Generally yes, but I wasn’t talking to them. If you switch operating systems, you need to do some work to learn how they work. Yes, Linix could be way more „noob friendly“. Yes, even distributions that make this process as painless as possible (e.g. Fedora that automates everything with akmods) require you to load the generated MOK into your UEFI manually and that looks very scary (by design - it’s usually only a good idea to load a MOK if you know what you’re doing and why as it can break the whole trust concept of secure boot).
The main problem with Linux for mass adoption is IMHO that there’s still many cases that require you to leverage the terminal or edit config files. And to some degree that there isn’t „one official way“ of doing or customizing things. Yes it’s cool to be able to do all those things and to have the freedom, but I also respect people that just want it to work and not need to tinker everywhere.
Generally yes, but I wasn’t talking to them. If you switch operating systems, you need to do some work to learn how they work. Yes, Linix could be way more „noob friendly“. Yes, even distributions that make this process as painless as possible (e.g. Fedora that automates everything with
akmods) require you to load the generated MOK into your UEFI manually and that looks very scary (by design - it’s usually only a good idea to load a MOK if you know what you’re doing and why as it can break the whole trust concept of secure boot).The main problem with Linux for mass adoption is IMHO that there’s still many cases that require you to leverage the terminal or edit config files. And to some degree that there isn’t „one official way“ of doing or customizing things. Yes it’s cool to be able to do all those things and to have the freedom, but I also respect people that just want it to work and not need to tinker everywhere.