• rtxn@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    The fucking GTK file chooser. It’s like all application developers have made a pact with each other to never use a consistent UX, with the exception of having to press ctrl-L to edit the path textbox. It’s painful. And as much as I like XDP, support for it is spotty at best, and sometimes downright broken.

    I mean, who the FUCK puts the filesystem root in a submenu? Or sorts files and directories together? I just want to talk and explain why they’re beyond salvation.

  • Gallardo994@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    As a former Arch/Debian enjoyer on all my rigs in between 2012-2017, I can say several things but they might be outdated as of now. I haven’t rechecked it so here goes the list of things at that age:

    • Anything remotely related to Nvidia, especially if you had switchable laptop graphics. Running games was a nightmare and a coin flip. Sometimes you can get games to work, but you got an awful screen tearing even in OS, sometimes it’s vice versa.

    • PulseAudio was problematic. Sometimes booting the pc up resulted into missing audio output or input, or both. Sometimes, under heavy load, lots of audio was crackling until PulseAudio server was rebooted. Rebooting PulseAudio required restarting many apps so they even produce sound.

    • Drove away for like 2 months, came back to dead Arch install after updating it. Switched to Debian cause I realized I value stability over newer stuff. Until I bought newer hardware which just didn’t work at all, can’t recall what that was to be honest.

    • At least during 2012-2015-ish, any browser scrolling was jittery. Like, any. I heard it’s fixed right now but every time I used to boot Windows, it was completely different web experience.

    • As soon as I started using laptops, I noticed that my battery was draining like 2-3 times as fast. Shouldn’t be an issue nowadays I hope.

    • Printing was hell of a nightmare. Especially when I tried bringing my laptop to the office printer.

    • Probably also related to Nvidia, but still: connecting external monitors never yielded out-of-the-box experience I expected to see. Nothing used proper resolution, scaling or refresh rates. Lots of things required manual configuration every time.

    • Office software in general. Thank god most people switched to web alternatives right now.

    • Back in 2012-ish years, Flash was still common and it generally refused to work in many distros. Especially with Nvidia graphics.

    There are plenty more reasons I decided to ditch Linux on my workstations and the ones above are just “honorable mentions”. The biggest thing I found myself doing is tinkering with my setup much more than doing actual work.

    So currently I just use a Windows laptop and WSL when I need local Linux. And of course I monitor and configure hundreds of Linux machines at work. I also have a Macbook Pro 16 mainly for iOS apps debugging and watching movies in bed.

    I can say I’m currently neutral to Linux, Mac and Windows these days. They have their own use cases for me and they all allow me to reach my goals in their own way. Just getting best of each world, I guess?

    • Ladas552@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      I am glad that you are at peace with your workstations now, but just for updates on current situation in Linux Desktop world:

      1. Mostly the same, but now you can just turn switchable graphics off, so to only use Nvidia.
      2. Now we can use stable pipewire which is 3x times better
      3. Have not seen a delayed arch update problem in a while.
      4. Now it’s fine. In Build steam browser still sucks tho, and turning hardware acceleration is an ass ton of problems even now.
      5. Depending on your laptop and configs, some Linux oriented laptops can live for 15 hours on stock
      6. It’s easy with Cups and HP drivers, even trou Wi-Fi
      7. Now there are tools that can configure external monitor management. Also, Wayland is good with these types without configs
      8. We still don’t have Microsoft Office
      9. Flash works with emulators like Ruffles

      Glad that Linux have noticeable progress in its lifespan

  • GravitySpoiled@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    The longer you use linux excluslively, you don’t think about windows or mac. You think about fedora or suse, kde or gnome, yay or apt, distrobox or toolbox.

    • MrBubbles96@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      That is…true, actually. The longer I use Linux, the more I’m like “…but what if, man, what if I ditch Arch for Fedora or NixOS or give Pop_OS! another chance (and i very well might when Cosmic launches)?” And sometimes I do…and then always come crawling back.

      Going back to Windows full time ain’t even crossed my mind for a hot minute. Partly because i have a spare driver running it for emergencies (that i barely use anyways, only because Windows literally runs one important app that I need, that I can’t run on Linux), and partly because going back means being stuck with Windows 11 again, and I really dislike Windows 11’s design choices, personally (and Microsoft in general, but i digress).

