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#linux #windows

This entry was edited (6 months ago)
in reply to It's FOSS

When I'm changing from Ubuntu to Win10: time is wrong, i need to setup +2h
in reply to It's FOSS

Installing Ubuntu was a pain. First attempt created a black screen, second was the same. Had to dig up several tutorials which involved tinkering with command line. Turns out some Nvidia drivers problem. Another challenge is a limiting nature of GNOME desktop environment. Never got used to popups moving literally an entire parent window stack with itself (???).
in reply to It's FOSS

When I switched 15 years ago, gaming was the biggest challenge.
in reply to It's FOSS

at my time (2004?), finding the WiFi drivers for computer!
in reply to It's FOSS

getting steam/VR up and running... each kernel upgrade. Got it in first place working with:
Option "AllowHMD" "yes"
Serval Updates later, games says 'no vr device'... new driver, no more AllowHMD..

snap packages:
firefox runs in a container... kerberos ticket not found...
Lxd keeps updating, lxd.sock service could not be executed, os wasn't upgraded...

snap is a nice idea, but not thought through to the end.

in reply to It's FOSS

I think the biggest problem is to change the own workflows for the system as well as for many programs.
Second thing is to have a very new (maybe special) hardware and Linux doesn't know the drivers yet.
Third problem is administration in a company environment: as long as MS AD/AAD is set, it's hard to fight for Linux usage there.
in reply to It's FOSS

I once had to bring my whole desktop to university for a project because the assembly code I had written would only run on #Linux and they didn't have it installed
in reply to It's FOSS

Having to deal with the intense Linux fandom. Furthermore: dealing with the several extra intense distro fans.

Now that I think of it... that never ended 🤔

in reply to It's FOSS

Was literally just helping my friend switch last night and the desktop screen and app launcher were just replaced with a massive error screen. Was researching for like 20 minutes on how to fix and in the end just updating everything using dnf that fixed it lol
in reply to loowiz

@loowiz Yes, a simple update can sometimes fixe those annoying bugs.
Unknown parent

It's FOSS
@nsoolo Many people give up before fully embracing open-source tools. We are glad you didn't!
in reply to It's FOSS

I switched in January and have had alot of challenges, but nothing impossible. Tried to install Linux Mint on my HP laptop and it couldn't even start after the installation. Tried Fedora Cinnamon instead and since then no (big) problems. On my small, old, slow, Lenovo miix, (Fedora xfce) almost everything had to be tweaked after installation. The screen was rotated in the wrong direction, standby didn't work and so on. I've learned a lot and I've never been happier with my computers.
in reply to It's FOSS

Well, back then, wifi drivers were a lot more finicky. Sometimes it was a several hour long endeavour to get the wifi drivers working on some new piece of hardware.

Fortunately, things have gotten better since then and a newer kernel usually fixes it, but USB wifi dongles still sometimes require building a custom driver. Since then though, documentation has gotten better, but it could just be that I'm more comfortable now I'm a dev myself.

in reply to It's FOSS

It was along time ago... Late 90s... I really didn't run into any serious problems. There was some sound hardware I couldn't get to work... but as long as I paid attention to the "known working hardware" lists when setting up new machines, or buying new boards... it all pretty-much worked. To this day I have not had any success setting up advanced audio hardware or any kind of DAW on Linux, but other than that... it's been great.
in reply to It's FOSS

in reply to It's FOSS

I was bored because there were no more creepy ads in the navigation menus and no more annoying notifications. #kidding
in reply to It's FOSS

When I was switching to Linux I gave myself the challenge to "do everything I do in Windows but in Linux".

Took a while (this was early-mid 2000s) but I can say that just about everything (or an equivalent) I have achieved (and more) since then.

Like I was programming in ASP and ASP.NET at work, but did PHP on LAMP at home.

My needs, though, changed like my son got me into games that don't run well enough in Linux (on this hardware).

in reply to It's FOSS

Biggest issue I had when I switched to Linux about 12 years ago, were WIFi drivers and crashes after updates. I don't remember the distro I started with, just that it was Ubuntu based, but I quickly switched to Arch based distro - Manjaro, slow, bloated and crashed literally every 2 days! Now I am using Garuda with KDE, but I must admit I am playing around with QTile and if we ever have WM with Wayland compositor based on it, I am definitely switching.
in reply to It's FOSS

a lot of cool foss programs that don't have graphical interface and works only from command line + some interface and settings (such sending shortcuts to desktop)
in reply to It's FOSS

not telling all over the world how Windows is a scam
This entry was edited (5 months ago)
in reply to It's FOSS

WOW so many but thanks to AI now I can get quicker solutions not having to read so long like it was before AI chatbots.
The first obstacle is how not to ruin the boot and loose Windows along with all the information stored in its partitions. It was a big blocker for me who retained from installing linux.
Unknown parent

It's FOSS
@nazokiyoubinbou True, many games do not play nice with Linux.
@Nazo

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