• interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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    23 hours ago

    Ok, what I am hearing is Nixos but with an installer like this

    Rufus ISO to usb stick stick usb stick into computer press magical button to boot usb <-- this should be the most difficult part of the process Screen appears, least amount of text possible Ask only the important questions, on a single screen

    then one last big scary page “this will erase everything on your computer”

    Check “I understand” then press"ERASE BUTTON" (or cancel and reboots)

    then it reboots and everything your average grandmother needs right there a google button an office button and that’s pretty much it

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOP
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      2 hours ago

      Yeah basically, a turn key solution where your machine gets wiped and imaged with a Linux distro that does all the basic stuff most people need would be an ideal solution. A good way to look at it would be making sort of a Linux based console for non technical users as opposed to a general purpose computer. Tech people want the latter, but non technical users just want a reliable tool that can reliably handle a few tasks.

    • balsoft@lemmy.ml
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      20 hours ago

      Hmm, I’ll pitch this idea to a couple of Nixy lfriends, maybe we can hack something together. Also throw a Linux install party!

      • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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        8 hours ago

        Cool, so we need two things, The most streamlined installer possible. “Grandma’s Universal Nix.Conf”

        The installer should be written using 4th grade simple english, no jargon

        In the top right corner there should be a language selector.

        There should be only one page of questions.

        The installer should work completely offline.

        The installer should detect all peripherals and modify the nix file accordingly.

        The second page should only be tge warning about erasing everything

        The installer should detect if a nixos installation already exist. If it does, then offer the user to repair the bootloader

        Optionally, the installer coukd detect a windows installation. Check the amount of free space left on the drive.

        In this case instead of a wipe, offer to shrink the windows partition and install nixos in the liberated space. Install a bootloader setup for dual boot. Auto mount the ntfs partition and place a shortcut to the c:\user folder on the desktop.

        • balsoft@lemmy.ml
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          6 hours ago

          I think we can be even simpler than that. Don’t ask any questions. Simply generate the hardware-configuration.nix and have a single configuration.nix that is unchanged:

          • Some easy-to-use and simple DE. I’m thinking something like lxqt or xfce, maybe Pantheon - but that would be more familiar to Mac users than Windows. KDE seems way too complicated to just have it in configuration.nix without touching it, and it can sometimes break on updates.
          • Chromium (with pre-installed ublock origin)
          • Libreoffice
          • Some flatpak store (so that people can install apps without touching configuration.nix)
          • Make a simple “update” app that just pops up once in a couple weeks or so, prompts you to click a button and then runs npins update and nixos-rebuild boot, and finally annoys you until you reboot (it should also update to the next stable channel when that becomes available, and make that a big deal so that a user understands it might change some of their workflows)
          • Set up the bootloader so that if a generation “fails” (some script in the autostart of the DE doesn’t set a flag somewhere) on the next boot it boots a previous generation, kinda like Android’s A/B slot system but better. I don’t think systemd-boot allows this sort of thing, but I think it’s possible with a GRUB script
          • Maybe add a shortcut to open tmate and copy the URL to clipboard, so that you can send it someone in the know and they can help you troubleshoot
          • Finally, use impermanence to make sure everything outside /home, /nix, and wherever flatpak are stored, is wiped on every reboot and recreated from the generation, so that “reboot it” is a viable troubleshooting strategy.
          • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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            5 hours ago

            Sounds reasonnable,

            Installed should be downloaded by going to grandmasnixos.com On the front page, a single click starts to download a single file, that contains everything It is a tailored rufus executable with the ISO that contains everything to make it to first desktop boot When download ends, no internet connection will be required to make it to grandmasnixos desktop

            When the file is clicked and a usb stick has been inserted beforehand, the grandmasnixos ISO is preselected, rufus autochooses the usb stick

            User only needs to press “start”

            The motherboard version is checked against a lookup table, and the user is told

            Reboot computer a press $KEY_TO_USB_BOOT and choose to boot the usb key

            Installation is a single screen that says “This will erase everything on this computer, to continue, click the checkbox below” [ ] I understand this will erase everything on my computer buttons below [ ERASE AND INSTALL GRANDMASNIXOS ] or [ CANCEL AND REBOOT] (first button only clickable if the checkbox is checked)

            (there is an “Options and settings” button somewhere, it does not have to be clicked to continue)

            No further user interaction until it boots into a working desktop

            There is no password by default, the desktop auto-logs in, no remote access is possible until a password is set, sudo works passwordless

            There should be no updating unless enabled, no telemetry, no call home of any kind, the system should be able to work offline and forever without an internet access and never nag the user.

            The desktop environment should be something occasional win10 using grandma will not get lost in

            Taskbar at bottom Desktop that you can dump files onto and start stuff by clicking those files systray on the right Large font start menu Start menu includes a single settings panels that does everything a user needs (passwords, wifi, power management, update, timezone, language, locale, host and domain name, remote desktop etc…)

            taskbar should have pinned the most important apps file browser, browser, calculator, notepad, word-like and maybe a mail client maybe a zoom? client or something equivalent but open source and usable ?

            If updating is turned on, it should be very conservative, updates hand curated by grandmasnixos, basically never uses software that hasn’t been proven rock solid for at least 6 months. Rolling back any update should be one-click-trivial

            On first boot there could be an “out of box experience” screen that allows setting up

            wifi password region/timezone/locale/language power settings host and domain name password enable updates enable remote desktop and services open easy user guide

            So total, from download to desktop it should be 8 clicks total counting press F9 during boot as a “click”

            • balsoft@lemmy.ml
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              4 hours ago

              There should be no updating unless enabled <…> and never nag the user.

              I disagree, at that point you might as well continue using Win10. Security updates are the #1 reason to do this. Most computer use nowadays is networked (actually in a browser), and it’s super important we keep that updated.

              If updating is turned on, it should be very conservative, updates hand curated by grandmasnixos, basically never uses software that hasn’t been proven rock solid for at least 6 months

              Eh, this sounds like a lot of work. Probably just use the stable channels, and only manually test when switching to a new stable channel.

              Rolling back any update should be one-click-trivial

              Agreed, should also be very obvious (like a label on the desktop that says “Issues after update?” and gives you a button to roll back and reboot)

              The desktop environment should be something occasional win10 using grandma will not get lost in

              This is the main question IMHO. I’ve not used any DEs for a while, so don’t really know which one would fit this best while also being simple and robust.