is great where you are understood and no other audio distractions. Thanks and I'm a new subscriber 😉
Desktop:
Distro: MX Linux
WM: Xfce4
Editor: Pluma (Fork of gedit gnome 2)
File Manager: Caja (Fork of nautilus gnome 2)
Music: Clementine (Internet streams)
Laptop:
Distro: AntiX
WM: Fluxbox
Same as above
For screenshots you can also just make different keybinds to scrot for [full screen], [current window], [select area with mouse] as you see fit. :)
I miss my Linux Mint with Cinnamon. Been on the road and stuck with MacBook and PCs. Arrggghhh.
re: text editors
vim is a great text editor especially when it comes to text manipulation
@ItsAllUnity I have found the learning curve isn't as steep if you keep 2 rules in mind:
"You can do everything in normal mode, except insert text"
"Everything" includes moving around, selecting text, moving text, deleting text, replacing textwhich sends you into insert mode), copy text, pasting text, saving, opening file and more xD
Which is why rule #2 is always return to normal mode whenever you finish inserting text, for accessibility you can map tab to escape or use alt combinations(in the terminal)
Don't enter a new line with enter escape and press o :p
You should try Emacs with Evil mode ;-)
@@abel6580 but but so many modifier keys
vim is the Roach Motel of text editors. They check in but they can't check out.
I have used vim for years! It is still my favourite go to for editing text. I use notepadqq for when I need something visually easier to follow.
Regarding to Discord and privacy, it is not what you say in chatrooms and private messages. Discord reads directly on your system and what processes you run on your computer, It is for showing other Discordusers what games you playing and what music you listening to. You can turn this off in configuration, but it runs anyway. That is not a good policy, sadly.
I use Manjaro XFCE on my Acer Swift 3 and my GPD Pocket 2. XFCE is harder to setup but once done, you are setup exactly the way you want it to be. I use firefox everyday for browsing, kdenlive for video editing, libreoffice suite for my office work
This is the video I been looking for! I didn't know it existed. I was hoping something like this would be front and center on your website.
3:48 looking through the description for the referenced link 🙄
For terminal, I am pretty agnostic about it since I use tmux. For text editor, hands down vim. Even I use vim plugin on vscode.
I’ve used Gnome , KDE , Xfe and LXDE but always go back to Mate and looks as though it’s really been improved recently in stability and it works very well with apps native to other desktop environments which I feel other desktop environments don’t do as well.
The other desktop environments are not bad but Mate is really great for someone who likes to mix and match.
Chris: "Ubuntu sucks"
Also Chris: "Don't distro hop"
Mixed messages!
Make your Ubuntu the way you want.
switching once is fine
My use is: browser=Firefox because I like it, I use WPS as an office suite, and gcc and clang for compiling c,
c++. I watch many youtube videos for learning and relaxation.
If debian had a official rolling release I feel like debian could be the main distro for development company's don't want to make apps for linux because they say its fragmented but if we had a LTS one that is every 6 Months like Ubuntu and a rolling with the support arch has debian could take up 80% to 90% of distros
debian is by far the best distro in terms of stability and security, but software availability isn't that great since using PPA will just break it, but that is getting better with snappy, flatpak and appimages.
What I’m expecting before watching the video: Terminal. I web browse in the Terminal, I listen to music in the Terminal, I terminal the terminal in the terminal, I access my pornhu-important documents in the terminal.
Jokes aside 8:36 I’ve been using discord for years and I don’t really worry about privacy as far as that is concerned either. I really enjoy using it and it’s on several of my devices. Mac, iPad, although I honestly didn’t know Discord supported Linux so that’s cool.
Re MATE: I really like the Gnome 2 style. I gave up on Ubuntu after the switch to the TERRIBLE UI. Now if it's Ubuntu I use Xubuntu. Xfce for the win. Also Raspbian on the Pi is excellent.
I've been using Linux since kernel 0.99.
I have always been efficient in Linux, even when it was just in a shell. And with X it was completely a no brainer.
