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.

  • Dragonstaff@leminal.space
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    2 days ago

    Every couple years I decide to switch to Linux, spend few weeks trying to get everything to work right, then give up and go back to Windows.

    I feel like I’m in a “Goldilocks zone” where I’m enough of a power user that doing what I want in Linux takes quite a bit of work to get set up, but not enough of a power user that I enjoy the technical challenge.

    Most recently I was trying to play a couple modded video games, and run a headless HTPC. One thing would work on one distro, another would work on another, but I couldn’t get everything to work at once.

  • variouslegumes@reddthat.com
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    5 days ago

    You’ll find some things are broken and janky in Windows and Linux. Just different jank you’re not used to. I have friends who complain about how they have to do weird workarounds for Linux and then turnaround and fuck with RegEdit. You get used to either given enough time.

    • well5H1T3@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      then turnaround and fuck with RegEdit.

      LOL, forgot about this. And they say they ain’t tech savvy enough

    • other_cat@piefed.zip
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      5 days ago

      +1

      I did flip my peripheral electronics, it’s just my main computer I haven’t changed yet. I made an attempt a while back ago but ran into enough snags, after already having a rough day, that I gave up and I haven’t tried again since. I’m pretty sure I know what the problem is, I just haven’t found myself wanting to sit down and burn the time it would take to install the new OS and get everything installed and tweaked how I like it etc. The latter part being a most-of-the-day project.

      I will do it eventually though. I am sick of Windows. Now I just need to get over my fatigue and get off my ass.

        • dormedas@lemmy.dormedas.com
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          5 days ago

          If you’re definitely making the hop, copy the whole windows file system to an external NTFS-formatted drive and then mount that and sort the files later haha.

          You won’t be able to boot it as a backup, but the files will be there. If you have drive encryption you have to turn it off

  • Kagu@lemmy.ml
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    4 days ago

    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

    • nizvicious@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Same here, fellow Fedora and Windows dual boot. I have a seperate hard drive for kernel level anti-cheat games: Escape From Tarkov - some PVE maps do run under Linux but PVP and parts of the map require anti-cheat.

      Battlefield games from 5 onwards

      Call of Duty games Coldwar onwards - do not open a call of duty game under Linux, there have been posts where it is an instant ban.

      Ghosts of Tabor

      I do have hope that one day the anti-cheat situation will work out where it doesn’t matter what operating system you are running but for now if I want to play some of the above games with friends for now I dual boot.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    While we are nearly an “All Linux” shop at home, there is one machine that I won’t change.

    It is a HP oscilloscope running a heavily modified version of Win98. Back then, it cost as much as a new car, and it still works mostly fine (and where it doesn’t, I know, and can work around). The Windows is basically an afterthought to the hardware, and I don’t think I could get any kind of drivers for the hardware - not even for a newer Windows version. So that remains.

    But even my wife wants to switch to Linux now instead of going Win11.

  • Whitebrow@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Isn’t mint based on Ubuntu? So that should work without a hitch for you. Worst case just boot into the live usb without installing it directly and just try it there.

    As for me, I dual boot on separate drives because I have specific software that requires windows sometimes. Otherwise it’s primarily Linux on all machines in the house.

    • KazuchijouNo@lemy.lol
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      5 days ago

      Yeah! Once you get into linux you discover that in reality there are like 3 maybe 4 linux distros. Ubuntu is based on Debian and Mint is based on Ubuntu. And if you are knowledgeable enough then you just compile everything from source and it doesn’t matter if you’re running Fedora or FreeBSD.

      I may be a fool though, don’t listen to me.

      • jaykrown@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        The only thing a beginner needs to know is Linux Mint. I think any time anyone shows curiosity in trying Linux, it should be stressed that there’s a really simple and “safe” way to start, which would be through Linux Mint.

  • MarieMarion@literature.cafe
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    3 days ago

    I’m convinced it’s much less straightforward than people here say it is.

    I hate Windows, but I only use my computer for OpenOffice, some liiiiight browsing, and old-school light pirating (light enough TPB fits all my needs), so meh.
    My new neighbor is an old leftist techie though, and when my 9 year old laptop dies, I may ask him to convert me. Maybe.

    • ☂️-@lemmy.ml
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      3 days ago

      it is not, but for the simple use case you mention, it’s actually more intuitive.

      you can try it out straight from the usb.

  • Caveman@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Most recently when I used Windows was because of work. I’ve been seeing these posts for a while now and I can make some valid arguments.

    • Anti cheat games
    • Adobe products (Web is not the same)
    • MS Office desktop
    • Work has processes linked to Windows specifically (server that only works on IIS Express maybe?)
    • Big legacy codebase where they don’t match filename casing.
    • Specific Visual Studio scripts or plugins for a DSL.
    • Security requirements that need windows APIs (like mandating crowdstrike)
    • Music production with a Ableton (it works but it’s not noob friendly).
    • You have deep knowledge of Windows and getting up to speed on Linux would take a year without guarantees you have a comparable system.
    • Your client is on Windows and you’re making a desktop Windows app that’s not cross platform.

    Thankfully none of these apply to me so I’m on Linux but I can see how this is an issue.

    • golden_zealot@lemmy.ml
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      4 days ago

      I’ve found real solutions to pretty much everything but this. For Fusion, I still just have to run it in a windows VM under Linux.

  • Eiri@lemmy.ca
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    5 days ago

    Because my PC is an entertainment box. I don’t want to turn it into a problem to solve.

    Also, Nvidia.

    • well5H1T3@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Also, Nvidia.

      Was waiting for this to pop up LOL

      If you are on a market for a Linux-first laptop, AMD is the way. I mean, yes, Nvidia is far better now than half a decade ago, but still, the hoops you have to jump? FUCK YOU NVIDIA

    • bstix@feddit.dk
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      3 days ago

      There’s a lack of linux native VSTs, but other than that my exp has been that Linux is both easier, less demanding and more stable than Windows for audio. Don’t know how it compares to Mac.

  • thenewred@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago
    • CAD
    • Photo editing

    Gave FreeCAD and darktable a solid try hoping to switch my main desktop, but they have significant usability problems

    • Badabinski@kbin.earth
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      4 days ago

      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.

    • Mechanite@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      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.

    • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 days ago

      Have you tried RawTherapee instead of Darktable? They both do pretty much the same thing, but I find RawTherapee much easier to use :)