An honest look at the state of the Linux desktop going into 2024

2024 ж. 21 Мам.
158 882 Рет қаралды

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Timecodes:
00:00 Intro
00:51 Sponsor: ProtonVPN
02:21 Standardization and cohesiveness
05:31 Packaging formats and app distribution
07:17 Display, Wayland, HDR, and scaling
09:27 Drivers, graphics and firmware
11:40 Gaming
13:06 App support
14:31 More challenges?
17:02 Sponsor: Get a PC made to run Linux
18:00 Support the channel
#Linux #desktop #operatingsystem #linuxdesktop #linuxdistro
Unified theming between desktops is pretty much abandoned as a thing that should be pursued, but we're also seeing an accent colors standard emerge. And that's complimented by the work being done on portals. With portals for settings, screenshots, remote desktops, printing, sending email, creating shortcuts or transferring files, there's now a solid abstraction layer between your desktop and the apps it runs.
But, for now, we're not there yet. These standards are progressing, but they're not all encompassing, and they're not implemented equally across all desktops. The big ones, like GNOME and KDE, sure, but other smaller options aren't there yet.
Packaging formats, at the end of 2023, are in a bad state. Linux packaging has never been messier. As neither flatpak nor snap are fully ready for 100% of applications, some stuff simply can't be packaged using these, and they still have drawbacks that some users don't want to deal with. Which means a lot of app developers still can't say "hey, this is what we should be using now".
The display situation is much better though. X11 is now clearly abandonware, and work on Wayland has been stellar in 2023. Mostly all desktops now have plans for Wayland, everyone is in agreement.
Added to that, work on supporting HDR has moved by leaps and bounds, and we'll see a fully working implementation in 2024. Fractional scaling is now properly implemented on Wayland as well, meaning we can finally do non blurry scaling, with different scaling per monitor, and different refresh rates per monitor as well.
As per drivers, we've seen some solid progress as well. AMD now has solid drivers on launch day for their GPUs, Intel has finished their Xe driver, Arc GPUs are now well supported, and nvidia drivers have progressed a lot. We're also seeing very strong efforts for open source nvidia drivers.
As per firmware, the linux firmware vendor system, or LVFS has also seen broad adoption, letting you apply firmware updates on the fly and easily. This already supplied 100 million firmware updates, and Google is even pushing manufacturers to support that for their own Linux based Chrome OS.
Gaming has been incredible in 2023. Not only did Linux pass macOS market share for Steam, but we've seen great support for the Steam Deck, which, in turn, means great support for Linux. Sure, it's all driven by Proton and Wine, it's not native Linux ports, but my opinion is that it doesn't matter: if you can click install, and then play, and run the game with the performance you'd expect, things are good.
Non steam gaming has also progressed immensely, with Heroic becoming a really fantastic launcher for Gog and EPic Games, and Lutris still handling most of the rest.
Now for app support, I'd say we haven't seen many improvements in 2023. Sure, our own open source apps have progressed this year, but the usual suspects are still missing, that would let a lot more people move to Linux. Still no Office, Adobe apps, a lot of content creation software, or CAD software are still missing, with no indication that it will change.
The big challenge I can see is AI integration in the desktop. It's a move Microsoft is making with Windows 12, adding AI powered search, and automations throughout the desktop. Whether we should chase that trend on Linux, I'll let you decide, but what's certain is that once users have had a few years to get used to one click buttons that save 30 minutes, it will be hard to go back.

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  • Try out Proton VPN, it's free, it's open source, it's private, it's encrypted, and it's what I use: protonvpn.com/TheLinuxEXP

    @TheLinuxEXP@TheLinuxEXP5 ай бұрын
    • Comment is from 4 hours ago, video is 15 seconds old xD

      @SomeRandomPiggo@SomeRandomPiggo5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@SomeRandomPiggohe forgor to set the video to public, maybe

      @usersomeone58@usersomeone585 ай бұрын
    • @@usersomeone58 scheduled, more likely

      @fosstera@fosstera5 ай бұрын
    • Also you are first!

