Just for fun, I decided to try and imagine what a Linux distro would look like if it got hit by the enshittification stick that seems to affect every digital product of service these days. ๐ SUPPORT THE CHANNEL: Get access to: a Daily Linux News show, a weekly patroncast for more personal thoughts,...
Omg i just tried 24.04 in a vm for testing. I really hate the direction theyโre taking gnome. I know theyโre trying this minimalist thing, but itโs horrendous. Iโve been gone for a few releases, and this is the first time Iโve used Ubuntu and thought โthis is garbageโ. Like itโs become so dumbed down.
GNOME and its applications have been headed in that direction for a while now, but I'm not sure Canonical are behind those changes. If they were, I'm sure they would have done something about GNOME apps looking alien on Xubuntu, for example.
As that link suggests, the Mint team are looking to produce apps that run on any desktop environment, forking GNOME apps that don't comply with that. Hopefully that keeps the momentum going for that sort of thing.
The first was the amazon sponsored search. But that was a few years ago.
Constantly it's Canonical's not invented here syndrome where they don't work with others to do new stuff but instead opt to push their own solutions which often fail.
Snap's dependency on a proprietary store backend.
And the latest is locking some security updates behind a mandatory Ubuntu Pro account.
Nothing quite as bad as what Microsoft is doing with Windows. But not really in the great fluffy open source spirit either.
Luckily thanks to open source nobody is forced to put up with any of that.
I really enjoy how his videos get recycled already. Heโs pretty unique both in the fediverse, on youtube and in the linux sphere as he makes high quality content, is knowledeable in linux and cares about r2r and open source.
Thats like 3 jackpots in a row. This guy is as underrated as one can imagine.
I stopped watching Linux YouTubers after the Red Hat/CentOS Stream/Rocky controversy that happened recently. There were so many clickbait videos with a poor understanding of the problem just trying to make a buck off the communities anger and spreading disinformation .
The Linux Experiment handled it the best and had the most nuanced thought out view on the issue. This is despite us ultimately having different conclusions. My only complaint about his coverage is that if you visit his personal website he has some extreme views on ethics, including believing that investing in the stock market is unethical. I felt he should have been more upfront of that in his videos before sharing his views on the ethics of a company like Red Hat.
Iโll still watch some of his videos on occasion if they get picked up here and I believe him to be the most honest of the many Linux YouTubers. That being said I wouldnโt hold any of them in high regard. Many of their videos are sloppy, have clickbait titles, contribute very little, are are just trying to get ad revenue from you as much as Linus Tech Tips is.
Thanks for the elaborate answer. I can see all of your points as far as Iโm knowledgeable in them. The red had details are a bit out of my sphere but the rest I can grasp.
I have not seen his views concerning the stock market but in general I agree that the system is broken and rigged and ideally, we should get rid of it since it perverts all the efforts of hard working people to serve those with the most money and least empathy.
But besides this, I do think we need high quality (production) content in the fediverse as to both boost its popularity and make it easy to stay off youtube for those very hooked on regular talking heads in their lives.
Linus was dead to me when he โtookโ the production sample and auctioned it off. Everything after that is not my concern.
But channels like gamersnexus, jayz2cents, networkchuck, jeffgeerling and co provide fun pastime with some tech input. If they decided to mirror on peertube Iโd probably support them.
I don't really see a whole lot of difference in opinion about Linux itself among the various Linux YouTubers I watch, TBH, nor do I see much difference in honesty in that regard, but I do appreciate Linux Experiment quite a bit for having the most focus on the "average computer user" compared to the others who so often get deep into the technical side of things and put a larger amount of focus on high-level stuff for IT professionals. I just want to find some cool FOSS software and DE features for stuff like media, office software, email and privacy/security. I don't need hour-long deep dives into the latest distro vs distro or GitHub drama, or in-depth comparisons of the minutiae of different terminals and programming languages for development/networking/so on that most "average computer users" like me are rarely, if ever, going to use. Not that such information doesn't have value, but it just doesn't have much value to me specifically.
"In order to play Call of Overwatch: Valorant Warfare 69 on Linux, you must install this DKMS rootkit module, which is only compatible with the Microsoft Lindows 13 Linux distribution."