Could be small or big.
My answer has always been that, Linux can’t handle everything I’d ask out of it that I normally can with Windows. I know the games issue has been progressing far from the days when that used to have been an archaic flaw with Linux for the longest time. Games might not be the issue except for some concerns I have for some games.
I was taking some time a few moments ago, to check if a program called Firestorm Viewer would work on Linux Mint which could’ve been my distro of choice. And the description written on the linux page described exactly the kind of concerns I’d have for compatibility and usability from going Windows to Linux.
They said that their viewer was tested and designed to function mostly with Ubuntu and while it could work with other distros, it’s not to be expected to be smooth.
That’s the kind of sentiment and concern I have always had with Linux if I were to go from Windows to it. There are programs and tools on Windows that I have that are used for specific purposes and I know they will not function on Linux. Furthermore, incase anything breaks down, any and all solutions would only be applicable to that thing that would be far easier to solve than just being SOL if I was on Linux.
It is something as a user that I just can’t simply afford to deal with on a regular basis if I made the switch.
So while I may not have too much of an issue running games, I won’t have too much of an issue using alternatives, I won’t have to deal with the Windows ecosystem .etc I will just be running into other walls that would simply make me second guess my decision and make me regret switching to the point where I would dip back into Windows in a hurry.
I still need to provide binaries for Windows, so build and compile for multiple operating systems.
I love Linux. Deploying software to customer sites was historically challenging on Linux due to system dependencies. Containers alleviate most of those problems.
Honestly in my experience linux is dogshit.
Want literally any program that reads or writes files to be able to work? Well good fucking luck spending hours asking on discord and reading websites trying to figure out how to fix the permissions and never figuring it out.
Want the system to fucking boot the OS? Lol. Roll the dice baby! 1/3 of the time it’s going to get stuck in command line.
And why struggle in the first place? Two of my favorite games don’t even run on it.
And even the games that EXPLICITLY SAY THEY RUN ON LINUX IN STEAM DO NOT WORK
I turned a gaming laptop into a word processor. And ultimately into a dust collector.
I’m done trying. Fuck linux and fuck the first person who tells me different.
I’m curious to know exactly what distribution you tried. Every type of Linux I have tried have never given me issues with programs, booting, or running games.
In fact, the only games that have flat out not worked for me are the ones that require a Windows system for their anticheat.
I don’t blame you for hating the system; I would too, given the circumstances. I’m just curious as to how your system got to such a state of unusability.
mint manjaro kubuntu
I don’t remember the specifics of the first two; all above complaints relate to the third
Mmm yeah, Mint is like the only one of those designed for compatibility and ease of use first. Manjaro as your 2nd distro is an especially wild step. That was my 2nd distro as well, and it was miserable and I broke my machine lol. Then, come to find out, the company that makes it suxx with a capital XX.
You know, now that I think back on my early days, I actually did try Kubuntu for a little bit and I had a few hiccups there. Never failed to boot on me, but it did have times where it felt like it was trying. 😭
If you ever feel like giving it a go again, Pop!_OS is pretooled to have all the drivers you need. I didn’t have a single problem with Pop! my whole time using it. If that doesn’t suit your visual style, then PikaOS has a great KDE Plasma spin that feels just like Windows!
My point being: I’m sorry you had a bad experience, but also understand that there are options that are drag ‘n’ drop easy at this point.
I’ll go fuck myself now, I guess…
Oh, by the way, what are those two games?
I had way more problems with kubuntu than manjaro by the way. Trying to remember back, I think I switched away from it because of some security issue that was a meme at that point? I was thinking of switching back but I merged the laptop’s ssd and hdd in the disk manager so now I’d have to have a clean start and I got lazy.
I’m no longer in a situation where the laptop is especially useful to me and it was my trial run for deciding if I would switch on my desktop.
Oh, by the way, what are those two games?
Rocket league and this
I could probably run a VM for the latter if I were on a desert island I guess
Yeah, Kubuntu has some issues. If you didn’t have any trouble with Manjaro, CachyOS is similar, but without the BS, super fast and gaming focused. I’m using it now, and I was fully expecting to break it but it just keeps trucking.
