28:16 This is amazing! When I was installing Debian, it asked if I wanted to install other interfaces like MATE, Cinnamon, etc. I had heard of these, but I wasn’t sure if I should choose them during installation. I actually came to your channel to figure out if I needed to install these other interfaces, but what you’re showing now makes it clear that I don’t need to worry-I can install them later. Thanks a lot for pointing that out!
Thank you for this clear and concise tutorial. I have been using Debian bookworm testing for a while and liked it. So when this official stable version was released I had to install it. I love how we no longer have to search for non-free ISOs with this new realse. I appreciate all your vids, the way you pause to give us time to see what you've written in the terminal is excellent! Thanks again for all that you do!
Frozen Bubble is addicting! FYI Installing Debian 12 from the Live Environment sets up sudo automatically but if you use the Debian Installer from the GRUB menu it only sets su. If you only have su you can still authenticate then issue sudo commands until you exit su; you can also change your account type from standard to Administrator and after logging out and back in or rebooting you can now use sudo (settings > users > your user profile). Have verified this with Debian 12 Cinnamon and KDE Plasma desktop environments. You can install downloaded deb packages with gdebi by double clicking the package or right clicking and select open with then picking gdebi; all packages installed with gdebi can be found (normally) in the '/opt' directory. You can clean up your system after a package removal with 'sudo apt autoremove' for a dust free Debian. Awesome video BTW! It was nice to see you so happy. Kind of stoked about Debian finally touching down; have been waiting two decades for Debian to make a splash and it's finally happened.
A little side-note on removing libreoffice in it's entirety: iof you type 'sudo apt remove libreoffic*', it will list all the pieces that it is about to remove. Much shorter than the entire list.
This is great news. Hopefully Jay will write a Debian Server book. His Ubuntu Server books are excellent and I think the community would benefit from a well written guide to Debian Server.
Thank you! You are an amazing instructor. This was an exceptional tutorial! Not only do you provide the 'how' but you give us the 'why'. So many instructors leave that out.
Excellent tutorial, thank you! There are a couple of things about synaptic that you may want to add... 1. After installing synaptic, install apt-xapian-index, then restart X (or reboot). Open synaptic and you'll have a quick filter field in the menu bar. Type in your search term (you might also want to select All on the left), hit Enter and it will bring up packages where the search string is found. It's probably trivial but now you don't have to open the search window. YMMV but I find it to be a lot more convenient. 2. You can click on the Packages header and toggle between ascending- and descending-sort. Makes it much easier to find what you're looking for.
Doesnt 'apt dist-upgrade' upgrade packages for the latest repo based on the version defined in the apt config, not the current distro version? Shouldnt this be 'apt upgrade' unless you are in the process of moving to testing/unstable distros?
Yeah I’m curious about the system vs user flatpak situation since after watching the bash series I wanted to make a script to install everything I need but want to do it properly.
For those who are having issues with Nvidia, my laptop was very old and I had to enable Non-free repositories and enable them in the terminal, and then use the sudo nvidia-detect command to find which card I had and what driver was recommended for me. the reason I say this is because following the method shown in the video led me to have no GPU shown within Nvidia X server settings. Now, I am able to because I had to install the Tesla 470 driver. Just a heads up! Might save you all a bit of pain that I had to go through...
It's not just Nvidia, my new AMD rig is unusable with Debian. I think 8 was the last version I was able to install without issue. Between the failures related to missing drivers (because it's better to be "pure" than to actually be functional), the installer failing to set the boot partition as being actually bootable, and now using a failing video driver - Debian is junk. Hopefully by the time 13 is out it will be at least as good as Ubuntu, Fedora, or even OpenSUSE.
@LearnLinuxTV Don't forget to make a video on keeping flatpak programs up to date like for security updates, as apt-get update and apt-get upgrade won't update flatpak programs at default when initialized.
@@albussd honestly I was using Ubuntu but I only switched to Debian when my sound drivers didn't work. And Debian is more staple than Ubuntu it is just a fact
Great video! Regarding backports, I thought this would also be indicated in synaptic for the package as second option if I recall correctly. Where I had issues though was on installing firefox from flatpak that it crashed randomly. Found out that Firefox has hardware accelaration enabled by default however the flatpak config had it disabled. Enabled it in flatseal and problems gone. Other option is ofcourse to disable it in Firefox itself. This might be helpful for others running into the same issue.
Amazing news. As a long time debian as primary OS user. I like these news. Debian is by far the best piece of softare i have used. I have zero issiues ever. I use stable apps on it. On workstation I use gnome, on laptop KDE ... all works seemless. Completely uneventfull and pleasureable experience. Hearing its has gotten better is hard to beleive but good to hear. I do not tend to upgrade that soon (workstation is still on buster, and laptop on bullseye) ... but this one sounds like a moment I should do that. Have fun with your transition ... I expect you will use it long time.
Another thing among the first things 'to-do' is to set up and configure a virt environment for running non-distro python software packages, as this is now a requirement with the Bookworm release. Strangely most linux youtubers miss out on that.
Just downloaded Debian 12 bookworm as a new user. Your vid helped me walk through setup with minor hiccups. Only lingering question is on adding the backport repository. Don't yet know how to use the clipboard so I could not complete this task. Great video.
26:07 the list of packages is not actually included in the blog post so here it is: libreoffice-common libreoffice-core libreoffice-gnome libreoffice-gtk3 libreoffice-help-common libreoffice-help-en-us libreoffice-style-colibre libreoffice-style-elementary
I knew there would be at least one thoughtful person like myself! I was about to post this myself after seeing it was NOT included in the blog post that Jay mentioned. Thanks @adanz17
Just installed debian on my laptop yesterday. I loved the fact that it lets you choose the DE instead of a pre configured option. I tried switching on kubuntu once and it was a mess. Uninstalling kde fucked up all sorts of things and i had to reinstall the whole OS. Ill admit i lacked the knowledge to fix it, but having a choice out of the gate is sweet, specially when you can just toggle your option and its ready to go.
