I’m curious as to what everyone’s reasons are! The Linux desktop has came quite a far ways in the last few years and is improving every day. I’d say for most people, Linux could easily replace Windows as their daily driver nowadays.

  • raven [he/him]@hexbear.netM
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    10 months ago

    I think an overlooked potential userbase for linux is older people who are still on windows XP. I have a few family members on manjaro mate (I know there are better distros, but it’s what I use personally) which is overall more familiar to them than newer windows versions would be. Get it set up with regular BTRFS snapshots and a grub hook, and you can talk them through rolling something back easily.

  • myliltoehurts@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    I mainly use my pc to play games, maybe 90% works fine but that 10% is still quite a lot. Also, even if the games themselves work sometimes extra tools (like overlays) around them don’t, which is the case for my main game.

    Lastly I have struggled with X11 in the past so much with my multiple different resolution and refresh rate monitors working, and it doesn’t seem like Wayland is there yet either.

    I look forward to these things being ironed out, it has come a very long way in the past few years, I do believe a couple more and I’ll be able to switch back to Linux.

  • axont [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    I’ve used Linux and simply had no use for it. My DAW of choice is Ableton Live and there’s no Linux version. I tried running it through windows emulators but that was just finicky. The only big name DAW I know about that has a Linux version is Reaper, which is fine, but I’m not that great with Reaper and the stock fx aren’t great. I don’t know of any free software style DAWs for Linux that would work with vsts and ASIO.

    I did use Ubuntu on a Chromebook for a long time when I was trying to learn more coding, but then I figured out I don’t enjoy coding. That’s probably my main reason for disliking Linux. I don’t wanna mess around in the guts of code, it’s tedious and uninteresting to me. I just want it to work already.

  • GnastyGnuts [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    I feel like I’ll need to switch to linux at some point whether I want to or not, since the assholes at microsoft seem to want to turn Windows into a subscription service, but for now windows is fine and I’m scared of fucking up my computer trying to figure out how to get linux going.

  • mtchristo@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    The file system. I can’t touch that mess. And because I know Linux (Unix) will never adopt the windows file structure. I have given up on the idea of switching to linux, I am too attached to my partitions

    Plus there are no professional grade CAD software for linux

      • mtchristo@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        Having partitions at the top of the hierarchy. C:\ for everything system and finicky programs like adobe suite and autodesk. And other partitions each for a specific aspect.

        D:\ for personal

        E:\ for portable software

        F:\ for work files

        And so on.

        I hate to be dictated where to put my files. I very rarely put files in \my documents or \music folder . I like to install programs wherever I like.

        And removable drives parading as files accessible from inside another file isn’t to my liking too

        You can say I have been brainwashed by windows. But some of its aspects are just superior to me.

    • Zvyozdochka [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.netOP
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      11 months ago

      This is one of the areas I think *NIX blows Windows out of the water. The Windows file system hierarchy is a complete disaster and probably one of the worst things about Windows. Programs just throw their junk wherever they feel like and it makes finding things like config files an absolute nightmare. Is it in %APPDATA%? Nope. Is it in Program Data? also nope. Is it in the Program Files? why is it in the Program Files?!

      • mtchristo@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        I don’t like programs spreading their files everywhere. But I very rarely have to deal with that. Because I am not an OS nerd. I just look for it in forums when needs be. What frustrates me in windows is apps leaving breadcrumbs all over the registry after an uninstall.

  • RaspberryTuba [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    My desktop’s a many-hats workstation. Half of it I could easily do in Linux using the software I use now, half of it I can’t. Do work with it a lot through WSL2 and our servers though.

    And well, my laptop’s an M1 MacBook. It has its own issues. :P

    Main issue on the desktop side though is not having the Adobe Suite, love em or hate em it’s what we use. And, I personally use every major bit of it a lot, and then also do collaborative work with it.

  • indorri [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    I got a new laptop recently and decided to try Linux again. That being said, I ended up jumping into Fedora Sericea to experiment with both the immutable image thing and to try i3/Sway, so we’ll see how that goes

  • Gaming and troubleshooting knowledge. I make my living using my computers, and if something goes wrong and I can’t fix it on the spot, i’m screwed.

    Last time I tried a dual boot, my rig had a wifi dongle that took me about a month to get working. It was great for a time, then all of the sudden it stopped and I couldn’t get it back. Terminal entry stuff should be a rarity too, I’m not afraid to go into it or Windows power shell but it has its own language and I don’t have time to teach myself. It seemed like every time I tried to do something, it NEVER produced the result other people were getting, and then I couldn’t find the error that I was getting.

    I want to switch quite badlly tbh, but I really do need it to be as simple and reliable as Android. Once my home server is built, I’m loading a Linux distro on it to start, then I’ll add a dual boot to my main rig.

  • Blep [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    Gaming. For anything work/school related I’ll use a vm or ssh into the school labs if i think the task will be easier on linux

  • I hate how almost all system programs have weird names/icons. KDE, why is a file explorer named Dolphin?? It has zero link to files to me. And that goes for a lot of default programs making it unintuitive to use.

    Windows uses clear names for everything, why can’t Linux do the same? Or at least, let me rename Dolphin (and others) to a name that makes sense. But that appears to be impossible too.