Also, you can run both of those games on Linux. Steam’s Proton tool is magic. ProtonDB users have Rocket League working on the Steam Deck. You probably just need the Heroic Games Launcher to get it from Epic. I don’t have any personal experience with Rocket League, but Civ IV definitely runs through Steam with Proton, and it’s not hard to mod games on there.
Unfortunately I’m addicted to a game that requires kernel level anti cheat. So I dual boot Fedora and Windows, but pretty much the only thing I use the Windows partition for is the game and that rare application that just works ™️ on Windows
I want to be able to rely on all the things I want to do on my PC “just working” I don’t want to come home after a long day of bullshit looking forward to playing a game or working on a project and have to do a bunch of troubleshooting because something is fucked up. I’m not there yet with Linux. To be fair I’m not there yet with Win 11 either so I’m in a tight spot.
I did buy a laptop so I could try it out more aggressively but have ran into a lot of roadblocks and just have a lot of things that I haven’t had time to figure out yet.
What kind of projects are you creating?
I will say, Linux really is not all the way there for people who use Adobe products. I get the hesitation. But, I haven’t had issues with games since like 2022 - and that was because I was trying to mod anyway.
That said, I have to inquire what distribution you’re using on your laptop? Not that they’re perfect, but something a little more preconfigured for your needs like Pop!_OS or CachyOS may be the ticket to a smoother experience.
CAD for 3d printing/woodworking
Drawing
Managing my media server and putting together playlists/reading lists.
Various little coding things to help with workflows on different things.
I’ve been playing around with Bazzite which seems to be pretty good so far but I have a list of things still I need to figure out how to do on it. Also for the record I’ve been running a headless debian server for my media for years without much issue so I’m not clueless about Linux but that isn’t as involved as using it for a desktop.
Yeah, you’re a bit SOL for CAD and drawing. I mean, Krita is great, but if you use Adobe you’re fucked.
I hear so many complaints about FreeCAD… Maybe we’ll be there someday.
Yeah, I use Krita for drawing so I’m not so worried about (assuming my tablet works) I do have FreeCAD installed and have played with it a little but it was a pretty rocky start that left me not super confident that I’ll be able to rely on it.
Theres also the issue that working off just the laptop is annoying so I’m looking to see if theres a KVM switch/Dock that will let me use my periphreals with the laptop without having to unplug all my shit. Haven’t messed with hardware like that in a long time though so I’m not sure what’s what.
I flipped in 1997, so any software I might have missed since those days are probably not around anymore.
Windows 95 was pretty shitty in comparison to Linux, and a lot of software broke with NT 4.0
It was an easy choice at the time. Linux was the operating system for this new fancy thing called the internet. Software development turned into a career, and Linux is just a very nice stack for building backends and infrastructure.
I do have an old ThinkPad around running windows 10. I’ve only used it three times in the past five years: To unbrick an Android phone, to set the MMSI on a marine radio, and to update the maps on my car’s satnav.
i don have enough technical knowledge to be confident I wouldn’t just fuck up my entire computer tbh. I’ll probably try it out when my hubby helps me build a proper pc, but that’s not happening for a while
Ehhh it could happen, but if you use something like Linux Mint or Pop!_OS, your experience is not going to be too different from Windows.
I did. But I could easily see how people are put off by the “fan base”. I actually avoid talking about Linux at all irl because I don’t want people to think I’m a fossbro
Jesus, yes. And I’m a lady so I get the extra layer of dudes trying to gatekeep their “manly” hobby. I can go for a hat trick of perceived emasculation while I’m at it and tell them my deadlift form is better than theirs and that I know the best way to clean a trout.
Jesus yes, the fanbase, more primarily the die-hards.
The kind that feel they have to be the jehovah’s witness of operating systems. Can’t tell you how many times someone wants a software or even a hardware issue troubleshooted and it never fails, there’s that one guy or two going “GO LINUX!”. “Have you tried Linux?” they butt in, disrespecting the inquiring user just wanting their problem solved so they can continue using their computer throughout the day. They’re not interested in being marketed to or browbeaten, even if that thing is free.