In my own experience, at least, having multiple DEs is not a good idea; I have never been able to get it to work without problems on real hardware. Just because you CAN do something does not mean you SHOULD. Better to carefully choose one DE you like, and then stick with it. Deb 12 was no different; I tried installing a second DE (LXQt), using tasksel just as Jay suggested, and it had so many problems I had to back it out. Fortunately, the original DE (Cinnamon) still works.
@@jamespleger752 yep, totally agree. Now if i wanna test some other DE, i’ll install a new OS on a different drive and go from there. I guess i learnt it the hard way hehe
I know this is an older video, but, re: thunderbird vs evolution, not only does evolution work better in exchange server environments, but it also correctly authenticates with apple services for mail/reminders/calendars, and is the only linux client i've found that will do this.
Very helpful video. I just started with Linux and was using Mint, but I moved to Debian since I will only be using Linux for certain things and I want a stable platform. Your video was more helpful than most of what's out there. I subscribed. Thanks.
My experience with steam on debian 12 is that debian has an "installer" that will install steam, but steam installs the latest version directly from steam, not a debian repo. And steam then keeps itself updated independent of debian repos.
@@cssplayer91 It's not a snap, Steam ships its own native Linux binaries and libraries for itself and games to use. Once you enable it in settings, Proton support should work out of the box.
@@cssplayer91 No, it's a deb package through apt. It's just not the actual client. It's an installer that runs and installs the full program from steam. That way debian doesn't have to keep up with every new version of steam. They just give you a way to install it and then steam keeps it up to date.
I am going to try Dibian 12 soon, that's why I'm here, very clear and straight forward for our new to linux user, I've always want to learn how to add extra repository in linux, the way you gave true to life example just excellent, Thanks
@@hackerman.1337 thanks for the explanation. Basically every now and then I make some tests on a virtual machine running Ubuntu and I prefer flatpacks over snaps. Guess I'll try with this new Debian releas. Thanks again.
@@fixer1140If you don't mind using the Cinnamon desktop environment or installing another one, Linux Mint is based on Ubuntu and disables snaps in favor of flatpak by default. I have never tried using another desktop environment on Mint though so Debian 12 is a solid choice if you don't want to use Cinnamon.
If you have to gut Ubuntu to that extent maybe it's time to use a different Distro? You're like the people who use Windows but hate everything about it which makes it Windows. When you're fighting that hard against your OS it's time to switch.
it took me a while but i finally found a proper tutorial on installing the nvidia driver, thank you sir, you earned a subscriber (new linux user btw) for whatever reason every single tutorial out there that i found just doesnt mention having to tick those two options in the gnome apps store
Thanks for pointing out the difference between software from Deb and Flatpak. Now - when removing the deb-versions and installing the Flatpak versions, what will happen to settings? Will they be recognized by the new installs? Ie. will Thunderbird read the mail accounts already in the system?
I'm glad I found this video. I just installed Debian on a new computer. My aspect ration was set to 4:3 even though I have a 16:9 monitor. It turns out I just needed to install the Nvidia drivers.
I'm on LMDE 5 and am seriously considering going back to Debian. The 12 release looks awesome, wasn't a big fan of the 11 release with the outdated GNOME desktop.
Great video. Thanks for making the content. One question - you installed some apps by downloading .deb packages from offocial website, while installed others as Flatpak. For instance, you could have installed firefox directly through the .deb from Mozilla's official website but chose Flatpak. Why so? Is there any technical reason? I was thinking that maybe installing the official .deb provided by the software company, if it's available, would be preferable to installing a Flatpak version. Please enlighten. Cheers.
@@HarpicBoy It depends on the type of software: 1. Deb provided by distro 2. Deb provided by software company (aka "upstream"), which once you install it, it adds its remote repository to your APT. 3. Flatpak version. Usually, you shouldn't be installing packages from a repository other than your distro, for example you should install debian firefox not the one provided by mozilla, as it is tailored for your distribution. Then comes the second problem, that when software in your distro repo is outdated (or is on prior LTS release), for example debian stable, so if you want newer versions, you should install the flatpak version, (so it comes with its own libraries); And finally, there are rare instances when you know a particular software is better installed in a particular way, for example vivaldi, which is not in distro repo (it is not fully open-source) and the flatpak version seemingly have weaker sandboxing, so the best way to install it is by their own website, and getting your consequent upgrades from their repo. Ok, as rule of thumb: Install a software from your repo. (If its a chromium based browser and it is not in the repo, install it from their website) If native "deb" has a problem, install the flatpak, If flatpak one has a problem install the one from website. Distro deb > flatpak > 3rd party deb.
@@arkeynserhayn8370 Thanks for your insight. Coming from windows the option of using 3rd party deb files seems more intuitive to me. I will try to use distro repo and flatpak primarily, for learning and getting used to linux environment. But say If I chose to download something from 3rd party, will I be "breaking" something big in the distro to a point I run into trouble or will I be good for the most part, as long the deb file is coming from a reliable source and not some random website. (like valve, mozilla, etc.)
The only down side I have found id the Gnome package manager is not very stable, but of course you can use the KDE one, or the command line tools. Just as a personal comment I would add #13 my user to the sudoers group so you can use sudo and not have to go to root.
