• JackGreenEarth
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    152 years ago

    I could never go back to Windows, after having tasted the freedom of Linux.

    • DarkThoughts
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      62 years ago

      Linux has its flaws, but so does Windows. And for me, the flaws in Windows became much more annoying than the ones in Linux. Game compatibility was the main factor that kept me backt from using it on a desktop, and that’s a non issue nowadays.

        • DarkThoughts
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          02 years ago

          While that’s certainly also part of it, I would still stand by my opinion even if Windows was completely free.

          • @blackbrook@mander.xyz
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            12 years ago

            I consider myself forced to pay for it every time I buy a laptop whose price has to include Microsoft’s cut off the action.

            • @Contend6248@feddit.de
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              02 years ago

              You are not forced, plenty of manufacturers offer FreeDOS variants for so many years, just support them instead.

      • @floofloof@lemmy.ca
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        12 years ago

        For me it’s the basic things that drive me crazy in Windows: the Start menu doesn’t work half of the time, and it shows web results above the program you want to run. File operations are slow and the File Explorer crashes a lot. Application windows constantly steal focus from the one I’m typing in, leading to passwords being typed into code, documents, web browsers or other unsafe places. Background indexing is constant and eats up CPU, and the file search still takes forever despite all this indexing.

        These are all basic things that Microsoft has had decades to get working, and they’re all still broken. Microsoft always seem to be paying attention to anything but the quality of the user’s experience.

        By contrast, Linux is just relaxing.

        • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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          12 years ago

          Man that MS indexing is so terrible. I shut it off because it was robbing my system when trying to work, and as you said it is slow anyway. Compared to GNOME desktop where the indexing is invisible to user, I hit the Suoer key type a few letters it instantly shows me results as you would expect indexing to work.

      • @fubo@lemmy.world
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        12 years ago

        Game compatibility

        Steam+Proton is pretty impressive. I can play Baldur’s Gate 3 on my Thelio. Does get a little toasty, though …

    • @ScoobyDoo27@lemm.ee
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      22 years ago

      I always see people say this but does no one here use professional apps like solidworks or revit? Are there good Linux alternatives? I’d switch to Linux but I need solidworks for work I do.

      • @Godort@lemm.ee
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        12 years ago

        Windows is the defacto standard for desktop PCs for a reason. In a corporate setting it’s kind of the ideal.

        Because of the sheer number of users, most software is built with Windows in mind and therefore has the most support. It’s pretty rare that you find an application that doesn’t have a Windows build available.

        On top of that tools like Active Directory, and group policy makes managing thousands of machines at scale a reasonably simple affair.

        Microsoft is a corporation rather than a community so you can always expect their main goals to be profit-driven and that comes with some nasty baggage, but it’s not enough that it’s easy for professionals to make the switch.

        Linux has made lightspeed progress over the last decade, especially with Proton making games mostly work cross platform, but outside of specialist use cases, the vast majority of business PCs and by extension home PCs will be running Windows for the foreseeable future.

      • @Redscare867@lemmy.ml
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        02 years ago

        I work in software and I haven’t touched windows in a very long time. Even back whenever I worked on FPGA development all of that software ram on Linux, so I think you’ll find that this is very field dependent.