it's my main Linux distro now after Elementary OS. I even run it on my server. since you CAN upgrade from Tuxedo OS 3 to Version 4 when it is released, unlike Elementary OS Kubuntu came close but the tuxedo control center with its power profiles really does work well on a laptop. you can eek out that little bit more battery life by downclocking the CPU and reducing the screen brightness when on battery power and yet have a power profile for when plugged in with everything clocked up to the max. brilliant idea and the best supported Linux distro for this.
@@plutorocks1 its also a free download for the OS as well so you can install Tuxedo OS on any PC. you just wont have as much info in the Tuxedo Control center
it's my main Linux distro now after Elementary OS.
I even run it on my server.
since you CAN upgrade from Tuxedo OS 3 to Version 4 when it is released, unlike Elementary OS
Kubuntu came close but the tuxedo control center with its power profiles really does work well on a laptop.
you can eek out that little bit more battery life by downclocking the CPU and reducing the screen brightness when on battery power and yet have a power profile for when plugged in with everything clocked up to the max.
brilliant idea and the best supported Linux distro for this.
Tuxedo OS 4 is now out and based on Noble Numbat, and it is as smooth as butter.The control centre is made specifically for their hardware.
Excellent. Thank you for letting me know. I kinda thought that was part of it
The tuxedo tweaks have fitted very nicely with KDE. Best windows replacement for my requirements that I have experienced thus far in exploring Linux.
@@anthonyward3853 Isn't the tool meant for Tuxedo hardwares or system76?
@@plutorocks1 its also a free download for the OS as well so you can install Tuxedo OS on any PC.
you just wont have as much info in the Tuxedo Control center
Really a breath taking distro like Kubuntu and ofc no Snapd
@@plutorocks1 it's better than kubuntu since it uses kde 6. When i tried kubuntu a couple weeks ago it was still on 5.
if it used deb bookworm I would use it.
I made the same mistake you did, but when setting up your password you can simply uncheck "require strong password" to use your simple password.
Hmmm. How'd I miss that? Lol.
Thank you
@@LowTechLinux I missed it at first as well, it was frustrating until I finally saw it staring right at me