I have been distro hopping for about 2 weeks now, there’s always something that doesn’t work. I thought I would stick with Debian and now I haven’t been able to make my printer work in it, I think I tried in another distro and it just worked out of the box, but there’s always something that’s broken in every distro.

I’m sorry I’m just venting, do you people think Ubuntu will work for me? I think I will try it next.

  • BCsven@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    14
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    You will get tons of distro recommendations, so here is one more: OpenSUSE, then use the YAST GUI GTK application select Yast Printer it has a GUI tool for all kinds of printer setup options and will show recommended drivers based on printer type, it then installs them via that GUI. Not to be confused with the regular printer settings app you see in most distros.

      • BCsven@lemmy.ca
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        How long ago? Everyone has an opinion and preference, but SUSE and RHEL are the only two certifed distros for corporate/ enterprise use of Teamcenter PLM and NX CAD…so it cannot be as “badly” built as you feel it is because it has to perform everyday with the least amount of issues.

        • stevecrox@kbin.run
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          2
          ·
          11 months ago

          I suspect they mean around packaging.

          I honestly believe Red Hat has a policy that everything should pull in Gnome. I have had headless RHEL installs and half the CLI tools require Gnome Keyring (even if they don’t deal with secrets or store any). Back in RHEL 7, Kate the KDE based Text Editor pulled in a bunch of GTK dependencies somehow.

          Certification is really someone paid to go through a process and so its designed so they pass.

          Think about the people you know who are Agile/Cloud/whatever certified and how all it means is they have learnt the basic examples.

          Its no different when a business gets certified.

          The only reason people care is because they can point to the cert if it all goes wrong

          • BCsven@lemmy.ca
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            11 months ago

            I wrote a long reply but looks like posting it glitched. I’ll try shortening. I should have noted that the Certification on SUSE and RHEL, is also a certification compatibility matrix. distro ver to software ver, and Siemens needs stable Windows, SUSE, RHEL releases to code to. Trying to install/running on other distros fails in many areas (even with an experiences guru trying fixes). They have a symbiotic relationahip with those curated distros to ensure it doesnt give downtime to a large enterprise. It is not just a piece of paper saying yes we tested the software install here is your signoff. Personally I did get it running on OpenSUSE for obvious reasons.

            • stevecrox@kbin.run
              link
              fedilink
              arrow-up
              1
              ·
              11 months ago

              I wouldn’t use “certified” in this context.

              Limiting support of software to specific software configurations makes sense.

              Its stuff like Debian might be using Python 3.8 Ubuntu Python 3.9, OpenSuse Python 3.9, etc… Your application might use a Python 3.9 requiring library and act odd on 3.8 but fine on 3.7, etc… so only supporting X distributions let you make the test/QA process sane.

              This is also why Docker/Flatpack exist since you can define all of this.

              However the normal mix is RHEL/Suse/Ubuntu because those target businesses and your target market will most likely be running one.

              • BCsven@lemmy.ca
                link
                fedilink
                arrow-up
                1
                ·
                11 months ago

                Yeah it is a Known Known and those 3 distros have tried and true reliability. The term certified is what they call it “Certified to run on X” and “Compatibility CertifIcation” it was in response to OP asking if linux is used in corporate world. It is, and for larger operations it is the 3 you mention. Personally I think Ubuntu hasn’t made it into the Corporate Desktop apps like SUSE/REL because you install it and have a hairy hippo or faceted cougar head as the backdrop, just doesn’t sit well with CEO stuffed shirt types when looking for a professional software.