I should’ve used it sooner rather than last year when they announced AI integration to Windows. Every peripheral I tried is just worked without needing to install drivers, and it works better and faster than on Windows, just like today when I tried to use my brother’s 3D printer expecting disappointment, but no, it just connected and was ready to print right away (I use Ultimaker Cura), whereas on my brother’s Windows computer I have to wait like 20 seconds; sometimes I have to disconnect and reconnect it again for it to see and ready to use. Lastly, for those who are wondering, I use Vanilla Arch (btw), and sorry for bad English.

    • ColdWater@lemmy.caOP
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      Haha thanks but it’s not actually my first distro, I’m distro hopping on my first week of switching to Linux, my first ever distro is EndeavourOS>Nobara>Fedora>OpenSUSE>Vanilla Arch

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        That’s a lot of different distros in one week. How do you give each one enough time to evaluate it before you choose to move to another?

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          At the time my main goal is to have to all of my games working, while I can make it run on every distro I tried, I found Vanilla Arch is the better one in terms of performance and ease of use (yeah call me weird for saying Arch is easier to use than other distros XD), so I keep using it ever since.

          • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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            Vanilla Arch is the better one in terms of performance and ease of use (yeah call me weird for saying Arch is easier to use than other distros XD)

            Not weird at all, I use Arch on my main system exactly because I’m lazy and it’s easier to use. It’s harder to install, but a lot easier to use.

    • TimeSquirrel@kbin.melroy.org
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      I remember the USAF handing me an M16 at 18 years old where all I’ve ever handled before that was even close was the NES zapper.

    • Cysioland@lemmygrad.ml
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      tbh vanilla arch is not that tough now that archinstall exists, and archwiki is an incredible resource

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    I use Vanilla Arch (btw), and sorry for bad English.

    Sure buddy… Is the “bad English” in this thread with us right now?

    • spongebue@lemmy.world
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      I laughed when I saw this. Like, it was a guy excited that his computer is working better, including with his printer. Maybe a teensy bit of punctuation I’d do differently, but whatever. It’s the Internet. Then suddenly “oh yeah sorry English isn’t my first language and I’m sure you can all see that”

  • flamingo_pinyata@sopuli.xyz
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    Welcome!

    For a while now Linux has been better at most personal computing things except gaming. And for server uses an even longer time.

    There are some specific hardware/software situations where you’ll need Windows but it’s unlikely to happen at home. Unless you have very peculiar hobbies.

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      Gaming is my struggle, right now. On x11, I get stable framerates, but even though my benchmarks show 60+ fps, it sure looks lower to my eye. On Wayland, gameplay is smooth, but I keep getting this weird thing where after 20-30 minutes of gameplay I’ll get this weird input lag, where my mouse movement stops and then “catches up” every second or so, resulting in choppy gameplay despite the smooth framerate.

      If I can figure that out, I’d happily drop my Windows partition.

      • rtxn@lemmy.world
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        mouse movement stops and then “catches up” every second or so

        I had that issue with a wired G502 mouse. It was caused by an excessive polling rate, and setting it to 125 Hz fixed it.

    • ColdWater@lemmy.caOP
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      Yeah it’s quite nice and more fun to use than Windows, I admit it’s pretty hectic on my first week of switching, but after learning a few commonly used terminal commands and open source softwares, I can do pretty much almost anything some time without needing to use DE I can just use tty instead

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      At work the only issue I ever found is the requirement to use Power Point for presentations and Word for filing patents. LibreOffice just did not translate well enough. Have not tried OnlyOffice.

      Edit: Complex Excel sheets especially with macros would be a problem too. These are not always cross version Excel compatible for that matter. One reason I shifted that stuff to Python long ago and voided that issue.

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        The sad thing is I’ve encountered funky compatibility issues just between current versions of word. Going from Office 2022 (I think. I honestly can’t remember their LTSC office releases off the top of my head at all) to M365 triggered some minor formatting changes, and going from local word document to one that’s shared on SharePoint completely fucked up all of the images in the document and required many hours of rearranging the images because word still sucks for desktop publishing

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          I remember working on a large doc around 1990. Pagination and figures, what a nightmare. Sounds like maybe similar issue. I’m not really sure Office impoved after say 2003. They could have called it done at that point.

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            Image handling has definitely gotten better in the last 10 years or so, but realistically you can get everything you want done with Word 2003 today

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      There’s plenty of good reasons to keep a windows device updated and available for use.

      Honestly, I prefer that to spinning up a windows VM, especially if your needs include Windows software that interfaces directly with external hardware.

      I realize that’s not an option for everyone, but for those who have an extra device available, or can afford a used laptop to keep in a closet, it’s well worth it IMO.

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    And if something doesn’t work, it’s all your fault somehow. Which is both a blessing and a curse.

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      That’s fine, I can look up the Arch Wiki for solutions, which is also a learning process for me and if it still doesn’t work, I can just duct tape the workaround myself XD

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        Tip from long-time arch user (btw). Avoid installing or making changes to system installation without going through pacman. I.e., don’t use install scripts or make install invocations requiring sudo. More often than not that will cause headaches long-term. PKGBUILDs are actually reasonably simple to create if you need to install something not in the AUR, and it will keep you from overwriting files and leaving files behind after uninstalling.

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          I make a promise to myself that I never install anything outside of the AUR, luckily everything I ever need already available there

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    These kind of posts make me a little happy. I don’t know exactly why but it does.

    Having used Linux on for 25 years or so and now hearing about people who switch from Windows and really enjoying the experience warms my heart a little

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      Me too, I’ve only used it for a year but every time I see a Linux appreciation post, it makes me happy and makes my day better

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    Yeah. I’ve been trying to get the word out.

    I’ve been screwing with Linux for decades, but somewhere along the line, Linux got easier and more reliable than Windows. I was as surprised as anyone. My last couple Linux installs were a cake walk.

    I also like Linux more than Mac, but I’m a tinkerer at heart, and Mac’s (relative) lack of fiddly bits (customization options) has kept me from staying on it long.

    • Cpo@lemm.ee
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      Same here.

      Daily driver is a mac but I always use a desktop Linux machine at home.

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    I’ve been using Linux for almost 9 years now. Shit is never so smooth for me but I still love it.

    The only device it has been smooth on has been my Thinkpad T530. Every other install I have has some annoying issue, usually small

      • Chris L@lemmy.world
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        I’ve had good luck with several Lenovo laptops. ThinkPads and IdeaPads. Everything but the fingerprint readers just works.

        • JustARegularNerd@aussie.zone
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          Everything but the fingerprint readers just works.

          Good to know the struggle for the fingerprint reader wasn’t just me. I did “get it working” but it was extremely hacky and it wasn’t what I was after; I only wanted fingerprint for login, not additionally for sudo, but that’s not how it set up and I didn’t want to spend even more countless hours trying to fix that

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    Most of my library just works under Linux.

    1000046693

    Plus it is a pleasure to code under Linux.

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    Awesome!

    and your english is perfect, dude. no worries. the only suggestion I have for you in that regard is to watch out for run on sentences :)

  • WeebLife@lemmy.world
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    I recently made the switch to linux as well and I have it on my laptop and gaming PC. I do keep a portable install of windows on an external drive for more niche cases, such as music production which I had terrible luck with on Linux. When I booted up my laptop with the windows drive, I noticed that my keyboard backlight wasn’t working. And it took me a second to realize that Windows doesn’t come with basic drivers… In Linux mint, my keyboard backlight worked right away. I also wish I made the jump to Linux much earlier.