Jayb151,

I just installed kubuntu on my daily driver. That didn’t go super well so I tried endeavor, also didn’t go well. It could be kde plasma, but it did not feel like Linux is ready to compete for something that is ready out the box.

That said, I run endeavor on my little netbook tablet and it works a wonder, so no idea. I couldn’t even get steam to load on my desktop for some reason. I tried Linux on my desktop for half a day, then decided to run back to Win11 with my tail between my legs. It just wasn’t with the hassle. Steam didn’t work, permissions for my second hard drive for Plex were messed up. I just didn’t want to have to figure it out. I’m back comfy with windows, and just experimenting with my netbook for the time being.

I really wanted Linux to stick this time… Oddly, I was using Ubuntu on my daily driver back in 2012 without a problem.

AVengefulAxolotl,

Its crazy how polarizing the Linux experience can be. Was it a desktop or laptop? For me it was just a few clicks (Manjaro then Endeavour) on the first try and be done with it on my desktop PC. Also with dual booting.

Hopefully next time you will have more luck! “Sadly” I cannot go back to windows now, I got Linux-pilled. Linux just treats my right without any Microsoft ads.

Jayb151,

Yes, I’m keeping kubuntu on my laptop because it works great. My desktop is going to have to be Windows for now

BigTrout75,

Nope. I have to know how fix everyone else’s computer.

django,
@django@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I just tell everyone, that i can only help with Linux.

ISOmorph,

You’re a nicer person than I am. Being able to (lie and) say “no clue how that works on windows, I use linux” is a freaking blessing

mateomaui,

No, I still need it for non-linux programs with no suitable alternative.

No, I’m not listing those for anyone to suggest inferior replacements. It’s a fact, not a debate.

moog,

I wish. Unfortunately I’m to locked into Ableton to switch. Wish they’d make it compatible with Linux :/

petsoi,
@petsoi@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Ableton Not sure if it helps, but there is Wine support for Ableton Live: appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=applica…

mvirts,

So done, except when my employer uses windows 😹

GluWu,

As soon as gaming is mostly flawless and similar or better performance than windows, I’ll be 100% over. Gaming has come so far, all the way into the 2010s the only games on Linux were like Portal, HL, minecraft, and KSP. But it’s still got a little ways to go.

ProgrammingSocks,

It’s always worth remembering that Linux is not a product, it is free software. So if you are switching you can’t go into it with the mindset of “somebody better fix this or I’m leaving” because there is nobody that will feel that pressure or care. You have to use Linux because it’s something you want to do.

WeLoveCastingSpellz,

If you are on amd, that already is the case. On nvidia however things are a lil different, not bad though.

baldturkeyleg, (edited )

If that’s the only barrier, you should try again. It’s further along than you think. Thanks in large part to the Steam Deck, compatibility is miles better. I have run into 2 games since I switched 1.5 years ago that won’t run - both are EA titles (shocked Pikachu face). That was my reason not to switch too.

GluWu,

I’m well aware of how far out has come, I was a second batch pre-order for the steamdeck. And yes, just in the time it’s been out, Linux gaming has come sooo far. For me, all of my games don’t run seamlessly and as well, some do still just shit themselves, so I still keep a win10 boot drive for gaming. Once major support for win10 ends I think Linux gaming will be even better and my gaming will finally be all Linux.

Jako301,

You don’t play many competitive multiplayer titles then. Anticheat us always a pain.

Battleye and Easy Anti Cheat are Linux native, but just cause that’s the case doesn’t mean they will work. Half of the games using them either never had an official linux version or are currently broken again.

A few games using Xigncode and nProtect work too, but there the number is even lower.

Punkbuster worked on wine for 5 years but often needs to be installed manually.

As for the more aggressive ones like Riccochet and Vanguard, you can’t even run them in a VM environment.

frauddogg,
@frauddogg@lemmygrad.ml avatar

Unfortunately, I can’t be. None of my creative tools work on Linux, and the alternatives all have less functionality and/or a steeper learning curve.

7fb2adfb45bafcc01c80,

Yup! Since 1993… Started Linux on my desktop and haven’t looked back.

jimbolauski,

I have a work Windows laptop that I refer to as my time machine. If not for having to use it for time sheets, email, word, and PowerPoint fun I’d kick the habit all together.

HulkSmashBurgers,

Hell yeah I am. I’ve been using linux since 2019. I bought a dell laptop and installed manjaro.

