• throbbing_banjo@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Same. They’ve always done this shit, but installing windows - and then uninstalling or disabling all the cooked-in bloat and spyware - has become so ridiculously tiresome that I just said fuck it and went Linux full-time.

      Every update or service pack, it starts all over. There’s no such thing as a clean windows install.

      Nobara was up and running in like ten minutes with no fuckery at all, and it’s no nice not having to fight my OS on everything.

        • throbbing_banjo@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Yep! I’m on Nvidia, the new drivers are really solid. I’ve read AMD cards run fine as well, but don’t use one

        • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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          11 months ago

          I can testify for AMD. It just works on the 7900xtx.

          Early last year it had issues buy they pushed a driver update and its perfect now.

    • Tardil@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      What are you running? I tried Ubuntu as my daily driver and honestly found it’s user experience pretty shitty. Lots of little buggy issues with the interface and running a few games on steam that support Linux wasn’t great

        • Log5J@infosec.pub
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          11 months ago

          I became a sysadmin, I like being able to learn to get around problems. But an outsider just sees someone spending all morning fiddling with winetricks when it ‘just works’ on windows.

        • Valmond@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          The thing is it’s the same base linux as decade(s?) ago, windows is changing how stuff is done all the time.

          So a one time effort or a marathon IMO.

        • wanderingmagus@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          Really depends on your use case. Like @trougnouf@lemmy.world said, casual users that use the OS as a browser and email client can use practically any distro. Users that do a bit more, like casual gaming on gold-rated Steam games, generally do fine with something like Pop!_OS or Linux Mint.

          It’s when you start going towards the more hardcore users, like really hardcore gamers that play obscure titles or have unsupported Windows-specific hardware, artists that need very specific unsupported programs for editing or recording, engineers who need to do CAD specifically in a Windows-specific proprietary software, or a tinkerer that’s used to the Windows environment, that “become a sysadmin” starts being a reasonable complaint.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Its been their practice since the early 90s. Bundling and defaulting all their shitty apps, then making sure everything else has compatibility issues by design.

      The worst thing to happen to Microsoft was the IETF. It shattered their walled garden and forced them to integrate with a host of other internationally developed and encoded systems through a uniform protocol. They’ve spent the last 30 years trying to claw their position of OS dominance back.