“Not that difficult” but still more difficult than being able to boot without a separate live USB drive.
Staunchly Peircean pragmaticist linguist, phonetician and semiotician. Does translation studies and comparative literature too when time allows. Politically far left. Localizes FOSS (eg. KDE Plasma, Vivaldi browser). Writes linguistics articles to Finnish Wikipedia.
“Not that difficult” but still more difficult than being able to boot without a separate live USB drive.
True, but… When MBR Grub drops to rescue or doesn’t appear at all, it’s not only difficult (at least for newbies) but somewhat random if you can actually boot a given OS. With EFI Grub, I’ve often managed to boot using BIOS boot override to launch a usable Grub configuration.
That’s usually good enough.
Well, Mint also corrects some of Ubuntu’s mistakes. It doesn’t force feed you Snap, for instance.
That’s nice… if you only plan to run a bare operating system. Try processing some big-ass data files with R.