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theneverfox, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@theneverfox@pawb.social avatar

I’m a pragmatic programmer. I came to Linux because we were doing server-side stuff, I stayed because bash shell is a blunt tool but command line is incoherent

IonAddis, (edited ) in I finally switched back to Linux as my daily driver after a couple of years of being on nothing but Windows.
@IonAddis@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve nibbled at trying to use Linux on my home computer for years and years, but games didn’t have a good track-record in Wine so I never went over.

I recently heard differently, and tried PopOS, and I’ve mostly been able to get all the games I wanted to play to play, mostly using Steam’s own emulation using Proton, and a few using Lutris.

The only two that gave me trouble were Starfield–it had a bug with Nvidia cards and I had to wait for a Linux driver to be updated with a driver fix. (And honestly after playing Starfield, it wouldn’t have mattered if it never played.) And Crusader Kings III…but only if I had it playing natively on Linux, as it’s supposed to be able to. It kept constantly crashing if I clicked on a character portrait. When I switched to playing it on Proton (so emulating Windows) it’s been rock solid.

I’ve played No Man’s Sky, Cyberpunk 2077, Rimworld, Control, Alan Wake II, Baldur’s Gate 3, and Valheim all successfully. (And Starfield and Crusader Kings III after some troubleshooting.) Those are modern enough that I don’t feel any more disadvantaged gaming on Linux than I did on Windows (accounting for my last-gen hardware and such.)

Honeybee,

www.protondb.com is worth a look. It shows the state of games using Proton and people list their tweaks to make games work. You can filter it to only show Nvidia GPU’s on PopOS as an example too. To find tweaks more applicable to your system.

Flaky,
@Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

I’ve been playing Cyberpunk 2077 on Linux just fine as well, and Forza Horizon 4 (though the Xbox account setup was a rigmarole). Only thing I had to do was use bluetoothctl to set up my Xbox Series X/S controller, as it uses Bluetooth to connect and it doesn’t work with KDE’s Bluetooth setting GUI.

GlenTheFrog, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@GlenTheFrog@lemmy.ml avatar

Interesting how there’s so many answers here, but no mention of the one I came here for (and I thought would be most popular) : ricing.

I got into Linux when I saw screenshots of all the cool desktops people made with KDE, XFCE, and tiling window managers. Even Gnome looked sleek and minimal. After a while I got bored of ricing but I stayed for the ease of use as a developer

furycd001,
@furycd001@lemmy.ml avatar

Ricing is great, but it’s probably not a thing that makes a whole lot of people switch to Linux…

regbin_, in what caused you to get into Linux?

Minecraft. I wanted host a dedicated Minecraft server so I rented a VPS and needed a free, lightweight OS. I’ve been tinkering with Linux ever since.

I love Linux and Windows, I wouldn’t trade one for the other.

berryjam, in what caused you to get into Linux?

Little Brother by Cory Doctorow

___, in I finally switched back to Linux as my daily driver after a couple of years of being on nothing but Windows.

I’ve been daily driving Debian with cinnamon on top. The only thing keeping my windows partition going is lack of HDR support and horrific Wayland nvidia support.

possiblylinux127,

Both of those features are only starting to make appearance in newer software

LeFantome,

Are you using Mint ( LMDE ) or running Cinnamon on Debian directly?

___,

Used to use LMDE but moved to Debian to get 12 early.

Wooki, in what caused you to get into Linux?

Username and password.

tkn, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@tkn@startrek.website avatar

Back when, after the world didn’t end after Y2K got patched and saved it, I was getting tired of Windows and none of my Macs were up-to-date enough to handle my writing workload, I gave Caldera OpenLinux a shot. Ended up compiling everything myself and used that for two years. Had a copy of MetaFrame laying around from a completed project, so I installed it on Windows 2000, and served Office apps over the network so I could use Word in Linux. I’ve had something running Linux since.

stellarforce, in Why didn't anyone remind me the dual booting exists?

I only boot windows for Fortnite and The Crew 2 because of BS DRM. Everything else runs great.

cows_are_underrated, in How to see enabled services that have been stopped [systemd]

Don’t you start a service with system tl servicename?

luthis,

Yes,

systemctl start [servicename]

But I wanted to see what I have stopped and not started again

cows_are_underrated,

OK, that’s nothing I can help you with.

BCsven, in Linux Sound Device Manager

As Chais mentioned use that, but also Gnome has volume per app in sound settings I believe…once the app is playing sound.

Grenfur,

I think that it does as of gnome 43+. Oddly enough Pop_OS ships with gnome 42.5. Which seems to have been the issue.

toastal, in what caused you to get into Linux?

Two friends in college recommened it while I was sick of Windows bloat/tracking & setting up programming tools seemed a lot easier

thepiguy, (edited ) in what caused you to get into Linux?

I used Linux on my jailbroken Chromebook during school before and I slowly started using more and more of wsl when that came out.

Then one day a windows update which started automatically on my laptop ended up wiping the encryption keys, I lost all my data including a lot of organised financial documents. This happened while I was having trouble with wsl where it would just delete itself on my pc. Then there was the issue of my pc having an English international keyboard which I was unable to remove and windows kept switching me to it every 2 minutes. Which makes programming harder due to how it handles inverted commas. I ended up doing some regedit to remove it, but then all windows system apps stopped working, including settings. And guess what, there was now an update ready which I could not skip because settings won’t open. And did I mention my laptop wiped itself again?

I did not have a single issue since I switched about 4 years ago, I never looked back. Not even for gaming, I exclusively use Linux and I am proud of it. And this is saying a lot, because I always mess up my system when doing random experiments for fun, but there is also always a clear way out. (I use arch btw, and rtfm really helps a lot)

FractalsInfinite, in what caused you to get into Linux?

I got this incredibly busted hand-me-down that was having issues running windows, so I installed Linux mint on it and then distro hopped until I started daily driving arch on a new machine.

Hexarei, in what caused you to get into Linux?
@Hexarei@programming.dev avatar

Back in the distant past of 2008, a RuneScape player by the name of Icedpizza thought my complaints about driver problems on older hardware would be easily solved by this incredible thing I’d never heard of called Ubuntu. Downloaded 8.04 Hardy Heron and my life has never been the same since.

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