| > The only two issues you mention that are real have nothing to do with Linux itself but third-party support. If you don’t think sleep or power management issues on Linux are real you should do a cursory google. You not having the flu doesn’t mean the flu doesn’t exist and isn’t running rampant. Also, third party support is critical. The majority of user would not want to use Linux if it didn’t have any access to Dropbox, Spotify, Slack, Discord, VLC, or any of the other creature comforts people expect to be able to use these days. > Spotify shortcut works fine but maybe you were using a broken package? Ctrl + right and Ctrl + left (next & previous track) are broken and have been for a long while now. Again, do some research. > I never had an issue with Pulse but Pipewire is the new king on the block and works so smooth. Pipewire uses PulseEQ. Also, this has nothing to do with what I mentioned (internal speakers not automatically being EQ’d with a ‘small speaker’ EQ). If you ever hear a MacBook, you’ll be flummoxed by how good it sounds in comparison to the tinny sound of your laptop. EQ is king. |
It's probably terrible on unsupported hardware. Having used Linux-compatible hardware for a while now though, neither of these are an issue.
> majority of user would not want to use Linux if it didn’t have any access to Dropbox, Spotify, Slack, Discord, VLC
Good thing all of those programs are natively packaged for most distros, then.
> Ctrl + right and Ctrl + left (next & previous track) are broken and have been for a long while now.
...because Spotify migrated it's shortcuts to the more technically-correct MPRIS implementation. If you want shortcuts, set them globally and Spotify will respect it.
I'm not going to make the argument that 'everyone should use Linux', but it makes me sad listening to software developers level outdated complaints against the ecosystem. Linux is fine these days, if you don't edit video or do intensive creative work then I see no reason to avoid it.