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Splash3579

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  1. Well that was short lived... damn. What did it take for it to fix itself? A hard reboot? I have this problem as well, it's most apparent when scrolling through chat in Minecraft servers, and it gets very annoying.
  2. I would say probably Ubuntu or Debian, and if the game you want doesn't natively support Linux, you can probably find a user-created port of it somewhere on GitHub (those guys know everything). If that doesn't work either, you can try using Lutris, which allows you to run Windows games on a Linux OS by using over-the-cloud conversions (I don't know exactly how they do that, but it sometimes works), however, sometimes for me it's a bit unreliable due to some games not running properly, but that may be because I did something wrong, since that was when I just got into Linux. Whatever the case, if all else fails, just wait a little bit, because Linux is starting to see a huge rise in popularity, and a lot of developers are starting to work on programs and applications for Linux. Even Badlion, a Minecraft PVP client that used to only work on Windows, has confirmed they are working on Linux compatibility! If you're patient enough, the games you want will most likely eventually get Linux support.
  3. How do so many peole like Arch more than Ubuntu and Debian? I think Arch is too finnicky, I never use it, I use mainly Debian, Ubuntu, and occasionally openSuse. The reason I like Ubuntu is that it's easier to learn how to use certain commands in the terminal, especially since most of the installing commands are as simple as just sudo apt-get install or sudo install and such, and it isn't really complicated. I also really love Debian because you can just download a .deb application, and just double click it to install it instantly, kind of like a normal Windows .exe file. Along with that, universal installers (.jar files) are the best thing ever created. On Ubuntu. all you need to do is just use the command java -jar [filename.jar] and it's installed... it doesn't get much easier than that! But for normal internet browsing, and just watching YouTube videos and Netflix, I use the stock Chromium OS developer software since I use Linux on my Chromebook. The one thing I don't like about Chromium OS, however, is that despite it being semi-open source, it is very scrict when it comes to security. You can't even install anything on it that doesn't come from the Chrome Web Store, and who even uses the Chrome Web Store? Maybe little kids who want to get slither.io "hacks" or a Cookie Clicker mod, but not many other reasons than that. TL:DR - Ubuntu and Debian are the best, there's no arguing with that. But I think we can all agree that fedora is the absolute worst.
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