@ShootFirstNS It’s also to dupe you into watching the same thing twice to inflate the view count which is kind of disrespectful to your audience. And YT loops are not even seamless anyway which makes it even worse
Nah it's made so in the algorithm the video gets played more than once if viewers could know the video is ending they would swipe away and thus the video wouldn't get as recommended to other users
Yeah, just take Linux Mint - it has GNOME Tweaks preinstalled, Nvidia drivers are two clicks away from installing, and they seem to care about user-friendliness.
There are also distros with a desktop environment close to windows, like mint+cinnamon. That's what awesome about Linux, it has something for everyone.
In fact that's why Ultramarine Linux exists!!!! It provides a near-identical fedora experience with *zero* hassle to set up anything like nvidia drivers. Instead of only Linux mint, people should also recommend these other relatively noob friendly distros too because they provide a good experience with zero hassle for the most things, which is really awesome
Fedora Nvidia driver installation is easier than anyone may think, follow the instructions and it will work like a charm , i just speak in my humble experience 😁
Yes, but it would still be a difficult process for an average windows user. It wont be as easy as installing geforce experience and getting the latest drivers on a click.
@OzoneBhattarai-lm2es actually I've been using Linux since 2013 ,and yes i believe it's easier in Windows than Linux and easier in Ubuntu family using Ubuntu driver installer tool, but i believe when i started using fedora all i did to install Nvidia driver to copy and paste 4 or 3 lines from chrome to terminal and i enjoyed it 😀
Tried it a month ago, UI felt extremely sluggish, Tried to switch to Wayland, Required me to rebuild the kernel, Wayland was buggy as f*, but at least it wasn't sluggish
Working my way through the "Command Line And Shell Scripting Bible"! Been learning command line for the last 9 months. Soon be moving from Mint to Arch. Also started learning C. Anyone who wants to give Linux a go, learn the command line and actually use it. It can be very complicated but it's not hard, just need knowledge abiut how to use it.
Did you know in order to play the role of an insane and mentally depressed person in the movie "Joker", Joaquin Phoenix had to install Nvidia drivers on Linux
For the keyboard layouts, you can set it up to Caps Lock(if you want caps lock, just press shift with it). Windows has only 4 options. `, Alt-Shift, Ctrl-Shift and Super(Win)-Spacebar[it's universal everywhere]. You have to install a separate program to do what I just discussed earlier. If you're on Windows, the best for productvity is Ctrl-Shift. Main reason is that there's almost no consequences with Ctrl-Shift(Can break many of the shortcuts that use Ctrl-Shift). Alt-Shift can send you straight to the menu bar, ` is bad option, as it's conflicting with many of the languages and applications that use this key, With Super-Space you can accidentally put a bunch of spaces or open up the Start menu. So Ctrl-Shift it is.
Debianite here. After XP and 7 I more lean to linux. did a lot of distrohopping (Ubuntu, Fedora, Suse, Void..)along with windows. Now I am a fulltime Linuxer. Never looked back after settled to Debian full time for 2 years and 10 years with linux testing
I made the switch from windows to Linux around 5 years ago. I don't regret it. I can even play a lot of games through proton. Sometimes it's a pain to setup things. It took me a while to setup my existing OneDrive.
I'm going to push back on the notion that Linux is more difficult to set up and use than Windows or MacOSX. Sure, it's true that *some* things are more likely to work, when they do, at least ... but sometimes things don't work as intended, and it could be just as hard or harder to get right than on Linux. And there's a *lot* of things that Windows and MacOS don't do, or don't do very well -- and that, to do them, you have to do weird stuff to get working. Things like setting your caps lock to be a ctrl key, or activating windows by hover without bringing them to the top. Windows and MacOS only work well if you're used to the workflows they enable, and you *like* those workflows. If you depart from that, they are *horrible*.
I've switched from Windows to Mint completely painlessly. Linux Mint absolutely is a Windows alternative. You can't intentionally pick the wrong distro, flash the command prompt on screen a couple times, and claim that Windows normies can't use Linux. First of all they can, WIndows tutorials will often reach for the command prompt; and second, i've used the command prompt maybe twice in a year on Mint.
