this post was submitted on 31 Mar 2025
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Linux Mint is a great distro, and I'm happy it works for you.
In terms of mass-adoption though, the fatal point is probably putting a Linux ISO on a thumb drive. Like I said prior, we must be aware of survivorship bias. You don't care much for the terminal - but you made it through.
The people that didn't make it through probably failed from the thumb drive step. I only say this from personal experience, because when I first installed Linux, I was very determined and came extremely close to giving up at this step. And I only got through because I happened to find an obscure forum about how Rufus needed a special setting for my machine.
P.S. I also was not tech savvy, but I wasn't completely lost either - and I still struggled really hard here.
I give people prepared USBs..
πππ»ππ»
If laptops started coming pre-installed with Linux Mint...
I remember back when I was a kid, the only way I was even able to try Ubuntu was through "WUBI" which was pretty cool - it allowed you to "install" Ubuntu via Windows, by leveraging the VHD support in the Windows 7 bootloader. It could also be uninstalled via the Windows control panel as it was registered just like any other program.
As far as I understand, it was discontinued because of inherent technical issues with that system - but I always thought if it could be done again, then it'd help bridge the gap a bit. All you had to do was download the installer, and double click it like any other program.
I had no clue how to write an image to a flash drive, hell I doubt I even had a flash drive to use at the time. π
Ubuntu used to mail out free install CDs for a while. Nowadays many people don't have optical drives anymore though.
I did get one of those at one point! Definitely no longer have it anymore, but it was really cool that Canonical provided those for quite a while (from what I know).
You can also order USB flash drives with a linux iso already on it for ten bucks or so.
@russjr08 @green previously it used grub4dos that was lauched from windows xp bootloader. this is still useful on mbr-efi multi-os boot usb drives
Ya the thumb drive was a tripping point for me. Took me a minute to understand I had to reformat the drive itself. I also didn't try to partition anything.