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by terrut 745 days ago
I've been a Windows user since 3.1, but this was the straw for me. They have always provided an OS that just worked for my home needs, even with the creeping privacy invasions in the last update.

I've been dual booting for a while and last weekend I went full Linux at home. My day job revolves around being truly good at solving Windows issues, and I will happily continue doing that, but at home I'm still just liking for something that "just works" I hope I'm part of a trend, and that 2024 is the year of the....

3 comments

Yes, it's a really tough thing to manage this whole Recall thing philosophically and it makes me concerned about this OS. Even if MS is backtracking somewhat, they have shown their cards now and how they prioritize positioning themselves as an AI company above even rudimentary privacy. It's hard to just regain trust as if nothing happened.

I'm considering Linux with a Windows VM for Visual Studio. I've had my Linux detours in the past and it honestly works pretty well for me. I personally enjoy Fedora with Gnome which I think strikes a good balance between stability, security, and freshness. But if being stable and worryfree is of top importance (like where you are "unpaid tech support", haha), why not just go Debian. :)

If you want Linux isn't "just working" over time, give macOS a look. My dad was a lifelong Windows user and sung the praises of Microsoft's monopoly over the industry. As much as he was disappointed and upset with Borland Software dying off, he thought the benefit of a single document format everyone used was a huge benefit for the industry early on when Word started to take over, and by extension all of the standardization through a single player rather than through actual standards. He always said it worked great and didn't see why he'd ever want to change, or why anyone would want anything different.

He ended up switching to Apple around 15 years ago after a series of bad experiences. He was very nervous about it, and really hedged his bets early on. It took him some time to get used to how the OS worked, to find new apps to replace some that he had used since the Windows 3.1 days, and sort out his workflows. He eventually gave up his Windows VM when he realized the only thing he ever used it for was to run Windows Update.

I grew up on Windows, with the views from my dad instilled in me. In college I tried Linux and ultimately moved to the Mac about 21 years ago. I still used Linux on and off for the past 22 years (and currently have a music server running it). I do find Linux to still be much more finicky than macOS. No system is perfect, but macOS is more of a "just works" operating system than Linux (imo), likely due to the focus on polishing that last 10% of the user experience, that never seems to get the attention it needs in Linux. While I am excited to see what Cosmic has to offer later this year on Pop OS, I'm always ending up having to deal with some level of nonsense, even my most recent install of Mint just last week had a few annoying things where things didn't work, and they should have worked.

Any Recs? i've just gotten a Kubuntu image. I am thinking if i dual boot that and SteamOS i should have everything i want covered.
No reason to use SteamOS, it's just immutable Arch with an A/B partition scheme. Modern SteamOS is designed specifically for the Steam Deck and they only ship it as a recovery image for the Deck.

You can install Steam on whatever distribution you want, I use the Flatpak, and just enable Proton in the compatibility settings.

And if someone’s after that console-like functionality, ChimeraOS is the right choice in this area. It behaves like SteamOS, but is more compatible with PC hardware.
Ok awesome suggestions.

I got set on SteamOS as i was contemplating buying an SBC with similar hardware and giving it a custom case.

But this looks better!

I'm pretty excited for the Cosmic DE later this year. Here is a demo given by the CEO and the design lead. The audio isn't the best, but good enough. This is probably the most excited I've been to try out a new operating system since OS X Tiger. It is being developed by the Pop OS team, but they are making it so anyone can use it, Fedora plans on having a spin, I believe it's out there for Arch, and I'm sure others will have it as an option. Though I wouldn't use it as a daily driver until it's actually released.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHLfsWhDvz0