I downloaded old iTunes. I'm struck by how much more customizable it is than Apple Music and the rest of it.

My iPod is also 17-year-old. 120GB. Works perfectly. Even got a Bluetooth adapter. No ads, no subscriptions, no tracking. Just a durable, functional device. Enshittification is real.

I just recently decided I will make the existing tech I have work for me even if it means spending hours going through forums to figure out how to get older sh*t that worked way better than newer sh*t. It's incredible how much control over our own purchased products we have lost in 10-15 years.
It annoys me so much I can only sound like I'm exaggerating when I talk about it. I find it f-ed up
Also, yes I know it would probably be better for me to know how to use Linux, but I am actually dogshit at that stuff. Not saying it's a never for me. I just haven't found a way to make it work for me (I'm not as tech-savy as I might seem to some)

@ayoub

If you have an old (well, not "ancient"), unused notebook, you might try to install #Linux #Mint and start from there. It's a learning journey, but there's not much to lose if you consider it an experiment, at first.

Assuming that you have enough time for experiments, which none of us actually has, unfortunately.

Try the Cinnamon edition first, and if your playing around with it shows it is excruciatingly slow on the old machine, try the MATE edition.

Don't go down the rat hole of investigation the myriads of available Linux distros ("flavors") first, that's utterly unnecessary for a sneak peek.

If Linux catches on with you, you'll probably develop an appetite for test-driving various other distros, and that's fine.

https://www.linuxmint.com

Home - Linux Mint

Linux Mint is an elegant, easy to use, up to date and comfortable desktop operating system.

@katzenberger @ayoub

I very recently had a look at the installation instructions for Linux Mint. That was actually depressing.

You need to be fairly well acquainted with tech terminology to fully grasp the steps. But if you are, then those instructions will most likely not be read - as you most likely already know the drill.

Compare that with getting the @fedora Workstation installation running ...

  • Download the Media Writer (available for Windows, macOS and Linux) ... https://fedoraproject.org/workstation/download
  • Run the binary, select the Fedora version you want
  • Insert a USB storage, click next and the USB storage is prepared for you.
  • Reboot using the USB storage (this can be a hurdle, but that's more a hardware issue than a Linux issue)

Compare those steps to this: https://linuxmint-installation-guide.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

Linux Mint might be great once you get it installed. But getting it installed is not for the non-tech users.

And I honestly don't grasp why the first details several places on getting Linux Mint installed is from a Linux Mint environment.

All details seems correct though. But you need to understand the technical jargons.

Fedora Workstation

We're so glad you've decided to give Fedora Workstation a try. We know you'll love it.

@dazo exactly my issue with it! @katzenberger @ayoub @fedora