Personally I haven’t. While Linux is imperfect, choosing the right distro makes the rest of the experience straightforward. And with it’s whole complexity, I find Linux more user friendly than Windows. Even driver issues, broken shadow file ownership and KDE specifics only made me more confident about my choice to use Linux after I solved everything.

  • NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    Isn’t everything in dot files in home? Create package lists and export them, add dot files.

    Or keep home on a seperate partition or drive.

    New installation, import package list.

    This seems straight forward to me.

    • Dariusmiles2123@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      I’ve never tried it, even if I know people are using it.

      Still it’s not an easy solution like the one people are using when upgrading from an old to a new iPhone.

      I know Linux doesn’t have Apple behind, but it’s better than Windows/Mac in every other way, so why not try to improve this?

      • NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        I am not sure whats to improve, it is just a situation where it is easy if you know how.

        As for the iphone, the amount of trouble that process has caused me is not trivial. Things are not the same! I would put it as more complicated. People are just used to dealing with it. Part of the issue with the iphone is applications and Icloud crap.

    • jbrains@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      Yes, but to folks accustomed to using SuperDuper to create bootable backups, it does not seem so straightforward.

        • jbrains@sh.itjust.works
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          4 hours ago

          Easy? Is this the kind of easy that’s “easy once you understand”?

          I want to be able to back up, not earn an undergraduate degree in how to back up.

          • NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip
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            4 hours ago

            I am not sure how much easier Clonezilla can be. It walks you through every step, waits for answers and confirms what you want done.

            Yes its easier if you know how, but it certainly is not hard.

            As opposed to apple, which makes cloning an entire disk (including boot) a lot more challenging if not impossible now that they sign the system volume.

            So in that regard, for a full disk image backup, Clonezilla (with linux or windows) is a lot easier.

            • jbrains@sh.itjust.works
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              3 hours ago

              How curious.

              I am now trying my first backup. There were extra steps and I think I did it correctly, but the web site inundated me with details in a way that Shirt Pocket did not do with SuperDuper.

              I haven’t used Mac OS regularly since about 2018, so I take you at your word that backing up isn’t as easy on Mac OS as it used to be.

              With any luck, this just works. There is room for a simpler and gentler introduction to this. Maybe I can publish one.

              • NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip
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                3 hours ago

                OK, I want to be helpful. Are you trying to back up the entire disk? Like Clone one drive to a file or another drive?

                Or are you wanting to create backups of the data and user information?

                • jbrains@sh.itjust.works
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                  48 minutes ago

                  First, thank you for trying.

                  There’s what I want and there’s what I’m trying to do. 😉

                  Waving my magic wand, I’d like a bootable backup of my laptop’s internal hard drive. This is what SuperDuper does. I would like it to be straightforward: I issue one command, then I can boot from the external hard disk to which I have backed up. For bonus points, restore is merely backup in the other direction.

                  That is what I’d like.

                  I’m cloning a drive with Clonezilla and tomorrow I’ll try to boot to the backup drive. I would like to understand how restore works, but frankly, I’m not optimistic and I’m not currently eager to risk screwing up my laptop’s internal hard disk.