• Casual Apatheist@leminal.space
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    2 months ago

    I actually did it. And I have abysmal knowledge of software but Linux is so fantastic. There isn’t one thing that I can’t do on it if it bothers me enough.

    And even the one proprietary software that I do have to use (for work, plz don’t ask) and comes only on Windows, works without flaw once I configure the WINE environment properly.

    Tried Debian, Manjaro, Linux Mint, MX linux and loved them all. They are all fantastic. Finally settled on Mint (I know) because it is the right balance of stable and updated for me.

  • GreenBeanMachine@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Moved my three laptops to Ubuntu, Mint and Zorrin. A week later I’m still dealing with issues setting them up.

    Ngl, the move is more frustrating than linux nerds would have you believe. But a necessary move and I don’t regret it.

    • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Moved my three laptops to Ubuntu, Mint and Zorrin. A week later I’m still dealing with issues setting them up.

      dunno about zorin, but what’s the issues with ubuntu/mint?

      And yeah, a lot of the time people will oversell the amount of progress made with linux for noobs, it’s come a long way and those OSes *should* be foolproof, but tricky and unsupported hardware be tricky and unsupported.

      Doesn’t help that some things are massive traps, like dual graphics card when at least one of them is NVidia, removing support for existing things via early wayland adaptation, etc etc.

      “But it works on my thinkpad! ™️” Well , not everyone bought a thinkpad/found one next to the trash.

      • GreenBeanMachine@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Setting up my dev environment took a while and some troubleshooting.

        The last issue that I can’t seem to solve is streaming 4k videos in 265 encoding from my cheap network drive. I have all the codecs, and tried multiple different players, messed with vlc setting, no luck. Audio out of sync, or no video, or stuttering, or refusing to play at all.

        I can access those videos on my phone and even stream them to my Chromecast, so there’s no reason it should not work on linux laptops.

    • BlameTheAntifa@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      If your computer isn’t very old, you should give Fedora a try. I recommend using Ventoy to try some different live ISOs, so you don’t need to commit to installing anything without trying it first.

  • Wooki@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Tell trackIR to release a linux client. I’m stuck with it and cant move until a Linux client is released

  • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Until there is one, single distribution that the vast majority of people can install on their existing hardware, that just works, easily and conveniently, Linux will remain a relatively niche desktop OS. I think when Valve finally releases the desktop version is SteamOS, that might do the trick.

    • Synapse@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Why would you want a majority of people using the same distribution? It’s much better if users are distributed relatively equally among a hand full of distributions. More options with good developers and community support is better. In case something bad happens to one, it’s no problem switching to the next one over. Look at examples from the past: Ubuntu, CentOS

      • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Why would you want a majority of people using the same distribution?

        I don’t, necessarily. I just think it’s the only way we will ever see widespread adoption of Linux on desktops. But, maybe I’m wrong. Honestly, I hope I am. I hope through changes in the culture and more education, people will make the switch. But, I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t skeptical.

        • OpenStars@piefed.social
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          2 months ago

          People need to: (1) have capacity, like a single mother with 3 kids and commuting to work 3 jobs isn’t going to switch even if it took less than a day, and (2) they need to see the value of doing so first. Lowering the entry barrier will help IMMENSELY, and then after that people are willing to put up with some slight amounts of effort so long as they know in advance it will be worthwhile.

          Unfortunately a non-technical mainstream normie isn’t going to know how to check their hardware first, and barely knows what software they themselves use (including the variety of plug-ins) on a daily basis, or how to know which ones they will have to give up using, and seek alternatives for.

          If such alternatives exist. Like, on a mobile device (including laptops, or an Android phone/tablet), nobody has ever managed to tell me an actually usable web browser that doesn’t burn up my battery in the background all day long like Firefox does - Firefox is an absolutely horrid shit app, which just so happens to be better than Chrome… barely.

          And what program/app is more crucial in this modern era than a web browser? So when people see the state that the CEO of Firefox has put that FOSS program into, and the lack of anyone else (e.g. LibreWolf) making a better app - which again must be usable by non-technical mainstream normie users - then they nope right out and never bother to reconsider.

          Note that the market share of people using desktops vs. a laptop or mobile where battery concerns are absolutely critical is dropping, see e.g. this article.

      • QuandaleDingle@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        That issue wouldn’t matter to most people. People want what works. For now, Windows works for them. They wouldn’t care about community contributions, FOSS, and decentralization. If you want widespread Linux adoption, you need a robust. easy to use, and beginner friendly OS. Of course there are options like Mint and Zorin, but they still can’t quite do everything Windows does.

      • hzl@piefed.blahaj.zone
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        2 months ago

        Honestly, I first installed linux on a machine in like 2006 or 2007 or something. It just doesn’t do what I need for my main machine and I don’t need to run two computers with synergy for more monitors anymore. I have a dual-boot, but I literally never use the thing because it doesn’t run Voicemeeter or VB Cables and JACK isn’t really a substitute.

        It would be nice if Linux ran everything I need, but I’m not about to change my entire workflow and sacrifice useful programs to save a little overhead on my operating system.

  • trongod_requiem0432@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Only if you can make Word, Excel and all my games run natively without extra steps.

    linux user starts rambling about how it’s supposedly super easy, then drops gun and starts crying