Windows 10 is close to being dead now, with support ending this year. So why not try out Linux? Instead of getting a whole new system and having to deal with the increasing amount of AI junk and adverts in Windows 11.
Mind if I ask some things? If you don’t want to try again, you can ignore this.
Did this happen while you were trying it out on the USB, or had the installation finished and you had removed the USB and restarted?
Were the nvidia d rivers installed in the driver manager? Was there any difference with the open source drivers?
Was secure boot disabled in your BIOS?
Was it a laptop or desktop? In case of laptop it might have been using battery saver mode. installing https://github.com/linrunner/TLP might have helped setting it up properly if you don’t want to handle it yourself.
What graphics card do you have? I can check if there are any compatibility issues, though there shouldn’t be unless it is decades old, in which case you might want to try out one of the more old hardware compatibility focused Linux distros.
Did this happen while you were trying it out on the USB, or had the installation finished and you had removed the USB and restarted?
After I had finished the installation and restarted
Were the nvidia d rivers installed in the driver manager? Was there any difference with the open source drivers?
I don’t know, I don’t use an Nvidia card
Was secure boot disabled in your BIOS?
Yes
Was it a laptop or desktop? In case of laptop it might have been using battery saver mode. installing https://github.com/linrunner/TLP might have helped setting it up properly if you don’t want to handle it yourself.
It’s a desktop PC
What graphics card do you have? I can check if there are any compatibility issues, though there shouldn’t be unless it is decades old, in which case you might want to try out one of the more old hardware compatibility focused Linux distros.
Intel Integrated Graphics 4000 (on a i7-3770 CPU)
(I’m still probably not going to try again for the time being, but I figured I’d answer your questions anyways)
Sounds like something went wrong with the installation. Mint is overall more performant than windows. What slowed down?
I don’t know the terminology but it slowed down like how a video game slowed down, everything was super choppy as if it had decreased framerate
Mind if I ask some things? If you don’t want to try again, you can ignore this.
Did this happen while you were trying it out on the USB, or had the installation finished and you had removed the USB and restarted?
Were the nvidia d rivers installed in the driver manager? Was there any difference with the open source drivers?
Was secure boot disabled in your BIOS?
Was it a laptop or desktop? In case of laptop it might have been using battery saver mode. installing https://github.com/linrunner/TLP might have helped setting it up properly if you don’t want to handle it yourself.
What graphics card do you have? I can check if there are any compatibility issues, though there shouldn’t be unless it is decades old, in which case you might want to try out one of the more old hardware compatibility focused Linux distros.
After I had finished the installation and restarted
I don’t know, I don’t use an Nvidia card
Yes
It’s a desktop PC
Intel Integrated Graphics 4000 (on a i7-3770 CPU)
(I’m still probably not going to try again for the time being, but I figured I’d answer your questions anyways)