this post was submitted on 29 Mar 2025
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[โ€“] DannyBoy@sh.itjust.works 6 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I've been using Debian on my desktop for five years now so this information might be a bit outdated, but I have recently installed Mint on my server.

In my experience Mint (and Ubuntu) have been more beginner friendly with installation and initial setup. I remember trying to install Debian on my MacBook which just crashed on bootup whereas Ubuntu worked out of the box. Mint draws from Ubuntu's repositories which are more up to date and has more packages in it. Being able to rely on apt for installing packages has meant an easier user experience. And the last thing is that there's just more information out there for troubleshooting Mint problems than there is for Debian in my experience.

That's what I find. I could be wrong about some of the details

[โ€“] Parsizzle@lemm.ee 3 points 5 days ago

Oh wow that's a great explanation, thank you! I have a bit of experience with Ubuntu and a fraction of that with Debian but absolutely no experience with any other Linux distro, so I appreciate your reply!

I run Ubuntu Server for my home lab and had a RaspberryPi running Debian for a short while as well but it was all CLI so I have almost no experience with the GUI. I was quite surprised to hear about pop ups for Ubuntu Pro.

I personally found setting up Debian for the Pi to be fairly straight forward and about as difficult as converting an old windows laptop into an Ubuntu Server..server, so they might have made Debian a bit easier to get up and running.

That being said I can't recall if I got that particular installation specifically for the Pi so that might have an impact there.

I genuinely appreciate your explanation! :)