I recently tried to install arch linux on wsl feature in win 10 and gui for it, but i fkd up and entire win 10 isn't working. Its not like i dont know why that happened, but i couldnt repair it and so i am wondering which os to install. I wanted to use linux long time ago but i am worried about some of my favorite games not working cuz of anticheat. I already tried win 11 multiple times and I hate every single thing about it so i have a question for you: should i try using linux or should i just fresh install win 10 again?
i mean finding out if your games anticheat blocks linux is a pretty fast google search no? and then it just depends on whats more important to you. But you could also dual boot and have windows and linux installed. The question is if you really want to start with arch. If you are really interested in it, you will be able to learn it since it really isn't that hard as people portray it to be, but if you just want something thats simple and works, maybe consider trying out something like mint first.
@@user-pt8oo6pw9n i want arch for sure, i dont want dual boot because of need to restart system to do so, i want win 10 or arch or some way to have arch and win at once (That's why i tried wsl), i know for sure my fav games wont work because of anticheat.
Depending on why you want Linux, you could install VirtualBox & install Linux in a VM without touching Windows. VirtualBox is pretty easy to install & use. Each VM feels like its own machine. Easy also to share data between the host & client machines. And, in the end VirtualBox is an application. Fun to.try & if you don't like it, just uninstall & delete the virtual drive.
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're refering to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX
And much FOSS that has nothing to do with GNU. While there probably wouldn't be Linux without GNU, it was Linux that changed GNU from an academic dream into something real. Most of us will just stick with the name "Linux". Have fun tilting at windmills.
If i have to read a manuel and follow instructions, that are not intuitve, to get something trival done like installing a driver, then it sucks. Best case is that i don't have to do anything. Second best case is that i go to a website and install (maybe download it) with some clicks. Like WTF if one Step is "lspci -vnn | grep VGA", SMD.
My main issue with linux is that while I'm substantially more tech savy than most, I am not turbo nerd enough to use the command line for everything. I really like GUIs, and Linux is sorely lacking in that aspect for a lot of things (at least, in my brief experience).
Well it's not intuitive either to install drivers on Windows. Last time I've spent 1 hour to get an Epson printer to work on Windows... the driver that Windows update did install automatically did not work, I had to uninstall it from the device manager, then go to the manufacturer website, search for the printer driver, install the software, then I got the printer to work somehow. On Linux most stuff does work without requiring additional software, for example printers nowadays simply work connecting the USB cable. Regarding things that are counterintuitive, using GNOME Tweaks is not like having to edit single register keys that you don't know what they are doing to change certain things on Windows trough the regedit. I mean... most stuff on Linux DE such as GNOME is intuitive.
To install Nvidia drivers on fedora: you have to first get a phD in computer science, then use the package manager to install them and then it doesn't work, you don't know why do you do a bunch of things, then it works, you don't know why but you're happy and when you update, it breaks and you don't know why and so on
It's GNOME desktop environment, which can be installed on top of any distro :) but you'll find it pre-installed on Ubuntu, Debian and PopOS, it's also selectable during installation of Endeavour OS. There are many more but those are the ones I can think of on the top of my head.
yeh like I am computerscience student but when I come home I want to be able to go through my daily live without having to use the terminal. I want to choose to use the terminal but linux often forces me to use it.
Installing nvidia drivers on fedora is nothing short of a punishment, i tried installing it thrice, failed and broke system every single time. Followed tutorial, still messed up, in the end I'm now just using integrated graphics.
I don't understand why just running "sudo dnf install akmod-nvidia" in the terminal is """much more difficult""" than finding the nvidia driver website, selecting the right version, waiting for it to download and waiting for it to install.
Until now I can't make my CUPS server worked on my Ubuntu. Surprisingly, my Windows somehow able to do it (my printer is connected to a OMV NAS and I run a CUPS docker there).