Kinda sad there is no Debian sticker on that laptop🙄- great video - thanks for all you do! I always install just XFCE4 desktop and always have to add my user to the sudo list as one of my first things - really surprised the Gnome or Desktop does it automatically? have to agree 100% this is by far the best Debian XFCE4 i've experienced this far, very clean, simple install and everything just worked. Thanks again
Thank you so much. Having been in windows or Mac since Solaris 7, it was daunting trying to return to linux, this was clear and well paced, giving me a nice desktop in the process.
I switched to Ubuntu sheesh...over 10yrs ago. Mainly run XFCE. Now I wonder, why I'm not running base Debian. seems like I get more bang for the "buck". Nice reviews on this. Thanks
While I do have the root account enabled on my Debian systems, I prefer to use sudo commands for updating and installing things, simply because there are situations where I may step away from my computer while an update is happening, and if the update finishes, or aborts out, the ability to sudo may still be available, but in general I'm not leaving a terminal open with root privileges for any kitty cat to walk across the keyboard and randomly rm -rf the system.
Thank you so much! Saved me from headaches and sleepless nights. Almost wiped Debian and installed Windows back on this system. In my mind I made it so much more complicated that it really was. 👍
For anyone using gmail with thunderbird make sure that you use IMAP instead POP( which is selected by default), since POP doesn't sync when Emails are read.
Thanks for this and your many good and in-depth tutorials. I have learned a lot. I have installed Debian 12 on a MacBook pro from 2010. Works everything - except Wifi - very, very well. I just can't find a solution for it unfortunately. Any tip for me on how to turn on wifi? Thank you very much!
Great job on this. I'd love to see a video on how to get Guacamole working on Linux and Windows. Trying to get setup for my parents sake because they always need help. Every video I've seen about it is very convoluted and you need to learn 3 other programs or sign up for something elsewhere.
Here's a question, if I may: if I install backports and then the kernels upgrades to a newer version, will this conflict somehow with my nvidia drivers? I know that the kernel and the drivers have to be in sync.
40:12 | how can I save the file within the nano editor? when I try to press "ctrl + s" on my laptop, the nano editor said "wrote one line", did I did it good? or is there something I have to change?
Thanks for this, from a recent subscriber and relative Linux noob! As I'm planning on shifting multiple small household servers over to Debian 12, my big question is about remote management, as I'm having trouble with figuring out how to deal with Wayland and VNC. Have you done, or do you plan a video on making that shift? Despite having turned on Gnome Remote Desktop, I've been, as yet, unable to get these connections happening from my Mac desktop (which is where I primarily work).
I checked out the blog post for copying the commands for removing the libreoffice suite leftovers, but could not find it there. Could you please put them there or below this video?
I am a long time Debian user, but the info on changing desktop environments and flatpaks was quite useful. I think flatpaks will be great for getting up to date software without constantly updating the whole system. You use the terminal enough you consider putting on the dock.
It's interesting how some software like Libre Office benefits from being very up to date where as a text editor is probably better if it never changes. It's a shame that so many tweaks are needed to get Debian 12 into shape. I feel that Mint requires none of these. I will be installing this today and trying Plasma Wayland.
@@wayland7150 While true, Debian is a distro you setup once and then run it for at least 2 years before upgrading, so setting it up isn't a big deal long term IMHO.
Love your work. Have followed the advice for installing the new Firefox to the new flatpak version, but can't install gnome shell extensions on Firefox as only to be told "No such native application org.gnome.chrome_gnome_shell" set up and configure a virt environment for running non-distro python software packages, though this may be fixed with chrome but would like to stay with Firefox as it has worked with it in the past?
Depends what you mean by 'extra software' do you consider the desktop environment and file manager extra software? For a minimal desktop I'd deselect "standard system utilities" and probably "Debian desktop environment" and select DE of choice (if you want a DE) during installation and that should give you a pretty minimal desktop installation; there will still probably be a fair amount of extra software installed by the DE but it's fast and easy to remove unwanted software through package manager. If you don't want a desktop just deselect everything during install.
You can deselect all DEs when asked and end up in console-only system. Then just use apt to install e.g. gnome-core or even more minimal gnome-session package. Beware of the latter though: you'll get no file manager, no text editor, no terminal -- nothing, as minimal as it goes.
33:47 and they work so long as nothing is updated and drivers stop working and drivers go back to default. bcoz nvidia not yet make drivers for 0.0.1 version you wanted update
hello, i like what you do. your terminal is looks good. how did you make your terminal titlebar dark, i have been trying to change mine by accessing editing background on gtk.css file but it wasn't appealing. please share any info
Yes, tasksel can save a log of what it installed when adding a desktop environment. To do this, you need to specify the -l or --log option when running the tasksel.
GUFW, the graphical version of ufw, is available in Synaptic Package Manager. You must install it yourself; it is not-preinstalled. This definitely should have been included in his 12 things to do after installing Debian 12; more important than some of the other things he mentioned.
Debian newbie here ... Is there a technical reason why you chose x11 for Plasma over Wayland. I've found tons of opinions on the subject, but no clean kill from a technical aspect. Thank you!
For me, Fedora with Wayland doesn't have any screen tearing when there's a lot of action going on. X11 had a lot of it. I was used to it, but never knew why, til I found out about Wayland. X11 is way better for remoting into a Linux machine vs Wayland. RustDesk, for example, doens't have full support for Wayland, but X11 works just fine. Hope that answers some or all of your question(s).
I used both vlc and mpv on Linux, for 'recent' AMD-GPU's mpv works much better, vlc has some big problems with those GPU's. I also noticed stability-problems with vlc (crashing when opening a new video from an open instance), this is not just on my system, I heard other people (Chris Titus Tech) point it out too. I had the same video run much better on mpv than vlc. mpv is a great videoplayer with bad marketing, it currently is superior to vlc but most Linux-users and Windows-users don't know how to properly set it up.