  • RecallMadness@lemmy.nz
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    10 months ago

    Just want to turn my laptop on and not have to wonder if everything will work.

    Not have to perpetually debug small issues like “why is there no sound? Oh it’s playing out of a different audio device”

    Not have to worry about installing software and where it comes from, and in which format.

    I just want shit to work, day in, day out. And I’m fully aware that I’d probably have these issues, plus others, with osx or windows.

  • CrabAndBroom@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    Nothing TBH. I find Windows too stressful, Macs are too boring, and I can’t use TempleOS because I don’t have schizophrenia.

  • pinchcramp@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 months ago

    The ease of buying a quality laptop without having to worry about if it will run well with my OS.

    I’ve been using MacOS for about 8 years at work and I never really taken to it. It’s fine and I can do my work but I won’t use it if I hadn’t to (unless the only alternative was Windows). But one thing I really like about Macs is that you can buy one and you won’t have any headaches with battery life, software compatibility etc. You get decent hardware (let’s ignore the whole 8GB on an M3 = 16GB on other machine debacle) and know that it will work decently well with 3rd party software/hardware and if something breaks you can just bring into an Apple store.

    While there are dedicated Linux sellers (System76, Tuxedo Computeres, Starlabs), I’m hesitant to spend 2k on a computer just to find out that the build quality is subpar, the battery life sucks or that customer support will just ignore my requests (read some bad experiences on the Starlabs subreddit).

  • Stillhart@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    I feel like this post is guerilla marketing for “TempleOS”, which I’ve never heard of before and will absolutely not be looking up after this.

    • Illecors@lemmy.cafe
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      10 months ago

      It’s not. TempleOS is a famous from scratch OS created by a guy with serious mental illness. It’s a sad story, but the capability of that guy was incredible. He’s gone now :(

    • Euphoma@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      TempleOS (wikipedia) is a meme os. It’s supposed to be god’s os and was singlehandedly coded by the late Terry Davis. So this post isn’t really marketing, and the reference is just supposed to be humorous.

    • LeFantome@programming.dev
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      10 months ago

      I love this reaction and how dramatically out of sync it is with what TempleOS actually is. I know it is innocent and accidental so this is in no way a shot at the poster. It is just a hilariously wrong take.

  • folkrav@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    I never “switched”. I just started using the right tool for the job. I use Linux for productivity stuff. Windows for gaming and audio/music production, mostly. I don’t own a Mac anymore but if I did, it’d probably be their laptops, and I’d probably take over some of the development and creative work while on the go. I’m admittedly not very “religious” when it comes to the software I use. Whatever works best for me. I’m not married to anything. Makes it easier to switch things out down the line.

  • WereCat@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Well for the most part Wayland ruined my experience but I’m willing to try again, just not in near future. (was using Fedore 38 KDE for 2months).

    And for the rest, I assumed that most things that work with AMD on Windows will work also on Linux since I had that experience on PoPOS with NVIDIA about 4y ago.

    Mainly GPU accelerated rendering in Blender which requires the AMD proprietary drivers and does not seem to work with MESA.

    KDenlive only supports the AMD x264 encoder and not HEVC and Davinci Resolve has no support for AMD encoders on Linux. They all work fine with NVIDIAs NVENC though.

  • FlappyBubble@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    Nothing really. You pay with your time by going to Linux but the effort is getting lower both because of me getting better but mostly the experience won’t compare with 20 yeara ago.since the non FOSS alternatives are getting more telemtry/call home functions rhe choice is an easy one.

  • 5714@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 months ago

    Low performance of very specific games made by small studios on middle-aged low-budget hardware makes me consider dual-booting, but then I remember that I hate closed-source, software-as-a-service, tracking-financed operating systems.

    • ffhein@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      That’s been the primary reason why I’ve kept a Windows dual boot, though when I tried Steam VR on Linux a month ago it mostly worked well. Still some features that are unavailable, and a couple of bugs, but usable.

  • inetknght@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    Windows

    It never was free.

    MacOS

    It’s not free any more.

    TempleOS

    I’m not religious.

    So, I guess I get to stay on Linux for longer. Well, damn!

  • DidacticDumbass@lemmy.one
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    10 months ago

    I own a MacBook Air basically for GarageBand and other DAWs. I know how to get Jack to work. Pipewire made life easier. Still, music production on linux still sucks butts.

    Too many butts for me to do anything other than other computer things and programming.