Let the apologists have a field day in the comments.

  • NatanoxOP
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    16 hours ago

    This is just not true. The average Windows user never has to open the registry, only devs and tinkerers have to. Neither a shell.

    For Windows admins do in 30 minutes and you in 30 seconds takes a normal user either 30 minutes ib Linux or, way too often, 30 hours because the random command in the internet didn’t work, did work but had unforeseen consequences (way worse and way too often) or outright broke their system.

    Even KDE lacks settings, and even if they ARE there the community is so god damn “terminalistic” that you’ll barely find the correct answer for the GUI, just a bunch of CLI commands that will age like milk and cause future people who look for help to accidentally break something.

    NOBODY should be forced to enter a superuser command they can’t understand to achieve a goal they very well do. The community is still fighting against the users’ ability to open a file browser or text editor as superuser WITHOUT going through the command line. It sucks, and normal users constantly get alienated by the lack of these fundamental things on a system that pretends to give them full control.

    Full control it does give; after 2 years of painfully learning the command line and its bells and whistles. And this sucks.

    • Zink@programming.dev
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      12 hours ago

      I’m sure it’s different in many distros, but in Mint the ability to open a file browser as root is in the right click menu.