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Distro Monday #1 - What's new in Linux? Why should I upgrade if I'm happy with what I have?
14:30
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Tech Freedom - Distro Monday Redo
10:07
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Distro Monday #3 - Manjaro? Ubuntu? Which is better for me?
10:49
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Distro Monday #4
14:58
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Tech Freedom Distro Monday #5
19:20
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Distro Monday #6 - What's virtualization, anyway?
11:29
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Distro Monday #7 - What's the best desktop environment for new users?
28:40
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Distro Monday #8 - Memorial Day Edition
32:38
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Distro Monday 9 - Got a recent Mac? We can help you get free: enter Asahi Linux.
14:02
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Distro Monday 10 - more trouble with Ubuntu? Say it ain't so...
15:32
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Distro Monday: Newbie Corner - how to pick your distro
33:44
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Distro Monday: Thursday Edition... How to pick your distro: Rolling vs Point Release, Bad Google...
21:57
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Distro Monday 14: Mint vs Ubuntu, Memeaplanation, what's new in Mint, Porteus...
36:14
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Distro Monday 15: Into Retro Gaming? These distros might be your ticket to nerd-heaven.
37:57
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Distro Monday 17: Ubuntu vs Manjaro... which is better?
18:41
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Distro Monday 18 - Nobara Linux 36 and more
15:16
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Distro Monday 19 - Minty Fresh Devuan
16:35
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Distro Monday 20 - MakuluLinux & More
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Distro Monday 21 – Neptune Linux & More
27:29
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Distro Monday 22 - RisiOS And More...
20:28
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Distro Monday 23: Nitrux, MX, and Crystal Linux All Release New Versions
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Distro Monday 24 – Salix 15, Arch 5.19, and more.
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Distro Monday 25: FerenOS Makes the Switch From Windows Easy & More
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Distro Monday 26: Redox OS Gets Huge Donation and More
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Distro Monday 27: Fedora, why you no? And More
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Distro Monday 28: Release Date News for Updates & a Bonus
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Distro Monday 29: Redcore, KaOS, and ProtonVPN, Oh My!
19:11
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Distro Monday 30 – What’s new in Ubuntu 22.10? Updates for Debian/ Ubuntu Kernel? And More
19:41
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Distro Monday 31: SparkyLinux, Zorin, and Rhino Linux Oh My!
15:56
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Distro Monday 32: Arch Vs Manjaro, What is the Difference?
20:15
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Distro Monday 33: Neon, Peppermint & TrueNAS, Oh My!
11:22
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Distro Monday 34: Fedora 37, CentOS 8.7, and Unity DE for Arch, Oh My!
14:17
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Distro Monday 35: Asahi, Alpine, and TAILS Updates, Oh My!
16:30
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Distro Monday 36: Salix, Linux Mobile, and OrangePi, Yum!
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Distro Monday 37: 4M Linux, Mint 21.1 Beta, and Kali 2022.4
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Distro Monday 39: Happy New Years!
23:51
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Distro Monday 40: Nitrux, Fedora Spins, and ARCH, now with Linux 6.1
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Distro Monday 42: The Answer to Life the Universe, and Everything... MXLinux, and Kernel Stuff
14:54
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Distro Monday 41: EndlessOS 5 Beta, Open Mandriva Rolling Release, and More
12:58
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Distro Monday 43: Tails 5.9, Freespire 9.0, and helloSystem 0.8.0
15:31
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DM 44: Blend OS, Elementary OS, and Escuelas Linux
15:26
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Distro Monday 45: “‘Peach 45!”
12:36
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Distro Monday 46: It Could Be Endless... OS
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Distro Monday 47: A Very Sparky Linux 62 to You
15:29
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Distro Monday 48: Minty Redcore with a Dash of IPFire
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Distro Monday 49: Ubuntu PSA, Nitrux & New to Fedora
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Distro Monday 51: Heads or TAILS?
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Distro Monday 53: Fast Distros with a Hacking Interlude
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Distro Monday 52: Newbie Day Mint vs Ubuntu
23:05
Distro Monday 54: Choices, Choices, Choices...
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Distro Monday 55: Blend-ing TAILS & KaOS, plus a Bonus
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DM 56 - Debian 12, Nitrux 2.8 & Ubuntu 23.10
10:54
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FOSS News: Big Show 3 - First Interview with Jared Heath of Altha Technology
2:12:13
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Distro Monday 50: Endeavouring to Make a Vanilla Kali
20:31

Distro Monday 54: Choices, Choices, Choices...