Why would anyone use other distros other than this one? It looks great and it works. What is the benefit of using something like cachy or nobara vs this? They all blurr together and look the same (if you use KDE on all of them). So what is the real distinction?
I have attempted to follow the advice to use the latest Firefox from flatpak, but it broke my integration with KeePassXC so I went back to Firefox ESR, which shall be "good enough" for real usage.
Awesome and helpful video! Not sure if due to dual booting, laptop manufacturer (asus), gpu (nvidia 2060-q), but my debian 12 kde plasma had a hard time recognizing the nvidia driver as installed. Running nvidia-smi, I could see it downloaded and installed, but not active. The nvidia app wouldn't recognized the gpu, after following all of the steps you had shared here. After much researching online, I followed the recommendation to disable safe boot of my laptop, and then it worked. gpu is fully recognized and utilized (tested steam games and get about same performance as in windows 10). Now am struggling to configure options for power plans and gpu profiles which don't show up anywhere. If you could make a video or share recommendations, I will greatly appreciate it. And am happily following the channel as a new subscriber :D
Thank you. I started with Debian years ago (4 floppy disk install) in a commercial environment and I got into using other distributions, The one I am using now irritates me a bit from their last upgrade. I have to admit I whined a bit about Debian as well because it was so conservative but I loved that it was so rock solid stable. I have to admit I know nothing about Flatpacks, so I have a bit of a learning curve.
Jay, your considered one of my favorites related to Linux stuff. I'd love to hear your take on PureOS but maybe its too early and best wait till its updated with Debian 12.
Great video! I´ve installed Debian 12 with the KDE Plasma environment and I don't have the GNOME SOFTWARE, I only have DISCOVER, how do I install GNOME SOFTWARE?
Excellent, clear presentation.Based on your prev video and my desire to switch distros I've jumped in to Deb 12, and...... I'm annoyed. It's Linux and and I'll get everything working, but I'm annoyed there are so many small bits missing out of the box e.g. min/max icons need to be added through the tweak tool, not Settings and I've had to install a package to get autocomplete working for sudo commands. I could go on for pages but hey-ho I'll get there. This is the wife's laptop and most importantly I got Dungeon Keeper II working, which can be tricky, so fairs fair! For me, I'm keeping my main machine on Garuda Linux. Keep the videos coming!
Good Video. A trap for mugs like me! I installed Flatpak, removed Text Editor and Firefox-ESR and then installed the debian versions. I then launched tasksel and added MATE. After a reboot Fierfox-ESR and the debian version of Text Pad had been re-installed. The Flatpak versions were still present so I was remove the debian versions. Fortunately I had not installed Libreoffice. This could get messy unless there is a way to remove or blacklist apps in the repository.
28:16 This is amazing! When I was installing Debian, it asked if I wanted to install other interfaces like MATE, Cinnamon, etc. I had heard of these, but I wasn’t sure if I should choose them during installation. I actually came to your channel to figure out if I needed to install these other interfaces, but what you’re showing now makes it clear that I don’t need to worry-I can install them later. Thanks a lot for pointing that out!
Switching from OpenSuse Tumbleweed to Debian 12 now, giving this a rewatch before pulling the trigger!
Thank you for this clear and concise tutorial. I have been using Debian bookworm testing for a while and liked it. So when this official stable version was released I had to install it. I love how we no longer have to search for non-free ISOs with this new realse. I appreciate all your vids, the way you pause to give us time to see what you've written in the terminal is excellent! Thanks again for all that you do!
12 days ago you posted this 12 things to do in Debian 12 and I started watching this at 12pm. Weird lol. Thanks for the video!!
Thanks!
Frozen Bubble is addicting!
FYI Installing Debian 12 from the Live Environment sets up sudo automatically but if you use the Debian Installer from the GRUB menu it only sets su. If you only have su you can still authenticate then issue sudo commands until you exit su; you can also change your account type from standard to Administrator and after logging out and back in or rebooting you can now use sudo (settings > users > your user profile). Have verified this with Debian 12 Cinnamon and KDE Plasma desktop environments.
You can install downloaded deb packages with gdebi by double clicking the package or right clicking and select open with then picking gdebi; all packages installed with gdebi can be found (normally) in the '/opt' directory.
You can clean up your system after a package removal with 'sudo apt autoremove' for a dust free Debian.
Awesome video BTW! It was nice to see you so happy.
Kind of stoked about Debian finally touching down; have been waiting two decades for Debian to make a splash and it's finally happened.
It's the satisfying sounds.
@@wayland7150 The music is hypnotizing. Nothing audible is obnoxious - totally agree. The tunes of the game are a big draw for me as well. 👍
A little side-note on removing libreoffice in it's entirety: iof you type 'sudo apt remove libreoffic*', it will list all the pieces that it is about to remove. Much shorter than the entire list.
This was helpful as there was no reference to the removing of LibreOffice in the blog post that Jay mentions in the vid (@LearnLinuxTV)
Addition: “sudo apt autoremove libreoffice” is even better because it will also remove dependent packages that are not in ure elsewhere.
0:20 0:31
@@GerardWassinkthat was helpful
@@marjiram7709 ????
This is great news. Hopefully Jay will write a Debian Server book. His Ubuntu Server books are excellent and I think the community would benefit from a well written guide to Debian Server.
Thank you! You are an amazing instructor. This was an exceptional tutorial! Not only do you provide the 'how' but you give us the 'why'. So many instructors leave that out.
Excellent tutorial, thank you! There are a couple of things about synaptic that you may want to add...