What really helped was that in early days you had DOS and Windows 3.1x which both SUCKED MONKEY BALLS! So when I saw Minix at school I already liked the ease with which I could develop in C and assembler (that;'s what it was used for in college).
When Linux came it suddenly was also multi user! I had a "big boy" development system and server. My dad who was using OS/2 at the time and was a VMS sysadmin couldn't believe that speed and functionality and was not convinced that it was free :D
As a Windows user i've realized that in Linux you can't do pretty much anything except hacking, programming and science stuff.
Gaming - Not all games are supported and those who are is pretty much hassle to setup or run ( Wine, Lutris ) and on top games stutter or doesn't perfom as good as on windows even after the Steam Proton.
Production / Content Creation - You partially can do some design work and 3D Graphics, but major applications aren't supported such as: Photoshop ( yes there's alternatives but Photoshop has many specific workflows and plugins associated with 3D ) , Cinema 4D, After Effects, 3ds Max, Maya is barely supported ( insanely hard to install ), many middleware is also not supported such as xNormal which is must have for every 3d artist. Basically there's alot of Industry Standard stuff that's not supported, but since Blender is pretty damn good right now i think some ppl can live without these missing softwares.
As an OS itself i think Linux ( e.g. something like Manjaro KDE Plasma ) might be better, only the support/compatibility kills it.
Heck Chris, my first distro was Ubuntu 7.04 and then I switched to Debian because someone recommended it to me and I managed to install it and get all my stuff installed, etc and it has been my go-to distro for a long time for running my server, but as I started to advance over the years I did my first Arch install a year ago and I love as a daily driver!
Fav text editor, gedit kate... Speechless
Pretty informative video, im a super noob with Linux and had just experimentally put it on an oldish laptop i had given to me that was super slow with windows 10, originally thought it was the hard drive but after installing Ubuntu (I know you and some others dislike it, but I'm new and it was an easy start), the laptop became very snappy and I've been able to actually use the computer for stuff. Once I become more confident with how linux runs as a whole I might try something like arch but for now ubuntu works for what I needed and I've been learning alot with it.
I like a mix of KDE/XFCE, leaning towards XFCE with some KDE applications(Kate, KDEnlive, etc), mainly use Manjaro because I'm too lazy to setup Arch but have done in the past. for File managers I like Dolphin although some of their choices in recent times have annoyed me so yeah... Gimp is awesome. OpenShot is also cool for basic video editing.
Thanks for sharing Chris! Took LinuxMint 19.3 beta MATE out for a skeptical spin... and it is now my home base! Wow! Super duper fast and light! Vivaldi is my fav too! :)
Thumbs up for Arch Linux!! And must say as I'm obligated to do so, I use arch btw!
6:25 Chris, you ought to try the Fish shell + byobu combo, it's quite amazing and yo can do all the neat tricks you do on Terminator everywhere, be it a TTY, SSHing to another machine, etc. Also, "Oh my fish" with a powerline based theme like Agnoster.
7:20 gedit is more that meets the eye, check the preferences menu, you can have gedit with a "minimap" scrollbar, grid and numbered lines for easier code browsing
I recently switched to arch, and it was the best switch ever
Get yourself nvidia and you will never feel the same. After years of using arch, i have finally moved to long term distro's ( currently opensuse leap)
@@mdzaid5925 I have a nvidia gtx 960
It's working fine, and everything else has, even discord stopped crashing like usual
@@cats824 Node is a pain even in Arch for me.
@@cats824 For me, gtx1050ti gaved me hell lot issues at every update , it broke.
Cool. I use Debian with lxde and xfwm4. Works p well, idle loads below 400 mb.
i love arch 2 , arch + gentoo FTW :)
unlike a lot of distributions that shove all their fancy bloatware(not necessarily crapware though) in your face right off the bat,
Arch and Gentoo are pretty much designed to just get out of your way and i like that a lot.
Manjaro does this and I Hate it, but Im too lazy to try install arch.