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DM 54.1 – Choices, Choices...
Should you stick with a point release like Debian, Ubuntu, or OpenSUSE Leap, or be daring and try a rolling release like Arch, Tumbleweed, or OpenMandriva Rome? It isn’t that clear-cut. Since when is anything, really? So what is the primary difference?
Rolling distributions constantly roll updates to core and other packages as soon as they become available. This can lead to instability, but if you want the latest and greatest from your hardware and software, this is the way to go. Upgrading is easy because when you install, you simply install the base OS, then it constantly offers updates to you. With an Arch based rolling distro, such as Manjaro or Garuda, my strong suggestion is to run updates at least once a week, so that it doesn’t stack up on you, leading to problems when you actually do update. It is also easier to upgrade, without weird instructions, due to this.
Fixed (point) Release distributions will likely release security updates between major upgrades, but other than that, your system will be stable between upgrades. This means that you will be at least 6 months behind your rolling release brothers and sisters in terms of the other packages in your distro’s repositories, generally. Now, if you choose to take a flatpak route for most of your apps, you will get updates for those packages as they are released on flathub, or whatever other mirror you may have used to install the flatpak. If you stick with Debs on Debian/Ubuntu, you will be behind everyone, however, as long as the current version (as of the release of your version) of your apps is to your liking, it will stay that way until your next upgrade.
As you can see, certain situations call more for stability vs raw performance and the latest and greatest. So it depends what matters to you. Are you the kind of person that likes the adventure of constant updates, or would you rather simply set it and forget it?
Next, we’ll be chatting about two Point Release distros: edubuntu and 4M Linux.

https://linuxiac.com/rolling-vs-point-release-linux-distributions/

#distromonday #whichkind #Linuxnews #FOSSNews #newdistro #TechFreedom

DM 54.2 – Edubuntu 23.04 Out Now
Edubuntu is an education-focused distro based on, you guessed it, Ubuntu. What makes this one different? Why is it making a comeback as an official flavor of Ubuntu after a near-10 year hiatus?
One question at a time, please... Ok, so it comes with a raft of educational software preinstalled, such as GCompris, Inkscape, Scribus, TuxPaint, Stellarium, and Calibre ebook reader, organizer, and editor. Not ones to get lazy, the team have also added LibreCAD, Gramps, Tux Typing Tutor, Dia, Chemtool, Gobby, Drawing, Light Speed, Fritzing CAD, Laby, PDF Mod, as well as many from the KDE Education Suite, a few games, and more.
Why is it making a comeback? The team at Canonical felt the need to roll it back out after so long as there is a need for solid education-focused distros now, more than ever.
https://9to5linux.com/first-look-at-edubuntu-23-04-ubuntu-desktop-packed-with-educational-software
#distromonday #edubuntu #FOSSNews #Linuxnews #Linux #education #forthekids #TechFreedom

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#distromonday #freedom #consultation #Linux #degoogleyourlife #TechFreedom

DM 54.3 – What’s New in 4M Linux?
Well, the last 4 months have been jam-packed for the development team. When you see the list of programs added and updated, you’ll likely be surprised at this tiny but mighty independent distribution. Well, if you’re new around here, I should probably explain what 4M Linux is, 4M Linux is an independent distro designed to be lightweight and good at fulfilling the 4 M’s which the lead developer feels are necessary in any distro:
• Maintenance (system rescue Live CD)
• Multimedia (full support for a huge number of image, audio and video formats)
• Miniserver (DNS, FTP, HTTP, MySQL, NFS, Proxy, SMTP, SSH, and Telnet)
• Mystery (meaning a collection of classic Linux games)
This version has some new bells & whistles versus the older versions. Key internal differences include the latest LTS kernel and the Mesa 22.2.3 graphics stack to handle the multimedia end of things.
As for the bells & whistles:
• A raster graphics editor and Hex-a-Hop video game as downloadable extensions,
• AlsaPlayer,
• Baka MPlayer,
• GNOME MPlayer,
• GNOME MPV
• mp3blaster
• XMMS as a default media player
Now about updated apps:
• LibreOffice 7.5.2 office suite
• Mozilla Firefox 111
• Chromium 106.0.5249.91
• Mozilla Thunderbird 102.8.0
• GIMP 2.10.34
• VLC 3.0.18
• SMPlayer 22.2.0 video player
• Audacious 4.3 audio player
• AbiWord 3.0.5 word processor
• Gnumeric 1.12.55 spreadsheet editor
One thing that makes this lightweight distro stand out, though, is that it also has a server flavor called 4MServer, which includes the standard LAMP stack tools and has been updated alongside the main distro, with the latest stable versions of Apache server, MariaDB, and PHP.
https://9to5linux.com/independent-distro-4mlinux-42-released-with-linux-kernel-6-1-lts
#distromonday #Linux #4MLinux #4MServer #lightweight #fast #oldhardware #newhardware #FOSSNews #TechFreedom

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