I installed a few different distros, landed on Cinnamon Mint. I’m not a tech dummy, but I feel I’m in over my head.

I installed Docker in the terminal (two things I’m not familiar with) but I can’t find it anywhere. Googled some stuff, tried to run stuff, and… I dunno.

I’m TRYING to learn docker so I can set up audiobookshelf and Sonarr with Sabnzbd.

Once it’s installed in the terminal, how the hell do I find docker so I can start playing with it?

Is there a Linux for people who are deeply entrenched in how Windows works? I’m not above googling command lines that I can copy and paste but I’ve spent HOURS trying to figure this out and have gotten no where…

Thanks! Sorry if this is the wrong place for this

  • yianiris@kafeneio.social
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    9 months ago

    Auto downloading and installing software is pretty much a violation of ethics in the unix ecosystem, pretty much anything that begins with Auto should be rejected.

    But the general public wants the convenience and luxury of having things done by others without being bothered. Many distros competing with each other for lazy newcomers (ubuntu, mint, debian, manjaro, …) they provide all those non-unix like utilities.

    Lately it is getting worse, all sorts of telemtry is branded good

    @Nibodhika

    • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I assume you’re talking about the “auto-update” drivers. That’s pretty standard Linux thing, everything “auto” updates when you tell your system to update, that’s one of the huge advantages of package managers, not sure which Linux have you used, but the vast majority of them do have a package manager that updates everything (including drivers).

        • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Would you mind telling us which obscure Linux distro do you use that doesn’t have a package manager? And how do you update your system?

              • yianiris@kafeneio.social
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                9 months ago

                Then what you consider automatic is a very unique perception of how things work.
                In a car automatic transmission means it shifts on its own.
                In a non automatic either you shift or it doesn’t happen.

                On most pkg managers YOU elect when to upgrade, the output is a list of “upgradable” pkgs, then you are asked whether to proceed or not. Nothing automatic about this.

                Auto update would mean software has been updated on its own without you authorizing it.

                @Nibodhika

                • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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                  9 months ago

                  No it’s not, every sane person considers automatic to have little or no human interaction, but some human interaction to trigger the flow is still a thing, next you’ll tell me that an automatic weapon fires on it’s own will, or that an automatic garage door decides when to open. A single command that updates all of your system seems pretty automated to me, if not try doing your next update manually by downloading every single package from their source, compiling it if needed, and copying it into the correct folders, do that for every one of the hundreds of packages that get updates and then tell me that a single command is not automating a lot of that away for you.

                  It doesn’t even work how you’re describing in Windows, you get prompted whether you want to update there.