Why is Ubuntu hated?

Why is Ubuntu hated?

The corporate backing is probably the last reason Ubuntu gets so much hate. Ubuntu is backed by Canonical, and as such, is not a purely community ran distro. Some people don’t like that, they don’t want companies intervening in the open source community, they dislike anything corporate.

Is Ubuntu really bad?

Ubuntu isn’t bad. Just that, some of us – old Linux users hate systemd and snaps that Ubuntu have. We, instead either run FreeBSD or Devuan/Gentoo/Artix/Void Linuces Those with init freedom – the choice of init software, like sysVinit, OpenRC, Shepherd, runit etc. But, Ubuntu offers great desktop experience for users.

What are the cons of Ubuntu?

Ubuntu doesn’t have good support for new games. It’s graphic quality is not that great.

  • Ubuntu needs to be installed manually. One needs to have good knowledge of how to run installs and basic Linux commands to install Ubuntu.
  • There’s no driver support and you can’t play Mp3 audio files as it is on Ubuntu.
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    Is Kubuntu really that bad?

    No, it’s not bad, period. Kubuntu/Lubuntu/Mint are basically Ubuntu with a different desktop environment – the desktop environment is like “Windows explorer”, it’s the thing that shows you your desktop and Windows and stuff. Arch Linux is about the worst thing you could touch if you’re new.

    Is Ubuntu a good distro to use?

    Ubuntu is a good packaging of the Debian core, has good support for both server apps and desktop productivity/multimedia, and has a decent upgrade schedule, that keeps the kernel more up to date than the R Ubuntu is not bad.

    Is Debian testing a bad choice?

    There is no such thing as a bad choice. The point is you have a choice, which closed source doesn’t offer you. There is no such thing as a bad choice. The point is you have a choice, which closed source doesn’t offer you. I started on Ubuntu (8.04) but use Debian Testing now.

    What is Ubuntu and why is it important?

    Ubuntu is the biggest distro out there. It had a transformative impact on the Linux desktop, helping to move it from “hobbyist project” to something that can, and is used by millions. From its inception in 2004 until today, Ubuntu has been working on the Linux desktop, with more or less success depending on the initiatives they took.

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