Music nerd, in love with the ocean, and very proud Canadian
- 21 Posts
- 45 Comments
I’ll add it to the list. That’s a cool site!
LightOnFootOPMto
Buy Canadian•Weekly recommendations Thread: What Canadian products do you recommend?
4·7 months agoI don’t usually drink tomato (or any) juice on its own, though I do quite like it, but I do occasionally make myself a Caesar. So I might have to try the no name stuff in my next Caesar, though that’ll probably be a while. I usually have one or two in the summer. Probably my favourite cocktail, I just generally prefer straight spirits, wine, or beer.
LightOnFootOPMto
Buy Canadian•Weekly recommendations Thread: What Canadian products do you recommend?
4·7 months agoLove Hardbite chips. I’ve only tried I think their salt and pepper flavour so far but loved the texture of the chips. I’ll be a loyal customer of theirs for sure
LightOnFootOPMto
Buy Canadian•Weekly Recommendations Thread: What Canadian products do you recommend?
2·7 months agoI’ve seen those a few times before but never realized they were Canadian. I’ll have to pick some up
I like that idea, but I feel it’ll be easier to crowdsource that one. I’ll pin a post asking people to name any companies they’re aware of that used to be Canadian but have since moved
Added. Thanks!
LightOnFootOPMto
Buy Canadian•Weekly Recommendations Thread: What Canadian products do you recommend?
1·8 months agoI love Murdoch Mysteries. I’ve seen it several times and met some of the cast at a shooting several years ago. Yannick Bisson (Murdoch) is a really nice guy and quite funny too.
LightOnFootOPMto
Buy Canadian•Weekly Recommendations Thread: What Canadian products do you recommend?
2·8 months agoI’m bad for that, I have to limit myself to once or twice a year
Thanks! I’ve added it to the list
LightOnFootOPMto
Buy Canadian•Weekly Recommendations Thread: What Canadian products do you recommend?
2·8 months agoMy wife has a lot of skin allergies, and the Unscented Company is the only brand we can easily find that works for her. We pretty much have all their products. She definitely recommends them
LightOnFootMto
Buy Canadian•When you start seeing American companies producing ads like this, you know we've made headway and they're taking it seriously. This is damage control. Keep it up and don't fall for this crap.
3·8 months agoI’m not tech savvy but I use an ad blocker. I think most people either don’t know they exist or don’t care.
In the past they’ve had the cheapest tickets to Newfoundland I’ve found, which is where I go every year for my vacation anyway, so since they started flying that way I’ve gone through them. No complaints personally
LightOnFootOPMto
Buy Canadian•Weekly Recommendations Thread: What Canadian products do you recommend?
1·8 months agoI’ve got one too. It’s probably my third or fourth safety razor I’ve tried, and by far my favourite. I’ve got the aluminum one in blue. I got it as a gift, otherwise I probably wouldn’t have spent the money on it. Like you said, you can get good quality safety razors for far cheaper. But this one is definitely very good.
Canadian Brewhouse is pretty good. I’ve been a couple times, they have good deals on specific foods on certain days (wings on Wednesdays, tacos on Tuesdays, etc). They’ve got locations in Ontario, BC, Alberta, and Manitoba I believe.
Nice ideas. I’ll think on it. Thanks
Try asking over at [email protected], you might get more responses there
Furseeable* future
Amazing. Yes, very much so! I like that
I have a list that I just started on my phone of Canadian products to put in an eventual master list post on this community. I’ll add that link to my note



I was in your spot recently so I may relate to your situation better than others. I’ll try to explain it as simply as possible.
Step 1. Pick a distro: Any distro should work, it’s just a matter of what works for you. Are you mostly playing games on it? If so, check out Bazzite. Not gaming much? Maybe try Linux Mint. If you give me your specific use case I could help a bit more with finding a distro.
Step 2. Pick a desktop environment (DE): If you decide on Mint, I’d recommend Cinnamon which should be the first one that pops up on the downloads page (link to downloads page on main screen). It’ll be pretty similar to windows and very user friendly. If you’re going for Bazzite, I’d recommend KDE Plasma, which is also very similar to windows but with more customizability. But if you want, you can look up comparison videos and chose for yourself.
Step 3. Downloading the distro: You’re going to need a clean flash drive/USB stick. Anything that’s currently on it will be wiped so keep that in mind. Either back them up somewhere else or buy a new one. Once you have a flash drive ready to go, you’re going to need to download a program to “flash” the ISO file (basically the OS file) onto the stick. Simply downloading the ISO onto the stick won’t do anything. I like Ventoy as it lets you add multiple ISO files onto it so you can try out a bunch before deciding on one, but Balena Etcher also works. Whichever you choose, download the program and follow the instructions. It should be relatively straightforward but if you get stuck there should be tutorials online, or I can try to help you too. For Ventoy, I believe all you do is download the program, follow the instructions, let it do its thing, and when it’s finished you can add whatever ISO files you want to the flash drive. For Etcher, I think you download the program, then download an ISO file somewhere on your pc, then use the program to choose the flash drive and ISO file, and let it do its thing to flash it.
Step 4. Changing your BIOS settings: Once your flash drive has an ISO file flashed onto it, you’re going to need to edit your BIOS settings. I believe on Windows 11 you can go to Settings > Update & Security > Recovery, then click “Restart now” under Advanced startup, and select Troubleshoot > Advanced options > UEFI Firmware Settings > Restart to access the BIOS (this was from the web, I had to look it up because I couldn’t remember, apologies if it’s slightly inaccurate. Let me know if that doesn’t work). You should be in your BIOS settings now. Use the arrow keys to go to boot settings, turn off secure boot, then find boot order (might be named something slightly different) and make sure USB is first. Then save and exit (probably on the last page), and when the device restarts you should be in the menu for either Ventoy or Balena Etcher, whichever you chose. Select your distro, select boot in normal mode, and then you should get a pop up to install or test out. The rest should hopefully be easy to follow, but if not, let me know and I can try to help. If you have any more questions let me know, or if this was too confusing let me know and I’ll try to clarify