Welcome ![]()
Looks like you followed a trajectory like many of us. Iāve been on mint since 19. I originally came here because I wanted to learn about KDE, and a Lunduke video said they use it (so why the hell not try it?).
OMA most definitely will run i3 - in fact hereās a recent forum post on how to do exactly that:
For everything that you want to do here is my STRONG (albeit unsolicited advice
)
Remember ROCK is the LTS version, ROME is rolling (shambling/shuffling really) and cooker is testing/dev. In Mint terms, if Rock is version 20.3, Rome is version 22.0, cooker is 23 with the bleeding edge.
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RTFF: READ the Freakin Forum!
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Install a copy of ROCK (the LTS version) somewhere (another partition, another computer, etc) so you can (full KDE or plasma slim) get used to OM. Unlike mint, OM will not hold your hand. OpenMandriva is a different kind of cat. You will learn much more about linux than you thought (and all that without having to keep recompiling your kernel
). Plus package names are different. -
Ask for help - people who know MUCH more than me are all over the place helping out.
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Join the Matrix chat
Then when youāre ready, grab a server image, or one of the the Rock/Rome plasma slim isos, stuff it in a VM and play. Then go bare metal.
I know the goal here is to move everything over to XLibre and adding other compatible DEs and WMs. But I donāt remember if itās fully enabled in Rome yet. I know itās in Cooker.
Hope this helps. Guaranteed I messed something up here but hopefully I didnāt send you too far astray. Like I said, there are many people smarter than me here.
PS: If you donāt have a copy of foxclone go get it. When youāre experimenting / building it is often faster to restore a partition image than figure out what went wrong. Or (better yet) figure it out, then restore the image and do it right āthe first timeā.