It is written in the Book of Linux on the desktop:
Ubuntu is an ancient african word meaning,
unfortunately I can not install Debian.
But Debian really is what I need.
You, a new Linux admin, face a ton of Linux installations,
with many users, and no organisation. You are destined to
recover the chaos. Your hour of destiny has come. For the
sake of us all: Go bravely and send back patches!
Obviously this doesn't help, so here's a short description about what these things are for
ubuntu-remove-snap-firefox
remove snap from your Ubuntu, and install the Firefox Mozilla PPA repository
ubuntu-remove-phased-updates
getting rid of phased updates of Ubuntu (useful if you turn off automatic error reporting, which is not publicly accessible anymore). See comments for reference.
debian-system-zram
install zram, and activate it (50 % of RAM as compressed RAM), check with swapon
or zramctl
debian-system-dmesg
give users a chance to run dmesg
to check if some of their processes did OOM
debian-system-initramfs
enable compression of initramfs, makeing space in /boot
ubuntu-remove-fonts
removes fonts you are not likely to ever need (if you're in Europe)
These are so self explanatory, I will not comment them.
install-edge
install-google-chrome
install-google-earth-pro
install-slack-desktop
install-virtualbox
install-vscode
install-zoom
ubuntu-deluxe
kind of Ubuntu Pro, without the Ubuntu, makes a Debian 12 from your Ubuntu 22.04 (WIP)
apt-history
check which packages have been installed with apt
kexec-reboot
try to reboot to the latest installed kernel (if kexec-tools is installed)
lint-hostname
lint your hostname
ipmi-detect
check if computer has IPMI and what version of it
reduce-bin
use UPX (compression) on known huge binaries
netlimit
limit upload/download speeds on a interface
which-firmware
check which firmware packages should get installed
Another happy customer leaves the building.