|
|
|
|
|
by berkes
907 days ago
|
|
You are either extremely unlucky or chose a very strange setup. The problems you describe were common in early 2000s, but haven't been common in Linux desktop for a decade or so. For those reading above and thinking "I'll skip Linux, if that's the current status": it's not. Just pick Ubuntu LTS. Use it on common hardware (e.g
not bleeding edge) and stick with the defaults. Don't try to make it exactly like your Mac or Windows machine but lean into how it does things. They are different . They may be uncomfortable. Then, once familiar feel free to tinker and hack. I'm on Linux since 1996. I've hacked and tweaked everything in my younger years. Now I'm on a boring, hardly configured Ubuntu LTS. Well, my she'll and nvim are tuned beyond recognition, I guess. The rest: boring. |
|
I politely disagree. I recently installed Fedora on my desktop PC because Microsoft decided that displaying a full-screen ad for Windows 11 that prevented my PC from booting was acceptable behaviour. Anyway, one of the first things I noticed on Fedora was that video playback was stuttery. After ages spent digging around, I discovered Fedora had disabled GPU hardware video decoding for legal reasons. Around the same time I made the mistake of trying to delete a directory with lots of files in it on an NTFS drive. The operation failed and corrupted the filesystem, and I had to spend a week or so downloading and restoring backups. Needless to say I'm back on Windows now.