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by KronisLV
1482 days ago
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It will probably never be the year of the Linux Desktop in the mainstream, despite many promising projects out there. But for personal usage, Linux is more than acceptable - if you can grokk all of its pain points, that is. Linus Tech Tips did a few videos on the topic recently, it was painful but understandable to watch. Personally, Ubuntu LTS (or equivalent boring long term support distro) or something with XFCE is solid and really usable, especially if you intend to do programming, where things are weird on Windows sometimes. Except for gaming. Proton still has a ways to go and Wine isn't optimal for that sort of stuff and neither Linux or OS X are worth supporting for many games/projects/software because they represent a small part of the total userbase. For example, in regards to games: https://store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey Windows 96.68%
OSX 2.20%
Linux 1.12%
Supporting any system that's not Windows for games would be like burning money. At that point, you might as well offer the game for free on those systems (if using an engine like Unity/Unreal/Godot, where builds are easy) but refuse bug reports on them, if you don't have the resources for that kind of support. |
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Even though it was sold as Linux supported device, it had its own series of issues, with wlan driver being broken when Canonical decided to replace it for a less capable one taking 6 months to reach feature parity, nowadays GL is stuck at 3.3, although fxgl used to be able to do 4.1.
And then there is the whole issue with VA-API, and the workarounds to watch hardware accelerated video.
Hence why when this netbook dies, I most likely will stick to using GNU/Linux from VMs, which I have been doing with VMWare since 2010 in other computers, I don't recall the last time I went through the trouble of setting a dual boot system.