Hope she doesn't have to map network drives to any storage on her home network... because that has been a horror show for me with Linux ANYTHING.
Tell her stick with Windows so you're not pulling your hair out doing Linux Mint support every day all day lol
My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her?
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Re: My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her
This discussion is running for a while. What does your mum want for her 71st?
Re: My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her
What is the problem, exactly? I use network shares on my Linux machines all the time; I might be able to help with this.LD Wyze wrote:Hope she doesn't have to map network drives to any storage on her home network... because that has been a horror show for me with Linux ANYTHING.
Tell her stick with Windows so you're not pulling your hair out doing Linux Mint support every day all day lol
Windows networking is (unfortunately) not so easy.
Dell Inspiron 1525 - LM17.3 CE 64-------------------Lenovo T440 - Manjaro KDE with Mint VMs
Toshiba NB250 - Manjaro KDE------------------------Acer Aspire One D255E - LM21.3 Xfce
Acer Aspire E11 ES1-111M - LM18.2 KDE 64 ----… Two ROMS don't make a WRITE …
Toshiba NB250 - Manjaro KDE------------------------Acer Aspire One D255E - LM21.3 Xfce
Acer Aspire E11 ES1-111M - LM18.2 KDE 64 ----… Two ROMS don't make a WRITE …
Re: My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her
I have tried both for a different Windows program - Sketchup. It almost worked. I'd rather be her sys admin ...whm1974 wrote:I have you tried using Wine or PlayonLinux? That might work.jglen490 wrote:Unless someone has been directly affected by a Windows-related problem (i.e., a ransomware attack, on a Windows platform), they will not be convinced through fear tactics. I't's better to sell them by showing their favorite programs (or perfectly functional equivalents) at work on a Linux box. That's the one reason I can't get my wife to go with Linux. She said to me,"Will it run my favorite Solitaire program?", which Goodsol - not available on Linux at all. She's seen me using a browser, checking email, watching videos, even the user interface on my Linux box looks familiar, and it's all good for her, except her favorite Solitaire program. So I'm her Windows sys admin as well as my own Linux guy. Oh, well, the things we do for love.
I've checked with the Goodsol guy - a one man show - and he has enough fun keeping up with Windows and Apple and is not inclined to add Linux support to his repertoire. I can't blame him - it's his business model, and (again) my wife's favorite Solitaire game, for 20 years!
Linux is not happening for Rose. And that's the story that a lot of people will face and no alphabet soup of Cinnamon, MATE, Xfce, LMDE, KDE, or Gnome will overcome that.
Re: My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her
So back to the OP!
The only thing you can do, and I am her age, is to pick as closely a possible the Linux versions of her programs, load them on your Linux box and show her. You can slide the problems with Windows into the conversation, but she will likely not be concerned, so just show her, let her know that upon transfer, her scores may not make the transition - be honest.
If she's interested in what she sees on your machine, then you can probably take over and if she goes out shopping save her "score" files, wipe Windows, load Linux and the demoed programs, and if possible stick her score files in where they should fit. Test the programs, give her machine back with her new Linux environment.
If it's her birthday, give her a new machine, too. after all, this is your Mom
The only thing you can do, and I am her age, is to pick as closely a possible the Linux versions of her programs, load them on your Linux box and show her. You can slide the problems with Windows into the conversation, but she will likely not be concerned, so just show her, let her know that upon transfer, her scores may not make the transition - be honest.
If she's interested in what she sees on your machine, then you can probably take over and if she goes out shopping save her "score" files, wipe Windows, load Linux and the demoed programs, and if possible stick her score files in where they should fit. Test the programs, give her machine back with her new Linux environment.
If it's her birthday, give her a new machine, too. after all, this is your Mom
Re: My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her
You want to see a fast browser go get Opera for Linux . Renders everything a lot faster and I have few issues with it . I use it almost all the time and never use Chromium .
Re: My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her
I haven't used Opera in years but it used to be my main browser back in the late 90's with Windows and BeOS. Maybe I'll take a look.
Re: My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her
Do partition hard drive and install Windows and Mint Both
Re: My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her
I think the best feature of Linux is that it is FREE!!! No more costly "updates" and worrying about what virus software to use. No ore slow speed because of bloatware. Most aged people only use pc for email, Skype and searching the web, all of which are just as good on Linux.
Be sure to put shortcuts on her desktop for her commonly used programs and she will never look back......
Be sure to put shortcuts on her desktop for her commonly used programs and she will never look back......
Re: My mom is 70 and is thinking about going with Linux Mint. She's on the fence. What should I tell her to convince her
I wouldn't tell her anything. I would just show her how easy it is to use if you have it on a lap top or PC. My wife is not as old as your mum but not very techie at all, so rather than explain things to her I just showed her what it was like on my laptop when I installed it and once she saw it in action then she wanted it and I got rid of windows on hers. I tend to do all the updates for her so she doesn't have to remember her pass word and set up Thunderbird for her so she gets her emails as usual. If you can't do that, do that for her (apart from thunderbird) get her to use a password she'll find easy to remember (even if she does have to write it down). Good luck and I hope she is enjoying it now.