just about everything you want. Monjoro does support snaps and flatbacks. I found that sometimes they can be a little tricky to get installed, but for the most part it was pretty straightforward. The one thing that I've noticed about Monjoro is that you have to stay on top of the updates or even a straight Arch base. You have to stay on top of the updates. An example is I was thinking about just reinstalling Monjoro on my main machine. When I had a problem, I broke it. It wasn't Monjoro's fault. So I pulled my USB, put it in, and installed it. Everything went fine. Then the ISO was too old for them to update to the current one. So I would have to have gone and downloaded the new version to get it to work because I was telling Larry, I've had about four gigs of updates over the two and a half, three months. So you definitely got to stay on top of that. As far as the installer, I agree with you. The Monjoro installer is not as user friendly as Ubuntu or Ubuntu MATE or Mint. It just (32/41)
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