@@kasperspangejensen5496 that fine really , as long as you don't mind removing the packages you don't want or whatever.
i just personally like starting 'from scratch'
Video Editors beyond the two usual : Olive, Natron, Flowblade, Cinelerra GG
Add openshot and you can use blender to edit too.
Olive is great!
Natron is DEAD dude.. both of the original developers have left the product.. get away from it. Cinelerra is actuallyy a decent program, however.. I honestly just use Blender. :)
@@-Insert_Name_Here.- I agree Natron is no longer being developed but it's still available to download and unlike the others it uses a node based editing system.
Even though Linux can be customized, I'd recommend totally new users to use Zorin OS. It will give you the smoothest transition from Windows to Linux ever. One really cool thing I found is how Zorin automatically get's the latest stable version of Wine when you download Lutris from their store.
And I recommend Telegram for chatting. Open source, encrypted, cloud sync and 1.5GB for files, has more features than Discord, transparent as hell and they recognize that absolute anonymity can't be accomplished with mainstream apps but they still try their best to protect your privacy. The only thing it needs is group and video call support.
Zorin OS is my daily driver and it looks and feels wonderful.
I'm really loving Ubuntu budgie right now, had it only a few weeks now and it's awesome on an older HP laptop i use for work...
THank you, Chris. btb me pop shebop. EDIT: A while ago I found that I can run two instances of Gedit tiled, with tabs in each, and also group tabs so that they run together in a split-screen. This tremendous for writing and translating and having reference texts immediately available. I had started with Gedit, then used Geany, Leafpad etc etc. At one point Gedit couldn't display Chinese or Japanese characters properly so I dropped it. But that cleared up a few years ago. Now I use Gedit almost all day, every day. That said, my version of "gaming" is trying to use Vim and Emacs from time to time.
1 Distro: Arch (Manjaro - beginner friend-lier) (but it can be ANY distro really :D )
2 Desktop environment: MATE
3 Browsers: Brave & Vivaldi
4 Shell: Terminator
5 Text editor: Gedit & Kate
6 Chat Client: Discord
7 Gaming: Lutris & Steam
8 File manager: Nautilus (& maybe Dolphin)
9 Video Editing: Kdenlive (other mantioned: Lightworks, DaVinci, Resolve)
10 Photo Editing: GIMP
BONUS:
11 Screenshot: Flameshot
I really like Manjaro KDE. For some reason, it also seems to run better on my computer than Kubuntu or Neon.
From what I've seen and heard, I like Ubuntu's implementation of Gnome more than plain Gnome.
can't agree more on most your recomends... I haven't tried flame yet and don't particularly love terminator but then again I spend minimal time in the terminal. For sure I can't do without Kdenlive though and I too have used a ton of other open source editors, I am also growing to be fond of Gimp but it sure is a learning process lol
You introduce me to "ncdu" instead of "du" and I still use that when I'm on remote ssh session. Recently I found this GUI app that does the same thing called "filelight" that is very intuitive and easy to use as well. With Plasma 5.18, "filelight" will be integrated as a tab on a folder property window.
Yeah, Kubuntu because of KDE! Kate, VLC, Audacious, Steam, Discord, LibreOffice suite. I tried Nautilus and I liked it but I will stick to Dolphin as it suits me better. Great video!
Another excellent video Chris,personally I use MX Linux and Manjaro I my pc's
Just tried out Flameshot. It's f**king amazing. Thank you so much.
Before Gimp : ~ meh, I'm not into it.. its not the same
AFTER Gimp: ~ Ok, yeah, Gimp is pretty nice once you get used to it
My setup (in the same order): openSUSE 15, xfce, firefox, xfce termina, vi/notepadqq, zoom(for work), Steam/GOG, thunar, openshot/blender,gimp
xfce is the sweet spot for me. Low memory usage, quick environment, stable releases, looks and feels good, and you type in "pacman" to install things. It's great.