I recently discovered GNU Guix and decided to install it onto an old desktop (built in 2009) I had laying around. I used a system crafters custom installer and the accompanying video to do a non-libre kernel install. I’ve been liking Guix and I think I’m going to install it onto my laptop and make it my daily driver.

PlutoniumAcid,
@PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world avatar

The sheer amount of tech lingo in your post is exactly why most people won’t switch. We just want to use the damn thing, not tinker with it all night.

youngyoshieboy,

Done with it since I graduated, from then 4 years with Linux and still go on

neytjs,

Yep. Windows XP was my last Windows and when it became obsolete I permanently switched to Linux Mint (without dual-booting). Everything that I use has worked very well. I’ve never even thought about switching back to Windows.

twinnie,

I like the idea of ditching Windows because of all the telemetry but I just need a machine that’s going to do what I need it to do without a fucking battle. Everything on Linux is just so difficult, it’s like every time I give it a go I wind up spending hours trying to figure out how to do something that would take ten seconds on Windows. I wanted to make a desktop shortcut that would run a script with root privileges. On Windows that’s right click, drag, and select the option to make a shortcut. Takes a few seconds. Took me ages to figure it out in Ubuntu, mostly because it wasn’t working as it should. Yesterday I did an apt upgrade on another machine and it wiped out the WiFi. I’m still working on fixing that and now I’m looking into compiling my own drivers.

Guenther_Amanita,

I felt the same when I started using Linux.
My whole computing experience was on Windows, and when I switched, I expected Linux to be working the same and being a 1:1 replacement.

Just don’t expect it to be the same.
Even if it sometimes looks like it (e.g. Mint oder KDE-based distros) it absolutely isn’t similar.

People don’t have the same expectations on MacOS, so why should we on Linux?

And if you really don’t like it at all, then stay on Windows. No shame at all. Use the right tool for the right task.

TrickDacy,
@TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

a fucking battle

Interesting, I feel like this describes what windows itself does to a pc

It’s definitely not normal to lose wifi working drivers with an update. I would say it’s very rare in fact. As far as what you’re saying takes ten seconds on windows, no it doesn’t. You would still need to run as administrator and (I think) type your password, which probably takes longer than opening a terminal and typing sudo

WeLoveCastingSpellz,

On linux you also have to just click drag and choose “make a link”.

TheGrandNagus,

Funny, for me it’s windows that I’m constantly battling.

Be it having to constantly restart and do updates that take forever.

Searching online and downloading then clicking through installers for software I want, rather than just going into an app store.

Having to manually remove ads from my start menu

Remove as much telemetry as I can (that of course accidentally gets reset by some updates)

I have dark mode set, yet so many programs (even first party MS stuff that’s part of the OS!) doesn’t respect it, so I get randomly blinded at night

Each individual app running their own updater services in the background

Having to remember to run disk cleanup every once in a while because temporary files and old update files hang around for ages, eventually slowing my system down and taking dozens of GB of space

There are some good things - Win11’s window tiling is genuinely excellent, for example. But man, overall, Windows is just difficult and tedious to use. The only reason people use it is because it’s the default. Not because it’s good or it’s easy.

Pantherina, (edited )

Opposite.

Fedora with KDE is a Pain, and GNOME is simply underpowered a lot.

Installing GrapheneOS or programming a microcontroller just didnt work. I have no idea of udev rules and these things should work better. (Tbh I will try to fix the packages)

Also processes crashing just often freeze my entire everything. No seperation, no ctrl+alt+del task manager which nearly always works. The task manager is a normal app, and it just doesnt start if the desktop is down.

Virt-manager has not enough RAM? Yeah, Plasma crashes and I need a hard reboot. Yay.

Meanwhile Windows sucks, but it works. Also it is better for

  • collaborative normie documents
  • office: easy presentations (again, collaboration), excel: easy graphs with a UI that makes sense
  • arcgis: qgis is better on surface, but all the underground transformation tools are so messed up.

Many things in Uni make me get insane on Linux. Being the only one literally learning another program, while learning a bit of that proprietary license garbage too, is burnout and I will probably fail in the “recognize this button in arcGis and explain how to do x” exam.

Titou,
@Titou@feddit.de avatar

used to do collaborative works on Linux, never had any issues

mariusafa,

I’m done both with windows and people that develope software that’s only compatible with windows. Kind of c# shitters.

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