People be like Linux is good because you can do whatever you want with your system! But after that when you enter the linux community you are being told that immutable distros are the future and all who are against it are ruining linux and preventing it from becoming windows-like aka more popular
installing nvidia proprietary drivers on fedora is just sudo dnf install akmod-nvidia and other cuda support package that i can't remember it is not that complicated man
The problem is GNOME. The problem os always GNOME. They hold back development on Linux, especially on Wayland. Them being against client side decorationa breaks applications like DaVinci Resolve. KDE Plasma is a better experience.
Bro just follow few simple instructions on fedora, enable 3rd party repos and then it's just a click away from installing Nvidia Drivers. It's really not that complicated.
@lukaogadze5071 the kernel ones were outdated, and I tried to force installing the Debian drivers from the AMD website. It was a learning experience, and now I'm a happy Mint Cinamon user.
honestly, driver on windows are a pain in the A** now, you have to DDU the crap out of them every 3 updates or you will have crash impossible to understand
@morgensheeeern eh, they most likely use google docs and most decent printers (except for HP, but in my case that didn't even work with windows...) have linux support anyway
1. The OS is colloquially referred to as Linux, which is fine. 2. An app only needs a new version if something breaks or if the dev wants to add a new feature. Neofetch does what it needs to do, no new version is needed.
@@Bonez0r there is no single "Linux OS". here is not "the OS". Stale != Stable. If an app is not updated in 3 years, as a user you cant make sure it is still safe to use since there might be security holes which need patching. In 3 years many things happen... Its best practice not to use old junk
I mean I just feel like there isn't a real reason. Sure, linux on the server. But for my home PC it just lets me do less things. You wanna play this game? Linux can't run it. You want to use this app? not build for linux. It is just not useful to the majority of people.
If you are dumb and have no knowledge of computers and want to make presentations,excel sheets or play games stick to windows that's best for you, but as a developer you can't ignore linux and the control you have with it as its open source also most of the big techs use linux android is linux😂😂😂
To force Linux to be better at competing against Windows, just lock the terminal away for 10 years. The focus will shift to the user experience instead of the geeks' and the adoption rate will explode
Linux must stop being promoted as Losedows alternative and as an actual different Operating System. Everyone that expects to come to it and have it work completely like Losedows should not use it.
never seen a linux user that actually uses their system, just a bunch of distro hopping breaking and fixing stuff continuously, or just really basic stuff like browsing messaging watching vids
Linux, free and closed source (given recent politically driven restrictions) doesn't allow me to control my computer Nvidia card in at least half way windows does, due to software under development, which I don't want to do, and which windows doesn't makes me to. And it's not even fedora we're talking about.
@@meialua5178 Russian maintainers are restricted from kernel development. Indifferently from wether it is bad or good, it means that source code is not open anymore.
@@Arson_OakwoodThe Internet has always been on real computers & networks in real countries with real allies & enemies. It's a fantasy world to expect that the Internet wouldn't be affected by global politics. We've been fortunate that reality hasn't stuck its nose in sooner.
> get a thinkpad
> Install arch
> Not installing de or wm only use tty just like gods intended
Ncmpcpp newsboat rss feed etc.. ez
Or just "debloat" Ubuntu 18 server. or install mandrake Linux from floppy disks an old relative left.
I have a Thinkpad and I'm fine with my Windows and social life(well whatever's left of it)
> get a ThinkPad
> Install windows 7 (goat)
> Profit
@@propsekgamerYou'll eventually join the dark side
the looping trick is getting old. The vid is on point as always but believe me when I say:
Wdym by that?
it's just to remove the jolt of it restarting so if you want to re-watch without the abrupt start, you can. it's perfect i think
@ShootFirstNS It’s also to dupe you into watching the same thing twice to inflate the view count which is kind of disrespectful to your audience. And YT loops are not even seamless anyway which makes it even worse
Nah it's made so in the algorithm the video gets played more than once if viewers could know the video is ending they would swipe away and thus the video wouldn't get as recommended to other users
@xondarium7691 If that was true I guess most of the recommended videos would be like that which is not the case
I switched to Linux 5 years ago, never looking back. I use Arch, btw.
If you want a desktop experience like windows but better, use the KDE or Cinnamon desktop enviornments.