It’s happened to me before. Game won’t run? Linux. Can’t boot? Linux. Your computer is on fire? Linux because I guess it is capable of virtualizing a fire extinguisher to cool your computer down. It is no wonder some users online find Linux users insufferable this way.
The only worst thing a Windows user can do to you is just nag you to upgrade the OS but you can tell them to fuck off. With a Linux user? It could turn into an hours-long debate.
- CAD
- Photo editing
Gave FreeCAD and darktable a solid try hoping to switch my main desktop, but they have significant usability problems
I used to dual boot windows just for when I needed to run LR Classic or Photoshop but now I just use winboat which makes them usable in Linux in your desktop environment while under the hood its running through a VM. It works great except not having GPU acceleration hurts, but it was a compromise worth it to me to not have to reboot into and out of windows.
Have you tried RawTherapee instead of Darktable? They both do pretty much the same thing, but I find RawTherapee much easier to use :)
CAD was a big problem for me as well. I’ve been happy enough with OnShape (coming from Autodesk Inventor), but the extreme SaaS nature of it makes me worry.
I have about 7 or 8 machines running some version of linux. I try to switch as a daily machine every decade or so and works fine for a couple of weeks. Then something needs an update, that update then updates some dependencies which breaks a half dozen other programs. Half of those have new updates for it the other half dont. Of the half that do about half of those also update even more dependencies which then breaks even more programs. This spirals for a month or two sometimes settling out sometimes not. Eventually i get tire of fixing the machine and just want to use it so i go back to my windows box i havent had to fuck with since i put it together. Wait a decade or so and the cycle repeats. Just waiting on that time when the cycle breaks and im still using a linux box. Maybe another 30 some odd years and it will be ready.
- I don’t have a personal computer, just my work computer right now so I don’t need it.
- I work in graphics so I’m wary that not everything I use now will be available (I know there are alternatives, but they aren’t equal).
- I got a steam deck for my gaming (not my day to day).
- my wife and I use Mac’s and iPhones and I’m worried it’ll be hard for her to switch and the ecosystem is very convent and easy right now.
- I acquired a gaming computer for my kid and promptly put mint on it.
- I only pretend to be technologically savvy and am not confident to answer all the questions my family needs to go full Linux. It’s more at the testing hobby level.
My main reasons boil down to availability of programs, no necessity yet, and ease of the new ecosystem isn’t as simple.
I uninstalled my Windows 7 box and installed Mint on it recently and it seems to work okay, except there is no sound. I’ve tried all the troubleshooting stuff I read online, tried switching sound-cards, but no sound. I’ve got a Debian distro now on my USB, so I’ll try that one day.
It won’t take long for me to give up on Linux and to just continue to use Win10.
There is too concentrated which is bad (mac, win), and there is too fragmented which is bad (that is your Linux/distro universe). In other words, in one world, a single entity controls and is responsible for everything, and in another world, no one is. I am not getting into what is worse or better, rather what is usable for an end user.
And then there’s the tacit wisdom of the FOSS/Linux world savants: “Uh, if something is not done or not available – you can just fork it or raise a PR, can’t you?” completely escaping the fact that almost the entirety of the users of either world are just end users.
Irfanview, MYOB, and a lack of virtual file system in Nextcloud.
Adobe and games. But actually mostly Adobe.
This was my issue but one day I found out about LinOffice a project that will run office in a container and the windows appear on my KDE desktop as apps. So I looked into it deeper and it says it works alongside something called WimApps (https://github.com/winapps-org/winapps) that lets you also run office but more importantly will work with Creative Cloud. It’s seamless, it’s like I’m running Photoshop on windows. Closing apps can sometimes be wonky but it runs everything I’ve thrown at it.
There is a critical work applications that I need. I’ve tried everything to get it to run on Linux, so I really can’t do it.
Bought a Mac instead to at least get away from windows. The day that app can run on Linux, I’ll be switching back to it.