this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2026
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I posted in official support channels for my flavor of Fedora not having functioning Windows EXE thumbnails, despite having evidence of it working out-of-the-box for other people. It got two replies, "Lol, find another distro if you don't like it," and "Did you install (package that comes pre-installed)?"
In truth, this is how almost every issue I've had with Linux has gone, which is likely why I've had three false starts and gone through six different distros before deciding to stick with this one that is only mildly broken.
I’d love to know what it is about help threads that attracts people who don’t believe in helping.
My experience has been finding a 5 step solution to a problem, with step 3 not working properly and requiring several hours of effort to find a workaround, finding an entirely different solution elsewhere (that also doesn't work), then discovering there's been a flatpack the entire time.
Still have bazzite on my shitty 10 year old laptop because it cannot possibly run windows at this point, but I don't think I'd daily drive it.
I find the best way to get help is to find a good source of documentation, rather than asking questions directly. ArchWiki is great, UbuntuWiki is not bad. There are lots of blogs out there with people writing guides for how to solve issues that they've had, and they're usually really good (but this relies on search engines finding these results).