Fizz,
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

I was on windows and I was forced to update and then it bricked my computer and I had to reinstall windows except when I did it asked me for a windows license key. I tried everything to recover my license key but wasn’t able to.

This was around the time linus texh tips was teasing his upcoming month on linux series so I was like fuck it I’ll give it a go. Spent a week on mint and wifi was broken then tried Endeavor, Garuda and fedora and settled on manjaro. Manjaro was amazing to me. Everything worked out of the box and kde plasma looked so clean and I could set it up exactly how I wanted.

Then I watched linus tech tips video on linux and I was like wtf how did he have such a bad experience is he dumb?

LinuxSBC,

He’s pretty much the quintessential QA tester. He wants to do things his way, regardless of whether or not the OS wants him to do that. He’s usually skilled enough to fix anything he messes up, but he doesn’t know enough about Linux to do that, so he ends up breaking things. I feel like most people have a better experience than he did, but his technique uncovered a ton of bugs and usability issues that significantly improved the Linux desktop to have fixed.

Fizz,
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

Knows enough to be dangerous and confident enough to dive in head first. Deadly combo

30p87,

So basically the Dunning Kruger effect.

Noctechnical,

He wanted to do things his way

This quote alone tells you how Linus acts

30p87,

So basically the Dunning Kruger effect.

the16bitgamer,
@the16bitgamer@lemmy.world avatar

Love those videos, mostly because it is my perfect argument on why the Linux Desktop isn’t ready yet.

Was Linus an idiot in those videos? Yes, Luke even said so, stating he installed in and in the month chose not to use his machine (recent wan show)

However it shows, just how easy it is for a novice to break the distro, and how much work is needed to get it to the point of Windows for general population usability. Granted the issues Linus had with POP_OS was dumb and shouldn’t have happened. But it showed me that Manjaro existed, which I am using to this day.

Fizz,
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

I think linux desktop is ready for open minded people who see interested in a new way of doing things. I don’t think it’s ready for people who can’t use a computer or troubleshoot. Windows breaks often so I’m not as harsh when I see linux break.

the16bitgamer,
@the16bitgamer@lemmy.world avatar

Agreed, I am surprised how often file explorer crashes on Win 10. Or I need to restart windows for random reasons since moving to Linux. Its to the point I want to gut my desktop and put Manjaro on it too.

Compared to when I started using Linux in the late 2000’s, Linux has matured to an unbelievable point. To someone who is even slightly interested in learning, its perfectly usable as a Windows replacement… depending on your Distro, Desktop Environment, etc.

It’s this depends which makes recommending Linux hard for me, since when a problem occurs, I find its not as easy to troubleshoot especially with how many flavours of Linux exists.

Lifecoach5000,

I’m just now getting into it. Set up a laptop with Ubuntu running Plex media server. Been taking some real baby steps watching basic Linux tutorials.

It did take me about 4 hours to figure out how to mount an ext HDD so that Plex would have proper permissions to find the media. It was very rewarding to finally frickin resolve that! I’m still gonna keep pecking away and learn as I go while watching I keep watching tutorials.

unwantedpamphlet,
@unwantedpamphlet@mastodon.social avatar

@Lifecoach5000 @Altomes just a heads up, if you add something and plex doesn’t see it, it’s permissions. It’s always permissions. I’ve been using Linux and plex for years and I always forget permissions. Or I used to before I wrote a script to fix it before I realize I forgot it.

Cotillion189,
@Cotillion189@lemmy.world avatar

Windows.

kent_eh, (edited )

In my case, specifically Windows 95.

FirstWizardZorander,

98 for me. One day, it borked the file system one last time. Never looked back. Have to use Win 10 at work, though, and I hate how cumbersome and slow it is

Opafi,

Same. More specifically windows 8.

andrew,
@andrew@lemmy.stuart.fun avatar

In my case, specifically tiling windows. I use i3, btw.

CrabAndBroom,

Microsoft has been trying to make me hate computers since the 90s lol

PerogiBoi,
@PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca avatar

I used a bootable Ubuntu usb to save the contents of my windows hard drive after it failed. I successfully brought the files onto an external drive and installed Linux after. It was so fun. It still is.

lnxtx,
@lnxtx@feddit.nl avatar

Yeah. On the same hardware, Linux (Knoppix back then) worked much better than Windows (the 98/XP era).