FYI if you experience screen tearing in Firefox, turn off smooth scrolling. dunno why or how that works but it does
smooth scrolling itself hurts my eyes
@Prem Kumar I use Firefox with smooth scroll off
i rly read too many comments but i think am the only one here use openSUSE with KDE desktop and it rly feels soo good
0:05 - One of dudes at school saw my i3 setup and asked what Linux is this. Being an Arch user, I immediately thought of "I use Arch btw", but then realised it would give them wrong expectation what Arch is. So I just said I use i3wm with Alacritty as Terminal Emulator, polybar and rofi.
When people think of OS, then think of what they see.
My favorite Linux-world piece of software: digiKam. Omitting that first library-building step that may take forever with a big file collection (like, a couple terabytes big) - it's just so awesome for image management it's hard to describe. Now I just need to learn proper darktable workflow to untie myself from the Adobe/Windows bundle.
i would use xfce instead of mate.
xfce gives me more "power" to mold it in the way i want it to behave.
Now i just usew kde with kvantum for some custom apereance and some light eye candy
I'm running Sparkylinux after a rather lengthy distro tour. Your videos really helped me with the software side and set up 👍 If there is ever a featherweight Arch distro in the future that is 32bit, plays DVDs without any hassle and has a browser that can handle Filmzie and Pluto TV let me know and I'll switch 👍
I am a MATE user, and love the flexibility. I like the ease of use and for new customers to Linux. I am a Linux Mint user with MATE.
I second Vivaldi. I use it on Windows, Mac, and Linux. I also second Manjaro as a great arch district to learn on... I have it running on a super old 1.2 GHz dual core PC. I should probably put a different district on it but I have yet to find a lite district that is stable on it...
Probably worth looking at contributing to projects you love like Lutris if you can.
Flameshot is pretty awesome imo.
One other thing I'd point out is as far as I understand AMD GPU video encoding is behind Nvidia by a bit at least on Linux. Only reason I have not decided which route to go on my new build.
Well said man!!! Distribution does not matter. They are only an entry gate.
Fedora works Great
My setup:
distro: Arch
window manager: i3wm
browser: chromium
text editor: vim/nvim
download tool: aria2c
file manager: pcmanfm/nnn
photo editro: gimp
screenshot: flameshot
video player: mplayer
music player: ncmpcpp
What bar do you use with i3?
It’s like you mind melded with me. Great review.
MATE is the best for beginners. The “90s” look gave me a familiar first impression. Especially if your 30+ yrs old. Still use MATE, even though tried many others since. And it was the only one that worked “out of box” on my old 2008 laptop. Just had to wire to Ethernet to update drivers. Everything else was either slow or much more difficult (or wouldn’t even work)
your Ubuntu video keeps me up at night
First thing I did after I installed Flameshot way back when, was add a KDE shortcut for print screen. It's so integrated for me that I don't even think of it as a separate app anymore.
Terminator + guake = everything you'll ever want from a terminal emulator.
(Guake is a dropdown terminal and is amazing for quick hits)
thanks for sharing the Vivaldi browser mate would never have heard of it till you mentioned it. cool browser.
I didn't know MATE was pronounced like that; I assumed it was just pronounced like "mate." I'm glad to hear you love it, as it's my favourite lighter weight GUI/window manager. I also think it's pretty intuitive and easy to get accustomed to coming from Windows; KDE is nice, too, but it's just a bit of a resource hog, I think. I straight up can't really stand GNOME and that would be my biggest gripe about Ubuntu. In terms of my second choice, I would probably go with LXDE or Cinnamon; maybe Cinnamon.
I also love Nautilus, but am surprised in your choice of text editor and video editor. Why not Open Broadcast Studio? It seems pretty good. I hadn't heard of Kdenlive, so I actually thought OBS was the more popular video editor.
Text editor...I never really thought of using a GUI text editor. I just figured I was supposed to launch a terminal and use GNU nano (though I kind of prefer pico, but nano's good too).
