I stand by my previous statements as I think we still don’t have a suite of amateur radio open source software that compares with offerings in Windows, mainly in the areas of logging and contest programs. I’ve often complained about the state of amateur radio open source software. Quite simply, Linux Mint isn’t a compromise like previous desktop installations. You install a program and it actually appears in the menu. The browser actually renders things like they look on Windows. For the first time I feel I have something equivalent to what I had on Windows, and it doesn’t look goofy and didn’t require days of tweaking with arcane command line syntax to make it acceptable. On previous distributions, items like this would take hours to resolve and there would be several of them to deal with. I was able to fix that in five minutes after Googling and finding one command line to run. The only speed bump was getting my wireless working. The installation went extremely well and within two hours I was able to browse the web, play videos and hear sound, send email, work on Kicad schematics, compile Arduino code, open Excel and Word docs, do my banking with the same program I used on Windows, and I had amateur radio logging and digital programs installed. Last night I made the plunge and partitioned off some space on my hard disk and installed it so I could dual boot between Windows and Linux. Linux Mint seems to have taken care of those issues. While Ubuntu was quite polished and arguably had the best usability in the Linux world, I still felt that I was often fighting the operating system to make it work. For the first time recently I hit a brick wall trying to install the latest Ubuntu within a virtual machine. Ubuntu in my opinion went off the tracks with its migration to the Unity desktop. It’s based on the venerable Ubuntu distribution and appears to be taking some market share from Ubuntu. Linux Mint is a Linux distribution that has become more popular recently. However, I’ve never made the jump to using it as my primary desktop operating system at home it’s always been a novelty to play with and never a desktop workhorse that I would use to actually get things done. I’ve also used Linux quite a bit in my professional life for servers. I’ve run numerous distributions since about 1995, even venturing into BSD territory, running FreeBSD and some other Berkeley variants.
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