      @emiliumax@emiliumax5 ай бұрын
    • @@usersomeone58 scheduled uploads

      @clankfish@clankfish5 ай бұрын
  • I just want apps to respect display scaling regardless of desktop environment.

    @TensaFlow@TensaFlow5 ай бұрын
    • loaded up Nobara last night just become I had a couple of hours to waste, set the desktop scaling to 125 (just like I have in windows), loaded up path of exile and the game is super zoomed in. yeah I hope they fix the scaling.

      @Hype_Incarnate@Hype_Incarnate5 ай бұрын
    • Come on! Everyone loves the smartphone experience on 25"+ desktop monitors.

      @whothefoxcares@whothefoxcares5 ай бұрын
    • Games being zoomed in is due to a poor method of scaling XWayland apps that GNOME has refused to fix on multiple occasions, even though KDE Plasma has largely solved it a year and a half ago. Their solution doesn’t cover every X11 app, but it covers most of them, and fixes the issue of games being zoomed in. If you want proper XWayland fractional scaling, you must use KDE Plasma.

      @ars7374@ars73745 ай бұрын
    • Independent scaling per display!

      @JV-pu8kx@JV-pu8kx5 ай бұрын
    • Exactly 👍🏻

      @IakobusAtreides@IakobusAtreides5 ай бұрын
  • “There’s 14 standards! That’s too many! I’m gonna make one standard that combines all of them.” “There are now 15 standards.”

    @GhostFox_69@GhostFox_695 ай бұрын
    • Counter example: PipeWire

      @slateand808@slateand8085 ай бұрын
    • Linux desktop... In a nutshell.

      @a5cent@a5cent5 ай бұрын
    • The biggest downside of open source

      @wile123456@wile1234564 ай бұрын
    • Having a package manager is too confusing let's invent appimage, flatpak, snap...

      @thesenamesaretaken@thesenamesaretaken3 ай бұрын
    • @@thesenamesaretaken everything to gatekeep people from using linux in a decent manner.

      @kizurura@kizurura3 ай бұрын
  • I'm still a Windows user. I want to switch to Linux, but can't because of app support issues.

    @07whaleboy@07whaleboy5 ай бұрын
    • What app support?

      @lambada1975@lambada19755 ай бұрын
    • Adobe?

      @burnin8orable@burnin8orable5 ай бұрын
    • Do a dual boot, then slow migrate your apps until you go to Windows to do minor stuff.

      @Skatox@Skatox5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@burnin8orableThis is literally the only reason I can't get my spouse on Linux. They do graphic design and can't afford to relearn a whole new application. I wish there was a good Adobe Cloud Application Suite.

      @discocat2500@discocat25005 ай бұрын
    • @@Skatox I don't have the drive space for that.

      @07whaleboy@07whaleboy5 ай бұрын
  • We need more preinstalled Linux laptop OEMs in the U.S. Slimbook & Tuxedo, as good as they are in the EU, aren't really cost effective in the U.S. and System76 is pretty much the only one, and none of their laptops are really that competitive... We just need one major OEM to make more Linux laptops that are competitive, like with 16 : 10 screens and more recent CPUs and GPUs...

    @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, and these need to be sold in stores, for more notoriety!

      @TheLinuxEXP@TheLinuxEXP5 ай бұрын
    • ​​​@@TheLinuxEXPOh definitely. Imagine being able to walk into a Best Buy or Micro Center (the two big name computer stores remaining in the U.S.) and being able to see laptops with both Windows 11 and Linux (even if it is just one distro like Ubuntu or Linux Mint). I'd probably be interested to try it out! Of course, Microsoft would try and throw money at these stores to avoid them from putting Linux preinstalled on their hardware, but there's only so much they can do.

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
    • That won't work, because what'll happen is that they take the laptop home, try to install some Windows software on it and return it "because it doesn't work". That's happened at least one time before when some retailer (forgot who) did exactly that. Linux will never be a mainstream desktop OS. It's a niche "enthusiast" OS, nothing more.

      @wombatdk@wombatdk5 ай бұрын
    • @@wombatdk Mainstream laptop OEMs already make Linux laptops and brand them as developer laptops. Look at the Dell XPS 13 9315 and HP Dev One. They come with Ubuntu and Pop!_OS respectively.

