| And tbh: money is not the issue. I don't like the 'apple tax' but they are comfortable wayyyyyy up in their trees... and macOS / iOS dev env is leverage. I'm on the same boat. Except I have a chromebox as guinea pig. I've seen people reporting this transition as a 'surprisingly good experience'. So here's my 2 cents on a 30 minute run (amount of time it takes me to setup a new macbook): 1password: there are options, but omg it just works... xrandr: I knew things would get hairy when I found myself looking up how to dual monitor + rotate on i3wm fonts: I don't know what it is, but seems different I know your experience will vary from distro to distro, but that is exactly the point: it's hard to find that happy place. I'm sure that sticking to certain distro, under certain hardware, things will go fine. But that at point I ask myself: Sooo... this seems similar to mac ecosystem, why not pay the apple tax and move on? I don't think 2017 will be the year of linux on the desktop (or any other prophecy along those lines), but for sure it will be 'the year I reconsidered linux on the desktop'. The Linux experience I saw so far would be enough for me to be productive with some known rough edges that I can either help fix or report. Worst case scenario I get a macbook pro during the fall update ;) |
I had a Dell XPS 13 connected to a Dell monitor running the stock Dell Ubuntu distro and still had to use arandr with config files when I switched from desk monitor to laptop to conference room.
This was a known issue a couple years ago. Maybe it's resolved now.