1. After installing synaptic, install apt-xapian-index, then restart X (or reboot). Open synaptic and you'll have a quick filter field in the menu bar. Type in your search term (you might also want to select All on the left), hit Enter and it will bring up packages where the search string is found. It's probably trivial but now you don't have to open the search window. YMMV but I find it to be a lot more convenient.
2. You can click on the Packages header and toggle between ascending- and descending-sort. Makes it much easier to find what you're looking for.
My favorite distro! Can't wait to upgrade to Debian 12 now that it is released and stable. Thanks my friend for all you do here. Love your content! ❣
Doesnt 'apt dist-upgrade' upgrade packages for the latest repo based on the version defined in the apt config, not the current distro version? Shouldnt this be 'apt upgrade' unless you are in the process of moving to testing/unstable distros?
Looking forward to future flatpak videos on this channel! Flatpaks seem cool but they clearly have a bit of a learning curve
Yeah I’m curious about the system vs user flatpak situation since after watching the bash series I wanted to make a script to install everything I need but want to do it properly.
For those who are having issues with Nvidia, my laptop was very old and I had to enable Non-free repositories and enable them in the terminal, and then use the sudo nvidia-detect command to find which card I had and what driver was recommended for me. the reason I say this is because following the method shown in the video led me to have no GPU shown within Nvidia X server settings. Now, I am able to because I had to install the Tesla 470 driver. Just a heads up! Might save you all a bit of pain that I had to go through...
I got so many ACPI errors at start but it seems not affecting the running of the system after installing Nvidia driver. Any ideas?
It's not just Nvidia, my new AMD rig is unusable with Debian. I think 8 was the last version I was able to install without issue. Between the failures related to missing drivers (because it's better to be "pure" than to actually be functional), the installer failing to set the boot partition as being actually bootable, and now using a failing video driver - Debian is junk. Hopefully by the time 13 is out it will be at least as good as Ubuntu, Fedora, or even OpenSUSE.
=\ any reason to not install chrome thru the software app now that I have flatpak added?
@LearnLinuxTV Don't forget to make a video on keeping flatpak programs up to date like for security updates, as apt-get update and apt-get upgrade won't update flatpak programs at default when initialized.
sudo flatpak update
With Debian + Flatpak + non free firmware i don't see the point of install a debian derivative like Ubuntu
non free is not necessary in most cases
Also ubuntu is so unstable it makes you hate linux...
@@sixdroidnecessary for nvidia users
@@sale666No. Not true at all. Let us not be unreasonable and sensational just to bash something.
@@albussd honestly I was using Ubuntu but I only switched to Debian when my sound drivers didn't work. And Debian is more staple than Ubuntu it is just a fact
Great video! Regarding backports, I thought this would also be indicated in synaptic for the package as second option if I recall correctly. Where I had issues though was on installing firefox from flatpak that it crashed randomly. Found out that Firefox has hardware accelaration enabled by default however the flatpak config had it disabled. Enabled it in flatseal and problems gone. Other option is ofcourse to disable it in Firefox itself. This might be helpful for others running into the same issue.
TYVM
This video is excellent! Well paced and you cover everything in detail which is great because I am relatively new to Linux in general. 😊
Hey Jay. The link to the article on yout page doesn't seem to work...
Amazing news. As a long time debian as primary OS user. I like these news. Debian is by far the best piece of softare i have used. I have zero issiues ever. I use stable apps on it. On workstation I use gnome, on laptop KDE ... all works seemless. Completely uneventfull and pleasureable experience. Hearing its has gotten better is hard to beleive but good to hear.
I do not tend to upgrade that soon (workstation is still on buster, and laptop on bullseye) ... but this one sounds like a moment I should do that. Have fun with your transition ... I expect you will use it long time.
Since when do updates require a restart? Unless you're updating the kernel.
Another thing among the first things 'to-do' is to set up and configure a virt environment for running non-distro python software packages, as this is now a requirement with the Bookworm release.
Strangely most linux youtubers miss out on that.
Link to this being official and not just your opinion
Just downloaded Debian 12 bookworm as a new user. Your vid helped me walk through setup with minor hiccups. Only lingering question is on adding the backport repository. Don't yet know how to use the clipboard so I could not complete this task. Great video.
26:07 the list of packages is not actually included in the blog post so here it is:
libreoffice-common libreoffice-core libreoffice-gnome libreoffice-gtk3 libreoffice-help-common libreoffice-help-en-us libreoffice-style-colibre libreoffice-style-elementary
I knew there would be at least one thoughtful person like myself! I was about to post this myself after seeing it was NOT included in the blog post that Jay mentioned. Thanks @adanz17
Awesome help with plenty of detail . It's hard to find help of this quality . Thank you !
Just installed debian on my laptop yesterday. I loved the fact that it lets you choose the DE instead of a pre configured option. I tried switching on kubuntu once and it was a mess. Uninstalling kde fucked up all sorts of things and i had to reinstall the whole OS. Ill admit i lacked the knowledge to fix it, but having a choice out of the gate is sweet, specially when you can just toggle your option and its ready to go.
In my own experience, at least, having multiple DEs is not a good idea; I have never been able to get it to work without problems on real hardware. Just because you CAN do something does not mean you SHOULD. Better to carefully choose one DE you like, and then stick with it. Deb 12 was no different; I tried installing a second DE (LXQt), using tasksel just as Jay suggested, and it had so many problems I had to back it out. Fortunately, the original DE (Cinnamon) still works.
@@jamespleger752 yep, totally agree. Now if i wanna test some other DE, i’ll install a new OS on a different drive and go from there. I guess i learnt it the hard way hehe
you installed kubuntu then Uninstalled kde? lol
I know this is an older video, but, re: thunderbird vs evolution, not only does evolution work better in exchange server environments, but it also correctly authenticates with apple services for mail/reminders/calendars, and is the only linux client i've found that will do this.