FlappyBubble,

Used to use Windows 98 SE. First introduced to Mandrake Linux around 2000. Had no Internet, got the install media from a friend of my father. Barely got it working and couldn’t read English. Went back to Windows XP. Ubuntu came. Began to use it around 2008 for a few years. Back to windows briefly and then Raspberry Pi was launched. Switched to Linux permanently.

Almost went back in 2013 due to Lightroom, gaming and a few work related medical software.

Began to grasp FOSS maturely in 2014 and switched to alterbative software. When Steam launched Proton there was no turning back.

I was obsessed but it has come and gone. Now I’m a bit of a nuissance to friends sllwly switching them to alternative software. My partner gets the worst treatment. Now she uses hardware security keys, assymetric keys auth etc

vaidooryam,

where do you use asymmetrical keys for auth ?

FlappyBubble,

Everywhere possible. For SSH sessions, logins on the Internet. PGP and chat apps. All the time.

BannanaLama,

It all started with my own Minecraft Server and an an offer on V-Servers at my Hoster at the time. Started to learn what SSH is, how to install Java and run my own Minecraft Server. And now I am running my Homelab on Kubernetes and do it for work. Life is funny

blujan,

I was 11 and had issues with bad ram sectors so Windows would shut down every few minutes.

I read up on it and used an Ubuntu live USB, back when unity was new, I loved that it wouldn’t have problems with my ram so I installed it and started distro hopping.

I now don’t have a computer so I only use Windows at work.

PoisonedPrisonPanda,

I was fucking around with my windows pc.

And then i found out that you can fuck more around in linux, and that was the story of my first ubuntu iso burned on a cd.

I had no clue about anything but was blown away by something “different”

Zoop,

That is exactly my story, too! I’m glad we both found our way here like that. Fun stuff :)

GlenTheFrog,
@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…

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

The desire to learn something beyond DOS, beyond just BBS’, beyond RIME and FIDOnet email, wanting a UNIX like operating system that was like what I had at university, to be able to natively run talk, ytalk, IRC, ICB, Gopher, FTP, and NNTP.

onlinepersona,

I recognise those acronyms. They are from a bygone era my ancestors used to mention to me in hushed tones.

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Ok, see here now… :P

cows_are_underrated,

I am interested in tech, and also watched a lot of YouTube videos about different topics. Somehow I realised how much data windows sends. Since I was planning to buy myself a new pc(my old one was a Celsius W370 from 2009 that took 20 minutes to boot windows) I decided to not install Windows on this pc but to install Linux. I went the classic way and chose Mint with cinnamon.

That was about 1.5 years ago.

I wouldn say that I’m somehow obsessed with Linux and there’s definitely no way back. I got completely sucked into FOSS. My next phone will be a Google pixel where I will install Graphene OS on. Fuck big tech.

Altomes,

Huge on lineage myself, think its dope

indigojasper,
@indigojasper@kbin.social avatar

i came because of microsoft paranoia, then stayed for the customization

Bene7rddso,

Usually it’s the other way around

endhits,

Saw what windows 11 was going to be like and figured I should bail and learn Linux before I had to move over. Been just under 2 years on Linux. Don’t regret my decision.

init,

Same. I heard MS was checking out the possibility of adding advertising in the file explorer. I don’t know the veracity of the reports or where I saw them, but it spooked me enough that I knew I needed to get started familiarizing myself with something else before I had no options.

I’ll never go back. Ever.

AphoticDev,
@AphoticDev@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Windows. Windows caused me to get into it.

onlinepersona,

It BSOD’ed its last screen.

Fuck that OS.

Bananable,

Just windows, I had windows 10 installed on my laptop and was constantly fighting with windows update so when the system broke (wouldn’t boot) I finally installed Ubuntu. These days I use arch BTW.

Atemu,
@Atemu@lemmy.ml avatar

And now you get to be the only one who breaks your system on a regular basis ;)

CCatMan,

Also, now leaving a system running for months on end without windows updating on its own is possible.

yrmyli,
@yrmyli@sopuli.xyz avatar

Windows 10/11 happened.

pineapplelover,

Windows 7 was cool, windows 10 was trash, didn’t think it could get any worse until windows 11. Holy fuck

rattking,
@rattking@lemmy.ml avatar

Windows 9x was really, really unstable. I couldn’t believe how much more stable and convenient (packages managers) this free OS created by volunteers was. And around 2000, once I started building machines with Linux support in mind it’s been all I run. I’d say I’m obsessed.

pg_jglr,

Exactly the same story for me, the free Linux cost didn’t hurt either.

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