@ryo
>promises up to 10 years of security updates, as well as access to exclusive tools.
>These include Ansible, Apache Tomcat, Apache Zookeeper, Docker, Drupal, Nagios, Node.js, phpMyAdmin, Puppet, PowerDNS, Python 2, Redis, Rust, WordPress, ROS, and many others.
You can get most (if not all) of this shit for free.
Either way, Ubuntu is dead to me. I recommend Linux Mint or Zorin OS over Ubuntu in terms of a beginner/normie friendly distro.
@terminalautism I really need to try Devuan. I would probably recommend that over Ubuntu, Mint, Zorin, etc.
Most of the beginner distros are made to appeal to those who want an easy to use OS but are aware of the spying shit that Windows and macOS have. Many Linux users are just fed up with the shit that modern Windows has (universal backdoors, local accounts tied to MSN accounts, etc.), and have no desire to hack the kernel or whatever.
I don't know what's so hard about making a distribution for beginners, but no one can pull it off. Really, all you need is XFCE (if it's the most stable) and a GUI for the package manager and that's enough. Synaptic does the job, but I guess beginners would like something with pictures so they don't have to look programs up online just to see them. But yeah, that is the only thing that has to be made. How do they manage to screw everything else up?
All that a beginner needs is a tool for installing programs with (just by being an interface for the package manager, not being its own package manager, apparently Manjaro did that, they went out of their way to work extra hard to make things not work), and a system that doesn't break, and maybe configuring the desktop environment a bit. Somehow even that is too difficult.