Yeah, just take Linux Mint - it has GNOME Tweaks preinstalled, Nvidia drivers are two clicks away from installing, and they seem to care about user-friendliness.
ijs all the trouble he is having with gnome, KDE already took care of for you.
I use arch btw
Based
i use android btw
Same also btw.
i use arch with hyprland btw
@xbeast7585 That is awesome.
...I don't have the patience anymore. Maybe I'll try it on one of my jail broken Chromebooks sometime.
There are also distros with a desktop environment close to windows, like mint+cinnamon. That's what awesome about Linux, it has something for everyone.
In fact that's why Ultramarine Linux exists!!!! It provides a near-identical fedora experience with *zero* hassle to set up anything like nvidia drivers. Instead of only Linux mint, people should also recommend these other relatively noob friendly distros too because they provide a good experience with zero hassle for the most things, which is really awesome
distro made by Emperor's glory? gotta check it out. Emperor Protects brother!
I've been using LM from the version: Cassandra, it's hard to switch to other distros permanently.
@@nonnativeme Even when I started using NixOS (btw), after some time turned it into essentially Linux Mint.
You don't need to shoehorn in an awkward loop at the end with "when I'm saying that..."
Switched to Linux for fun, accidentally destroying my Windows partition in the process. A few years later, still using it.
(I use Arch btw)
Fedora Nvidia driver installation is easier than anyone may think, follow the instructions and it will work like a charm , i just speak in my humble experience 😁
Yes, but it would still be a difficult process for an average windows user. It wont be as easy as installing geforce experience and getting the latest drivers on a click.
@OzoneBhattarai-lm2es actually I've been using Linux since 2013 ,and yes i believe it's easier in Windows than Linux and easier in Ubuntu family using Ubuntu driver installer tool, but i believe when i started using fedora all i did to install Nvidia driver to copy and paste 4 or 3 lines from chrome to terminal and i enjoyed it 😀
It's really that simple. It's nothing but a meme. Memes are the absolute source of truth now.
Tried it a month ago,
UI felt extremely sluggish,
Tried to switch to Wayland,
Required me to rebuild the kernel,
Wayland was buggy as f*, but at least it wasn't sluggish
@@OzoneBhattarai-lm2es 'Average' windows users are just afraid of change and are too scared to leave the familiar interface of their beloved OS.
Working my way through the "Command Line And Shell Scripting Bible"! Been learning command line for the last 9 months. Soon be moving from Mint to Arch. Also started learning C. Anyone who wants to give Linux a go, learn the command line and actually use it. It can be very complicated but it's not hard, just need knowledge abiut how to use it.
Did you know in order to play the role of an
insane and mentally depressed person in the movie "Joker", Joaquin Phoenix had to install Nvidia drivers on Linux
For the keyboard layouts, you can set it up to Caps Lock(if you want caps lock, just press shift with it).
Windows has only 4 options. `, Alt-Shift, Ctrl-Shift and Super(Win)-Spacebar[it's universal everywhere].
You have to install a separate program to do what I just discussed earlier.
If you're on Windows, the best for productvity is Ctrl-Shift. Main reason is that there's almost no consequences with Ctrl-Shift(Can break many of the shortcuts that use Ctrl-Shift). Alt-Shift can send you straight to the menu bar, ` is bad option, as it's conflicting with many of the languages and applications that use this key, With Super-Space you can accidentally put a bunch of spaces or open up the Start menu. So Ctrl-Shift it is.
Debianite here. After XP and 7 I more lean to linux. did a lot of distrohopping (Ubuntu, Fedora, Suse, Void..)along with windows. Now I am a fulltime Linuxer. Never looked back after settled to Debian full time for 2 years and 10 years with linux testing
I made the switch from windows to Linux around 5 years ago. I don't regret it. I can even play a lot of games through proton. Sometimes it's a pain to setup things. It took me a while to setup my existing OneDrive.
I'm going to push back on the notion that Linux is more difficult to set up and use than Windows or MacOSX. Sure, it's true that *some* things are more likely to work, when they do, at least ... but sometimes things don't work as intended, and it could be just as hard or harder to get right than on Linux.