Very helpful video. I just started with Linux and was using Mint, but I moved to Debian since I will only be using Linux for certain things and I want a stable platform. Your video was more helpful than most of what's out there. I subscribed. Thanks.
Thank as New Linux user this was a God send adding the extra software repository and desktop easy to follow 😊❤
My experience with steam on debian 12 is that debian has an "installer" that will install steam, but steam installs the latest version directly from steam, not a debian repo. And steam then keeps itself updated independent of debian repos.
So its a snap pack? And how do steam games run with proton mode enabled?
@@cssplayer91 It's not a snap, Steam ships its own native Linux binaries and libraries for itself and games to use. Once you enable it in settings, Proton support should work out of the box.
@@koye4427it's steam native vs steam runtime
That how steam always has been.
@@cssplayer91 No, it's a deb package through apt. It's just not the actual client. It's an installer that runs and installs the full program from steam. That way debian doesn't have to keep up with every new version of steam. They just give you a way to install it and then steam keeps it up to date.
I am going to try Dibian 12 soon, that's why I'm here, very clear and straight forward for our new to linux user, I've always want to learn how to add extra repository in linux, the way you gave true to life example just excellent, Thanks
I was struggling so hard to install the propreitary nvidia drivers but you made it so easy. you got a fan for life now that was life saving!
Huge thanks for this video!
Hello there. Gemini AI recommended your channel to me to learn more about Linux. Cant wait to dive deep.
You mentioned (and demonstrated) a Gnome extension for flathub. Is there an extension for Plasma?
Hello Jay, could you make a video about how to purge snap packs out of Ubuntu and install flatpacks only? Gotta love this channel
They made it impossible to remove it's always gone be there partly use Debian.
@@hackerman.1337 that's a joke, right? Come on, just say that's a joke. By the way, Hello friend...
@@hackerman.1337 thanks for the explanation. Basically every now and then I make some tests on a virtual machine running Ubuntu and I prefer flatpacks over snaps. Guess I'll try with this new Debian releas. Thanks again.
@@fixer1140If you don't mind using the Cinnamon desktop environment or installing another one, Linux Mint is based on Ubuntu and disables snaps in favor of flatpak by default. I have never tried using another desktop environment on Mint though so Debian 12 is a solid choice if you don't want to use Cinnamon.
If you have to gut Ubuntu to that extent maybe it's time to use a different Distro? You're like the people who use Windows but hate everything about it which makes it Windows. When you're fighting that hard against your OS it's time to switch.
it took me a while but i finally found a proper tutorial on installing the nvidia driver, thank you sir, you earned a subscriber (new linux user btw)
for whatever reason every single tutorial out there that i found just doesnt mention having to tick those two options in the gnome apps store
I had to install VLC in flatpak because the VLC version from Debian repositories doesn't work with RTSP streams.
Just a note that its probably worth installing nvidia-detect and using it before installing the nvidia-driver.
Thanks for pointing out the difference between software from Deb and Flatpak. Now - when removing the deb-versions and installing the Flatpak versions, what will happen to settings? Will they be recognized by the new installs? Ie. will Thunderbird read the mail accounts already in the system?
I'm glad I found this video. I just installed Debian on a new computer. My aspect ration was set to 4:3 even though I have a 16:9 monitor. It turns out I just needed to install the Nvidia drivers.
I'm on LMDE 5 and am seriously considering going back to Debian. The 12 release looks awesome, wasn't a big fan of the 11 release with the outdated GNOME desktop.
Great video. Thanks for making the content.
One question - you installed some apps by downloading .deb packages from offocial website, while installed others as Flatpak. For instance, you could have installed firefox directly through the .deb from Mozilla's official website but chose Flatpak. Why so? Is there any technical reason? I was thinking that maybe installing the official .deb provided by the software company, if it's available, would be preferable to installing a Flatpak version.
Please enlighten. Cheers.
Are you still around?
@@arkeynserhayn8370 Yes, I am.
Want to know more about this too.
@@HarpicBoy
It depends on the type of software:
1. Deb provided by distro
2. Deb provided by software company (aka "upstream"), which once you install it, it adds its remote repository to your APT.
3. Flatpak version.
Usually, you shouldn't be installing packages from a repository other than your distro, for example you should install debian firefox not the one provided by mozilla, as it is tailored for your distribution.
Then comes the second problem, that when software in your distro repo is outdated (or is on prior LTS release), for example debian stable, so if you want newer versions, you should install the flatpak version, (so it comes with its own libraries);
And finally, there are rare instances when you know a particular software is better installed in a particular way, for example vivaldi, which is not in distro repo (it is not fully open-source) and the flatpak version seemingly have weaker sandboxing, so the best way to install it is by their own website, and getting your consequent upgrades from their repo.
Ok, as rule of thumb:
Install a software from your repo.
(If its a chromium based browser and it is not in the repo, install it from their website)
If native "deb" has a problem, install the flatpak,
If flatpak one has a problem install the one from website.
Distro deb > flatpak > 3rd party deb.
@@arkeynserhayn8370 Thanks for your insight. Coming from windows the option of using 3rd party deb files seems more intuitive to me. I will try to use distro repo and flatpak primarily, for learning and getting used to linux environment.
But say If I chose to download something from 3rd party, will I be "breaking" something big in the distro to a point I run into trouble or will I be good for the most part, as long the deb file is coming from a reliable source and not some random website. (like valve, mozilla, etc.)
Why at 03:55 was possible use the sudo command? When was added your main user to the /etc/sudoers file?
