Disclaimer: This is NOT my video
A comment from HN
It’s top-down engineering. Mark commanded the desktop team to go all-in on Flutter. This is how Canonical functions.
Disclaimer: This is NOT my video
A comment from HN
It’s top-down engineering. Mark commanded the desktop team to go all-in on Flutter. This is how Canonical functions.
Calamares is in just about every Linux install wizard these days, except for Ubuntu and maybe Debian with their even jankier setup wizard that’s a pain to use even if nothing goes wrong. I used a partition manager as a workaround (just wiping the entire partition table kind of worked) but I shouldn’t have to, as an end user. Nobody reinstalling Windows needs to go through a gparted boot disk first.
Calamares is extremely extensible so it’s hard to tell if the issue lies with Calamares or some distro specific config/script.
When Calamares works, it easily beats the Windows install experience, but the many ways in which the installer can fuck up don’t seem to be covered on Linux.
I tried to install Windows 10 about two years ago as a dual boot option. The selection on which disk to install it on always failed with some obscure error. Turns out the installer couldn’t handle multiple disks being available so I had to unplug every disk except the soon-to-be Windows 10 disk…whereas the openSuse installer was able to setup a pretty complicated RAID+encryption setup easily.