Yesterday I was de-cluttering the junk room and found an old intel i3 laptop which is at least 10 years old. So I decided to install AV Linux on it. I am using it now to post this message. There are good things and bad things about it. The good thing is that it has Yabridge GUI onboard whch makes installing Windows vsts relatively easy. Wine is pre-installed. The bad thing is that it seems to have been heavily hacked about. Its not possible to update Firefox for instance. In the Firefox about box it says that "Updates are disabled by your organization", and this makes me worried about security in this distro. I tried to install Bitwig, which comes in Flatpak or Deb. Neither option could be installed without messing around in the terminal, a no-go for a newbie.j_e_g wrote: Wed Aug 28, 2024 7:29 amThat actually isn't a "conservative" distro. Canonical (the company behind ubuntu) tend to make a lot of customizations to third party software, with the result that the behavior of the distro can be at odds with the rest of the linux ecosystem. If you want conservative, you want Debian. (But for music, just get AV Linux, which is based upon a debian deriviative).Tiles wrote: the most conservative multimedia solution. Ubuntu Studio
The good news is that I did get Bitwig installed on this very old and weak laptop and it worked fine just by plugging in a USB keyboard and headphones, and with latency around 6ms using pipewire.