The only down side I have found id the Gnome package manager is not very stable, but of course you can use the KDE one, or the command line tools. Just as a personal comment I would add #13 my user to the sudoers group so you can use sudo and not have to go to root.
Great idea J to talk about after installation tweaks
Kinda sad there is no Debian sticker on that laptop🙄- great video - thanks for all you do! I always install just XFCE4 desktop and always have to add my user to the sudo list as one of my first things - really surprised the Gnome or Desktop does it automatically? have to agree 100% this is by far the best Debian XFCE4 i've experienced this far, very clean, simple install and everything just worked. Thanks again
Thank you so much. Having been in windows or Mac since Solaris 7, it was daunting trying to return to linux, this was clear and well paced, giving me a nice desktop in the process.
I switched to Ubuntu sheesh...over 10yrs ago. Mainly run XFCE. Now I wonder, why I'm not running base Debian. seems like I get more bang for the "buck". Nice reviews on this. Thanks
thank you sir
your videos are really helpful
While I do have the root account enabled on my Debian systems, I prefer to use sudo commands for updating and installing things, simply because there are situations where I may step away from my computer while an update is happening, and if the update finishes, or aborts out, the ability to sudo may still be available, but in general I'm not leaving a terminal open with root privileges for any kitty cat to walk across the keyboard and randomly rm -rf the system.
you got the reason wrong, your voice relaxes me and help me sleep hahahah
Thank you so much! Saved me from headaches and sleepless nights. Almost wiped Debian and installed Windows back on this system. In my mind I made it so much more complicated that it really was. 👍
BTW the commands to remove Libre Office completely are missing in the blog post.
Thank you Jay.
Thanks! I just moved from Windows 11 (crap) to Debian 12 (sweet) and this helped a lot
For anyone using gmail with thunderbird make sure that you use IMAP instead POP( which is selected by default), since POP doesn't sync when Emails are read.
new, learning on Linux, just have a question wen you add a bookworm how you saved like seed on video
39.45 you said save the file?
How did you save the file, what did you do to save it?
Thanks for this and your many good and in-depth tutorials. I have learned a lot. I have installed Debian 12 on a MacBook pro from 2010. Works everything - except Wifi - very, very well. I just can't find a solution for it unfortunately. Any tip for me on how to turn on wifi? Thank you very much!
Is there an upgrade tool on Debian to upgrade between major versions? Or do you have to reinstall every time?
Great job on this. I'd love to see a video on how to get Guacamole working on Linux and Windows. Trying to get setup for my parents sake because they always need help. Every video I've seen about it is very convoluted and you need to learn 3 other programs or sign up for something elsewhere.
Hi is it possible to upgrade Debian 12 to Gnome 44?
But I'm not sure about is if you need to mess with KDE's software library if you install KDE, or one of the other desktops....
Here's a question, if I may: if I install backports and then the kernels upgrades to a newer version, will this conflict somehow with my nvidia drivers? I know that the kernel and the drivers have to be in sync.
Thanks for the video. Perhaps I missed it, but did you show the command apt autoremove?
40:12 | how can I save the file within the nano editor? when I try to press "ctrl + s" on my laptop, the nano editor said "wrote one line", did I did it good? or is there something I have to change?
Best Frozen Bubble video I've ever seen thanks
Thanks for this, from a recent subscriber and relative Linux noob! As I'm planning on shifting multiple small household servers over to Debian 12, my big question is about remote management, as I'm having trouble with figuring out how to deal with Wayland and VNC. Have you done, or do you plan a video on making that shift? Despite having turned on Gnome Remote Desktop, I've been, as yet, unable to get these connections happening from my Mac desktop (which is where I primarily work).
I checked out the blog post for copying the commands for removing the libreoffice suite leftovers, but could not find it there.
Could you please put them there or below this video?
sudo apt remove libreoffic*
I am a long time Debian user, but the info on changing desktop environments and flatpaks was quite useful. I think flatpaks will be great for getting up to date software without constantly updating the whole system. You use the terminal enough you consider putting on the dock.
It's interesting how some software like Libre Office benefits from being very up to date where as a text editor is probably better if it never changes. It's a shame that so many tweaks are needed to get Debian 12 into shape. I feel that Mint requires none of these. I will be installing this today and trying Plasma Wayland.
@@wayland7150 While true, Debian is a distro you setup once and then run it for at least 2 years before upgrading, so setting it up isn't a big deal long term IMHO.
Thanks Jay for yet another nice tutorial!
Love your work. Have followed the advice for installing the new Firefox to the new flatpak version, but can't install gnome shell extensions on Firefox as only to be told "No such native application org.gnome.chrome_gnome_shell" set up and configure a virt environment for running non-distro python software packages, though this may be fixed with chrome but would like to stay with Firefox as it has worked with it in the past?
Does Debian installation give the option to install the OS with out the extra software.
Depends what you mean by 'extra software' do you consider the desktop environment and file manager extra software? For a minimal desktop I'd deselect "standard system utilities" and probably "Debian desktop environment" and select DE of choice (if you want a DE) during installation and that should give you a pretty minimal desktop installation; there will still probably be a fair amount of extra software installed by the DE but it's fast and easy to remove unwanted software through package manager. If you don't want a desktop just deselect everything during install.
You mean the additional 83 games included with the GNOME environment? I'm afraid not.
You can deselect all DEs when asked and end up in console-only system. Then just use apt to install e.g. gnome-core or even more minimal gnome-session package. Beware of the latter though: you'll get no file manager, no text editor, no terminal -- nothing, as minimal as it goes.