Web browser...I hummed and hawwed for a year on switching from Chrome to either Vivaldi or Brave. On the one hand, I like Brave's ad blocking but I do like Vivaldi's tab tiling and stacking and the sync features.
Screenshots...I like Greenshot.
Cheers,
Doug
apt install i3-wm
@@marksmod What will that do? Which question were you replying to/answering?
flameshot is everything I've been looking for in a ss tool: system tray icon :D love it, thanks!
Manjaro and Mint, My Flavours.
Manjaro and Cinnamon maybe?
Agree, STAM = AWESOME! Really appriciate the proton movement!
I started to drink a lot too when I started working from home :o
I use like Arch based distros because they have AUR.
My favorite software:
+Distro/WM/DE
Arch with Openbox.
Lately, I'm using Deepin. It is so gorgeous and so bloated lol.
(for hotkey I use sxhkd).
+Browser
Firefox for almost everything.
Chromium for sites optimized for Chrome.
+Terminal
Termite
+Text-editor
Mousepad or Geany
+Chat
None, if necessary google duo on the browser.
+Games
+File manager
Pcmanfm. Thunar and dde-file-manager are not bad.
+Video taking/ editing / player
Fffmpeg, Kdenlive, smplayer
+Photo/images
Gimp, Inkcape, Nomacs, Rawtherapee, Imagemagick, ImageJ
'Bouns'. I like it. Great video Chris. Maybe we'll see a Chrisix distro in the future? :)
I recently watched your 30 days of Linux videos from last year. I remember you saying that on Windows you used Notepad++ and didn't see a comparable alternative.. It turns out there has been a replacement all along called Notepadqq which should be in most distros but if not there is a Flatpak. I wonder if you have discovered this yet. Keep up the good work, I enjoy your videos.
@Paolo G I mean on the basis of being a clone of Notepad++
I've used MATE since the the launch of KDE5 which I found too bloated after updating from KDE4 to KDE5. I like the fact that MATE is light uncomplicated and doesn't burden me with bling.
I used to use Terminator, it's great if you spend a lot of time in a terminal. I found that I don't spend that much time in one though. I pop in, issue a command, then pop out. If you use Gnome, check out Guake. Hit F12, enter your command, then move on with things. It's life changing if you use Linux daily.
Edit: I don't use KDE, but if you do, apparently Yakuake is similar. I'm sure there's a version for Mate.
You know, I used to be of the same mindset of "distros" don't matter but the fact I always keep coming back to Manjaro Gnome. With any other distro it takes a lot of work to get it close to my tastes.
Manjaro's logo/accent colour is in green which is my preference, then all I really need to do is use the dark variant of their theme and I'm good. With their recent layout chooser it takes even less work for me to get the design that best speaks to me. Plus the AUR aids in almost any software desired is available.
I had a random issue of blank screen with cursor the other day after unlocking my laptop with TTY not coming up. I was initially going to switch away as on top of other glitches it felt like Manjaro stable had gotten less stable. I just couldn't do it in the end because I realised I couldn't easily get my perfect Linux environment/setup. Sometimes distros don't matter. It really depends on how much you're willing to do and whether a particular distro speaks to you out of the box.
Chris, you haven't tried out Notepadqq yet? :surprised:
How about Vim? Give it a chance, you will probably like it once you get used to it. At first you disliked i3, now you love Awesome. For me any text-editor is off the list if it doesn't have good support for dark themes.
Yeah it is time to give Vim another go.
@@ChrisTitusTech Noooo Vim never deserves another go :)
I think maybe you’ve lost sight of how difficult some versions of “Linux” can be in the beginning. I found Mint Cinnamon to be the most acceptable (coming from a Windows platform) and that some distributions of GNU/Linux completely ludicrous for use by a newbie. I guess we’ll just have to agree to disagree on this one. Thanks for the video
Hi Chris, excellent video;s keep up the good work, I use ShotCut for editing and also OpenShot. ShotCut is updated regularly and has 4K support and hardware support