And there's a *lot* of things that Windows and MacOS don't do, or don't do very well -- and that, to do them, you have to do weird stuff to get working. Things like setting your caps lock to be a ctrl key, or activating windows by hover without bringing them to the top.
Windows and MacOS only work well if you're used to the workflows they enable, and you *like* those workflows. If you depart from that, they are *horrible*.
I've switched from Windows to Mint completely painlessly. Linux Mint absolutely is a Windows alternative.
You can't intentionally pick the wrong distro, flash the command prompt on screen a couple times, and claim that Windows normies can't use Linux. First of all they can, WIndows tutorials will often reach for the command prompt; and second, i've used the command prompt maybe twice in a year on Mint.
Uhm I use Arch btw ☝🤓
i like that all those options are there but i already collapsed while choosing
recently ditched linux because of battery issue, was a great experience only if you have time and effort put into it
I always recommend Linux Mint.
I maybe wrong, but in the latest fedora version (41) you can install Nvidia-drivers from the software center by just clicking in the driver section.
I recently tried to install arch linux on wsl feature in win 10 and gui for it, but i fkd up and entire win 10 isn't working. Its not like i dont know why that happened, but i couldnt repair it and so i am wondering which os to install. I wanted to use linux long time ago but i am worried about some of my favorite games not working cuz of anticheat. I already tried win 11 multiple times and I hate every single thing about it so i have a question for you: should i try using linux or should i just fresh install win 10 again?
i mean finding out if your games anticheat blocks linux is a pretty fast google search no? and then it just depends on whats more important to you. But you could also dual boot and have windows and linux installed. The question is if you really want to start with arch. If you are really interested in it, you will be able to learn it since it really isn't that hard as people portray it to be, but if you just want something thats simple and works, maybe consider trying out something like mint first.
@@user-pt8oo6pw9n i want arch for sure, i dont want dual boot because of need to restart system to do so, i want win 10 or arch or some way to have arch and win at once (That's why i tried wsl), i know for sure my fav games wont work because of anticheat.
@@tiixus9858 i think you can have a windows virtual machine with gpu passthrough... but i guess the anticheat would probably still not work
Is there any reason in specific to want to install Arch or just Linux in general? If you were happy with Windows 10 I'd say to just stick with it.
Depending on why you want Linux, you could install VirtualBox & install Linux in a VM without touching Windows. VirtualBox is pretty easy to install & use. Each VM feels like its own machine. Easy also to share data between the host & client machines. And, in the end VirtualBox is an application. Fun to.try & if you don't like it, just uninstall & delete the virtual drive.
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're refering to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX
Bet you like to correct people when they call react a framework
And much FOSS that has nothing to do with GNU. While there probably wouldn't be Linux without GNU, it was Linux that changed GNU from an academic dream into something real.
Most of us will just stick with the name "Linux". Have fun tilting at windmills.
If i have to read a manuel and follow instructions, that are not intuitve, to get something trival done like installing a driver, then it sucks. Best case is that i don't have to do anything. Second best case is that i go to a website and install (maybe download it) with some clicks. Like WTF if one Step is "lspci -vnn | grep VGA", SMD.
This is why I use MX Linux XFCE. It has a button to install NVIDIA. That simple.
just make sure to connect the flumberboozle to the GKX virtual port
My main issue with linux is that while I'm substantially more tech savy than most, I am not turbo nerd enough to use the command line for everything.
I really like GUIs, and Linux is sorely lacking in that aspect for a lot of things (at least, in my brief experience).
Well it's not intuitive either to install drivers on Windows. Last time I've spent 1 hour to get an Epson printer to work on Windows... the driver that Windows update did install automatically did not work, I had to uninstall it from the device manager, then go to the manufacturer website, search for the printer driver, install the software, then I got the printer to work somehow.
On Linux most stuff does work without requiring additional software, for example printers nowadays simply work connecting the USB cable.
Regarding things that are counterintuitive, using GNOME Tweaks is not like having to edit single register keys that you don't know what they are doing to change certain things on Windows trough the regedit. I mean... most stuff on Linux DE such as GNOME is intuitive.
