No, quantum computing (at least for now) sucks at the tasks CPUs are great at, so the idea of to have quantum as a support to the CPU, handling complex, heavily paralyzed commoutations, like the GPU does nowdays
I'd recommend Zorin. It has a UI similar to windows, easy to get into, great defaults, and being based on Ubuntu, most help on the internet will work just fine
MIT is basically "do anything you want with it, I don't care". I means some company can reuse it in its closed source projects freely and without notice or royalty.
There are plenty of other licenses that require you to also go open source if you include and/or modify it. Basically "you can use ot however you want, but if you modify it, it has to be open source as well"
I tried it out, and it was so cumbersome to install packages that I gave up. I understand its application in servers, but for home computers it's a pain in the ass
Oh, I didn't know that one, it looks interesting. I was quite hyped with GoboLinux because it tried to mitigate the things that annoy me the most in linux, that's how complex is the installing (and uninstalling, mainly) of programs. I mean, you always have the distros' package managers (apt, pacman, aur, yum, ...), compiling by hand and moving or linking to system folders, downloading a binary, flatpak, snap, brew, appimage. When I get to uninstall a program for some reason, I never know how to do it, because I never remember how I installed it.
I'm trying new distros out. I've been using Zorin (basically Ubuntu) for a long time now and getting tired of it.
I tried NixOS woth Hyprland, but I just could plugins to work on the NixOS' default Hyprland install, and installing things I needed to compile it on NixOS was way too hard, so I gave up.
Tried GoboLinux (very unknown, but very cool) with awesome wm, but nothing fucking worked. The bootloader didn't work, after that it's package manager didn't work, after that the touchpad tap didn't work.
I'll try Manjaro now. It would be cool to get Hyprland to work still.
No, quantum computing (at least for now) sucks at the tasks CPUs are great at, so the idea of to have quantum as a support to the CPU, handling complex, heavily paralyzed commoutations, like the GPU does nowdays