      @fabiandrinksmilk6205@fabiandrinksmilk62055 ай бұрын
    • @@wombatdk That's what Microsoft wants you to think. There's no way people would just install Windows applications on a non Windows system. And if they _did_ do that, that blame is on the store for not trying to help the users with their products that they sold. In that case, of course they would and should return it. The salespeople should let them know what does and doesn't work and (preferably) offer some sort of technical support. (Even if it's paid, that's another avenue of revenue.)

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
  • In summary, improvements with display, hardware, GPU, and gaming; package management and theming is fragmented; no progress on apps.

    @burnin8orable@burnin8orable5 ай бұрын
  • As the end of the year is near, I want you to know that it's a pleasure to watch your videos about our favorite OS. Thank you very very much for your work!

    @klevkaisetsu4883@klevkaisetsu48835 ай бұрын
    • Thank you very much !!

      @TheLinuxEXP@TheLinuxEXP5 ай бұрын
    • I wholeheartedly agree!

      @igordasunddas3377@igordasunddas33775 ай бұрын
    • favorite? that is win11

      @orkhepaj@orkhepaj5 ай бұрын
  • Personally I find KDE much more easier to use after moving over from window 11. Currently I’m running Kubuntu and Flatpak is easy to install for me.

    @Kidbuntu@Kidbuntu5 ай бұрын
    • It is a matter of taste... I prefer gnome, but they both work great! I find myself looking for stuff more on KDE, but it might just be that I use it less.

      @djnn22@djnn225 ай бұрын
    • @@djnn22Honestly everyone has their own preferences, that’s what make Linux so special. You can choose your distribution & desktop environment however you like.

      @Kidbuntu@Kidbuntu5 ай бұрын
    • Moved to KDE recently after many many years of Windows experience. And it feels so great. Customizable, pretty to an eye, works perfectrly fine. The only problem I have is fucking nvidia card - it sucks with wayland. I really started to consider selling my nvidia gpu and replace it with amd one

      @darellldark@darellldark5 ай бұрын
    • @@Kidbuntu Totally agree... You get to choose when using Linux!

      @djnn22@djnn225 ай бұрын
    • @@darellldark I ditched nvidia years ago because of that... I just got an interest in it last week because I need a faster video rendering "farm" and there is nothing as fast as nvidia at the moment on Linux... Even using older cards! But that would be its only purpose for me... I can't use it for anything else!

      @djnn22@djnn225 ай бұрын
  • What's really frustrating for me as a Linux user is when an app I've been using through wine/proton goes from working perfectly to not working at all because of an update. Sometimes I go months with everything I need working no issue. Other months I start wondering if I need to switch back to Windows because more and more things stop working. The state of Linux app compatibility is always in flux.

    @SilkCrown@SilkCrown5 ай бұрын
    • This is why I'd use a Wine manager like Bottles or WineZGUI. You can choose and lock the version as you want it to be. Also why I report to ProtonDB or put it in my review for the game, because if I forgot what worked then I can recheck the game page.

      @FengLengshun@FengLengshun5 ай бұрын
    • It's pretty simple. If your system does what you need don't update. Problem solved. Most updates do very little anyway.

      @g4z-kb7ct@g4z-kb7ct5 ай бұрын
    • This is why I like Bottles and WineZGUI via Flatpak. You decide when to upgrade and what version, the dependencies are upgraded predictably, and you can downgrade any components and the apps themselves.

      @FengLengshun@FengLengshun5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@g4z-kb7ct that is not a solution for all apps. You sometimes need to update app so it connects correctly to servers etc. For example in games, video chat clients, apps where you can edit something with other people (editing at the same time or even when you send files to someone and then that person have old version of software).

      @Daniel_VolumeDown@Daniel_VolumeDown5 ай бұрын
    • It's not mandated by law that you have to use one and only one system. Yes, maybe you have to use Windows too. Dual boot, another machine or simply use an external SSD with Windows and/or other systems. When Windows is better, you just use Windows. There's no need for "switching back" anywhere

      @SnLeo-zx6qy@SnLeo-zx6qy5 ай бұрын
  • Never seen an advertisement for a Proton product. I've been using it for 6 years with very little issues.