Windows
Me: delete Microsoft edge
Pc: no
Linux
Me: sudo rm -rf --no-preserve-root /
Pc: ok, as you say
To install Nvidia drivers on fedora: you have to first get a phD in computer science, then use the package manager to install them and then it doesn't work, you don't know why do you do a bunch of things, then it works, you don't know why but you're happy and when you update, it breaks and you don't know why and so on
It's now a lot easier with Fedora 41 without breaking anything.
Ehhhmmm on mint the nvida driver installation is the 3rd entry in the pop up after logging in.
Oh common, with chat gpt and stack overflow you just open terminal and type whatever it says. Never been easier
I can't believe gnome tweaks is still a thing
Which disto is used in the video. That one that has the command center like MacOS?
It's GNOME desktop environment, which can be installed on top of any distro :) but you'll find it pre-installed on Ubuntu, Debian and PopOS, it's also selectable during installation of Endeavour OS. There are many more but those are the ones I can think of on the top of my head.
Windows?
What's that?
yeh like I am computerscience student but when I come home I want to be able to go through my daily live without having to use the terminal.
I want to choose to use the terminal but linux often forces me to use it.
That is why i love foss, unfortunately USA gov will want to change it.
As a gentoo user i love it!
wait,are you using capcut?
if so,how are you using it?
are you dualbooting or you have another pc?
I edit my videos in DaVinci Resolve on Linux.
@ReluctantAnarchist oh
Installing nvidia drivers on fedora is nothing short of a punishment, i tried installing it thrice, failed and broke system every single time. Followed tutorial, still messed up, in the end I'm now just using integrated graphics.
❤❤❤Linux Mint❤❤❤
I don't understand why just running "sudo dnf install akmod-nvidia" in the terminal is """much more difficult""" than finding the nvidia driver website, selecting the right version, waiting for it to download and waiting for it to install.
don't forget to disable secure boot and set nouveau mode to 0 and/or disable Wayland
You can do on Linux what you can do. Although that is not that always you want. :D I use Linux and I like it daily.
Can I ask, what music is that in the background? It sounds relaxing :)
The track is produced by my good friend Alex Stroganov, but I'm not sure if it's available on streaming platform or not.
wallpaper???
Until now I can't make my CUPS server worked on my Ubuntu. Surprisingly, my Windows somehow able to do it (my printer is connected to a OMV NAS and I run a CUPS docker there).
People be like Linux is good because you can do whatever you want with your system! But after that when you enter the linux community you are being told that immutable distros are the future and all who are against it are ruining linux and preventing it from becoming windows-like aka more popular
installing nvidia proprietary drivers on fedora is just sudo dnf install akmod-nvidia and other cuda support package that i can't remember
it is not that complicated man
You also need to sign the drivers
reactos would be a alternative, linux is just different but in a good way.
The problem is GNOME. The problem os always GNOME. They hold back development on Linux, especially on Wayland. Them being against client side decorationa breaks applications like DaVinci Resolve.
KDE Plasma is a better experience.
That mustache bruh 💀💀
That’s why I use TempleOS.
How can be similar to windows when Linux supports 1024 cpu cores compared to Windows 128
Bro just follow few simple instructions on fedora, enable 3rd party repos and then it's just a click away from installing Nvidia Drivers. It's really not that complicated.
I once tried linux. Couldnt get even my headphones to work lol
Linux has actually better bluetooth than windows
@ oh, my headphones use 2.4ghz dongle. Im sure it can work but Im just gonna use windows for convenience :)
i have 0 clue why people want to complain about nvidia drivers they are not that hard to install
Fedora as windows replacement?
Easy get the Nobara fork... literally made for it.
Also has a Gnome version if you like to suffer...
I love arch with hyprland
Nice voice. Linux is cool. Anyway we must have a free alternative created by open minded people.
I ruined my Manjaro installation just by trying to install AMD gpu drivers
...There are no AMD GPU drivers in Linux.
