Quote from: Breaking News on February 05, 2025, 12:43:17Quote from: A on February 05, 2025, 09:50:53That doesn't mean linux is buggy.
Yes it does.
QuoteQuoteIf you want stuff not to break, try an LTS distro like Linux Mint
Which has the reputation of breaking if you don't update it "correctly". Check frustrated youtube users...
What do you mean by "update it correctly"?
There is only 1 way most people should upgrade Mint, through the GUI when it tells you it is time to update.
If instead of letting it handle it for you, you are doing manual upgrades and you mess up, that is a user error.
A lot of people jump on manual upgrades because they want the most newest shinnies that they will never use anyways. And that not only creates risk of messing up, it also creates risk of using bleeding edge stuff that are more likely to break. Because all LTS means is that it is long term support. At the point an LTS snapshot is made for a major release, it is no different than bleeding edge. Only with testing over time do you get reliability and stability, same applies to windows (remember the don't upgrade until SP1).
This is why my computer is still on Mint 21 instead of latest 22. I use it for work and care about stability. For my play computers, I don't mind getting latest shinnies. I only upgraded this computer to 21 not that long ago when 20 was close to end of life. "If it ain't broken don't fix it". I've been upgrading this computer since Mint 16 all the way to 21 over the last decade with no issues.