Yes
Peppermint OS will give you a stripped down Debian 12 install. @@Voodoo_S3
very good work you are doing bro
33:47 and they work so long as nothing is updated and drivers stop working and drivers go back to default. bcoz nvidia not yet make drivers for 0.0.1 version you wanted update
hello, i like what you do. your terminal is looks good. how did you make your terminal titlebar dark, i have been trying to change mine by accessing editing background on gtk.css file but it wasn't appealing. please share any info
Can tasksel save a log of what it installed when adding a desktop environment?
Yes, tasksel can save a log of what it installed when adding a desktop environment. To do this, you need to specify the -l or --log option when running the tasksel.
@@hrmf32 Cool, thanks 👍
Does debian 12 come with pre-configured/installed apparmor and ufw firewall?
not sure about apparmor but ufw doesn't come pre-installed
GUFW, the graphical version of ufw, is available in Synaptic Package Manager. You must install it yourself; it is not-preinstalled. This definitely should have been included in his 12 things to do after installing Debian 12; more important than some of the other things he mentioned.
what scren recorder you use on DEBIAN ? can you make a video about it and the recomended configuration for that ?
I don't use Gnome, how do I install the "normal" version of ff?
Debian newbie here ... Is there a technical reason why you chose x11 for Plasma over Wayland. I've found tons of opinions on the subject, but no clean kill from a technical aspect. Thank you!
For me, Fedora with Wayland doesn't have any screen tearing when there's a lot of action going on. X11 had a lot of it. I was used to it, but never knew why, til I found out about Wayland.
X11 is way better for remoting into a Linux machine vs Wayland. RustDesk, for example, doens't have full support for Wayland, but X11 works just fine.
Hope that answers some or all of your question(s).
@@TheJason13 awesome, thank you!
really great, I am enjoying debian 12. feels way more smooth that my last distro lmde
17:29 I know that you have your script but I would have like to see evolution, the email client. That’s ok I can open it once I install Debian. 😊
I like this channel, reminds me of Wizard car mechanic. Such a peaceful way to talk :)
Nice tutorial. What font do you use in terminal?
I used both vlc and mpv on Linux, for 'recent' AMD-GPU's mpv works much better, vlc has some big problems with those GPU's. I also noticed stability-problems with vlc (crashing when opening a new video from an open instance), this is not just on my system, I heard other people (Chris Titus Tech) point it out too. I had the same video run much better on mpv than vlc. mpv is a great videoplayer with bad marketing, it currently is superior to vlc but most Linux-users and Windows-users don't know how to properly set it up.
Just an fyi; For someone that doesn't know how to use mpv very well there are some nice GUI front-ends for it, such as SMPlayer and Celluloid.
MPV is the best media player.
I will go back to this video when I'll be on Debian 12.
This is so helpful, and makes a lot of things clear
This was an awesome video. Much appreciated.
Does the NVIDIA driver install also add i386 libs, often required by steam? Or do you have to set the alternate architecture?
Why would anyone use other distros other than this one? It looks great and it works. What is the benefit of using something like cachy or nobara vs this? They all blurr together and look the same (if you use KDE on all of them). So what is the real distinction?
I have attempted to follow the advice to use the latest Firefox from flatpak, but it broke my integration with KeePassXC so I went back to Firefox ESR, which shall be "good enough" for real usage.
Awesome and helpful video!
Not sure if due to dual booting, laptop manufacturer (asus), gpu (nvidia 2060-q), but my debian 12 kde plasma had a hard time recognizing the nvidia driver as installed. Running nvidia-smi, I could see it downloaded and installed, but not active. The nvidia app wouldn't recognized the gpu, after following all of the steps you had shared here.
After much researching online, I followed the recommendation to disable safe boot of my laptop, and then it worked. gpu is fully recognized and utilized (tested steam games and get about same performance as in windows 10). Now am struggling to configure options for power plans and gpu profiles which don't show up anywhere. If you could make a video or share recommendations, I will greatly appreciate it.
And am happily following the channel as a new subscriber :D
Thank you. I started with Debian years ago (4 floppy disk install) in a commercial environment and I got into using other distributions, The one I am using now irritates me a bit from their last upgrade. I have to admit I whined a bit about Debian as well because it was so conservative but I loved that it was so rock solid stable. I have to admit I know nothing about Flatpacks, so I have a bit of a learning curve.
Jay, What?! You introduced ME to Pop Os and now you're going to Bookworm ? I feel anxious . xD
Jay, your considered one of my favorites related to Linux stuff. I'd love to hear your take on PureOS but maybe its too early and best wait till its updated with Debian 12.
Debian 12.x is for testing wayland on all programs, but Debian 13 will correct all grafics and will return with 3D Cube for kde
Great video! I´ve installed Debian 12 with the KDE Plasma environment and I don't have the GNOME SOFTWARE, I only have DISCOVER, how do I install GNOME SOFTWARE?
Excellent, clear presentation.Based on your prev video and my desire to switch distros I've jumped in to Deb 12, and...... I'm annoyed. It's Linux and and I'll get everything working, but I'm annoyed there are so many small bits missing out of the box e.g. min/max icons need to be added through the tweak tool, not Settings and I've had to install a package to get autocomplete working for sudo commands. I could go on for pages but hey-ho I'll get there. This is the wife's laptop and most importantly I got Dungeon Keeper II working, which can be tricky, so fairs fair! For me, I'm keeping my main machine on Garuda Linux. Keep the videos coming!
Good Video. A trap for mugs like me! I installed Flatpak, removed Text Editor and Firefox-ESR and then installed the debian versions. I then launched tasksel and added MATE. After a reboot Fierfox-ESR and the debian version of Text Pad had been re-installed. The Flatpak versions were still present so I was remove the debian versions. Fortunately I had not installed Libreoffice.
This could get messy unless there is a way to remove or blacklist apps in the repository.