Drivers for AMD and Intel are in the Linux Kernel 👀
how? amd driver is in kernel. don't copy and paste random commands from internet and run as sudo. also manjaro loves to break 😂
@lukaogadze5071 the kernel ones were outdated, and I tried to force installing the Debian drivers from the AMD website. It was a learning experience, and now I'm a happy Mint Cinamon user.
@@ACIoannina oh... that makes sense now. good for you bud. best part about multiple distributions are choice.
Day 47583: I think this is a loop
I use nixos btw
Linux is just how you use your computer. Is there any other way?
honestly, driver on windows are a pain in the A** now, you have to DDU the crap out of them every 3 updates or you will have crash impossible to understand
kde neon is the closest to windows imo
Have you heard of the lord Arch
i-use-debian-btw ❤
"Free and open source" 🤣. That didn't age well...
For developers Windows with WSL is much better
I mean, it is pretty much a better alternative to windows for people who only use the browser... Which is actually a lot of people
one day some browser-only linuxoid might feel a need to open a .docx in his libre office... and then print something...
@morgensheeeern eh, they most likely use google docs and most decent printers (except for HP, but in my case that didn't even work with windows...) have linux support anyway
I use fedora btw ❤
Mint Linux is the best for Nvidia driver
1. Linux isnt an OS
2. Dont use neofetch. It hasnt been updated since forever. Use fastfetch
1. The OS is colloquially referred to as Linux, which is fine.
2. An app only needs a new version if something breaks or if the dev wants to add a new feature. Neofetch does what it needs to do, no new version is needed.
@@Bonez0r there is no single "Linux OS". here is not "the OS".
Stale != Stable. If an app is not updated in 3 years, as a user you cant make sure it is still safe to use since there might be security holes which need patching. In 3 years many things happen... Its best practice not to use old junk
I can't stand Gnome. I used to main XFCE, and that worked for my cheap laptops. But on my main system, I'm using KDE.
I also use KDE
Kde 6 on top
It's a different workflow logic
I mean I just feel like there isn't a real reason. Sure, linux on the server. But for my home PC it just lets me do less things. You wanna play this game? Linux can't run it. You want to use this app? not build for linux. It is just not useful to the majority of people.
Everything 's hackable....
I want my os to be autonomous - meaning updating and other sh!t which are boring and time consuming
I say linux is an alternative to macos
Games
If you are dumb and have no knowledge of computers and want to make presentations,excel sheets or play games stick to windows that's best for you, but as a developer you can't ignore linux and the control you have with it as its open source also most of the big techs use linux android is linux😂😂😂
Kde is better
On arch os installing nvidia drivers was peice of cake tbh
as long as "whatever you want" is to delete your root directory via terminal
To force Linux to be better at competing against Windows, just lock the terminal away for 10 years. The focus will shift to the user experience instead of the geeks' and the adoption rate will explode
"adoption rate" mf really compares linux distros to orphans
Linux must stop being promoted as Losedows alternative and as an actual different Operating System.
Everyone that expects to come to it and have it work completely like Losedows should not use it.
never seen a linux user that actually uses their system, just a bunch of distro hopping breaking and fixing stuff continuously, or just really basic stuff like browsing messaging watching vids
never use linux distro that build by companies...use linux distro build by communities
real
Linux, free and closed source (given recent politically driven restrictions) doesn't allow me to control my computer Nvidia card in at least half way windows does, due to software under development, which I don't want to do, and which windows doesn't makes me to. And it's not even fedora we're talking about.
What restriction?
@@meialua5178 Russian maintainers are restricted from kernel development. Indifferently from wether it is bad or good, it means that source code is not open anymore.
@@Arson_OakwoodThe Internet has always been on real computers & networks in real countries with real allies & enemies. It's a fantasy world to expect that the Internet wouldn't be affected by global politics. We've been fortunate that reality hasn't stuck its nose in sooner.
Don't install proprietary drivers. Full stop.
I’d actually like to play games on my distro tho lol
@@sainishwanth1477 I use dual-boot: Debian + win11. If I want to play games I just boot into win11.
even if it is considered as an alternative, it’s a far superior alternative
i use Arch btw