On 08/09/2015 08:14 PM, Isaac Dunham wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for a Linux distro that I could recommend to friends who are
rather frustrated with Windows 10.
The friends in question ask me about how to fix problems with their
computers from time to time.
With the greatest respect, Isaac, by my experience, I think you are wasting your time.

Every single time I have offered to replace Windows with Linux about 95% of them return to Windows within one month. It is what they want. They want what they already know. They want to use their existing software, and everything commercial to "just work". This not to say that Linux has a problem, it is simply acknowledging reality. They don't want change. The only ones who can handle the change are the fully committed: "power users" and IT professionals. In over 20 years in this business, I can tell you one thing for certain: the IT marketplace is deliberately designed to prevent "replacement."
The essentials would be:
-has a *good* Windows migration assistant, which must be able to handle
  Windows 10; I know that Ubuntu used to have this.

You should never trust a tool to migrate data. Always do it yourself from a backup, lest ye suffer a terrible fate.
-glibc-based, so that Flash and Avast Workstation will work

Flash is dead. There is absolutely no reason to use it at all on Linux, and even if you do, all the functioning Linux versions are crippled by design.

The NPAPI (netscape/firefox) version is the last one available on Linux with DRM video support, at version 11.2. It is severely crippled by the requirement to use hal, which is no longer supported by the vast majority of Linux distributions. Adobe refuses to update it to remove the hal requirement, now that Google makes the Linux version of Flash. Google has deliberately crippled the existing version used in Chrome so that it is incapable of DRM, except on Android.

This means you will get no commercial streaming video using Flash on Linux without Google's blessing. The only way around that is some "severe hackery" that only programmers are capable of. As another point of mention, you cannot get DVDs or Blu-ray to play back without using software which may violate your local laws. So if any of your friends are expecting DRM streaming video or disc playback, you might as well stop now.

Netflix works just fine, but only if you use Chrome or some Chrome libraries with a patched version of Chromium. No other browser on Linux has EME (Encrypted Media Extensions) support needed at this time.


> (at least one of the friends in question uses avast on Windows)

I wouldn't bother.

In my experience, even on Windows, an anti-virus is a waste of time and battery life. Even if it manages to detect something, 50% of the time it will either fail to remove the virus or damage the operating system or applications. Better to just dispense with it entirely, and extend your performance and battery life. Restore from a clean backup - which removes the virus 100% of the time. The restore also takes only 30 minutes to an hour, where scanning and possibly destroying the OS can take hours.

The only people who should be using an AV or AM as a diagnostic tool are technicians trained in its use, who are able to distinguish between a real problem and a false positive. Even Symantec (the company that basically invented the modern anti-virus) has a similar assessment, when they declared the "anti-virus" approach "dead."


> I suspect properly configured Xfce or Mate may be better at this point.

I'd go with XFCE or KDE at this point, with a preference on XFCE. Mate tends to be subtly buggy.


>. -binary based Highly preferred: -not rolling release,
I'd not go with source based either. They will get upset waiting an hour for something to compile.


> -non-systemd based, so that I can help debug issues; OpenRC or sysv-rc preferred -dpkg/apt based, since that's the package manager I'm most familiar with.

Frankly, for the moment, if I were you, I would consider Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS. It's probably your best option because it has the widest support right now, period for FOSS or commercial software. Even Valve uses it as their default choice for Steam gaming.


Take care!
T.J.
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