    @luc1ddaemon@luc1ddaemon5 ай бұрын
  • I switched to Linux a few months ago and all my damn games are running! My software development experience is liberating! When it comes to specialized software (which i don't need) it's not there yet. However, I believe that the success of blender can be a model for other programs.

    @oldm9228@oldm92285 ай бұрын
    • On a desktop i presume

      @misterperson7070@misterperson70702 ай бұрын
    • You can always try dual booting to windows and linux

      @cieplydran1@cieplydran1Ай бұрын
    • Which distro?

      @OPAgusta@OPAgustaАй бұрын
    • Mint

      @oldm9228@oldm9228Ай бұрын
  • Can't wait for Wine to support Wayland natively, I'd ditch grandpa X11 in a heartbeat

    @pikminpro6692@pikminpro66925 ай бұрын
    • Oh yeah

      @TheLinuxEXP@TheLinuxEXP5 ай бұрын
    • wayland is awful, has many issues.

      @Ralphunreal@Ralphunreal5 ай бұрын
  • The biggest issue for Linux to hit the mainstream is also its greatest strength...there's too many damn versions of it. Even Linux Mint, which I use, has four different versions on its download page.

    @voteDC@voteDC5 ай бұрын
    • Very true! I've realized going into analysis of someone's choices once they say they're trying some distro _isn't_ actually such a good thing. "Oh don't use Ubuntu it's spyware/bloated", "Arch/Gentoo is too advanced", "Pop! OS is abandoned", "Linux Mint doesn't support Wayland (being revised)", "Red Hat is being a little sketchy with the upstream code to Fedora", I mean the list goes on and on!!

      @zoox3732@zoox37325 ай бұрын
    • This. There isn't one-single company/organization spearheading the development of "Linux" forward (nobody wants Canonical to do that, so not counting them) in a singular direction - and until that is amended, Linux will stay niche. Valve and Mozilla have massive potential, with Valve being the much more realistic hope for Linux going mainstream, but they have been dragging their feet with SteamOS for some time now. As bad as "going mainstream" might sound, without that happening, Linux will never receive proper 3rd-party support in terms of media playback (HDR), gaming anti-cheat software & developer support, and app support. Some things just have to be agreed upon (a standard) in development before any advancements can be made.

      @mbazoka@mbazoka3 ай бұрын
    • i agree which also means development and development focus is fragmented

      @EliR.-dt4lt@EliR.-dt4ltАй бұрын
    • ​@@mbazoka exactly my thoughts, maybe fedora will be the one

      @davidddo@davidddo16 күн бұрын
    • ​​@@mbazoka not having to depend on a specific company is a feature, not an issue having a single corporation spearhead linux is a recipe for enshittification, the issue isn't canonical, i don't trust mozilla or valve to not eventually do that either i do think standards are a good idea though, not having to specifically make software compatible with eachother and just having them implement standards is great

      @fiona9891@fiona98917 күн бұрын
  • Loved the “almost done” comment. Linux desktop improvements have been “almost done” for 20 years. They’ll never be done because there’s always the ‘next big thing’ someone comes up with that takes the next 10 years to migrate to, just in time for the next ‘next big thing’ to come around the corner. Just look at init systems, the sound subsystems, hell…gnome in general changes everything every few years just to be different.

    @pcallycat9043@pcallycat90435 ай бұрын
    • I've switched in 2006. Linux is in much better shape now. Systemd migration was seamless, there were issues with PulseAudio but ALSA still works. Migration to Wayland was seamless for me, waited until it was ready. Meanwhile portals unified "open file dialogue", "take screenshot" - previously implemented in many different ways. Pipewire united PulseAudio and JACK. Bluetooth headphones works. Windows, macOS, Android changes with each release, that's fine.

      @sergeykish@sergeykish5 ай бұрын
    • @@sergeykish I've been in since the mid 1990's.. I honestly dont' have any issues with linux, i just chuckle when people thing anything about it is 'almost done'. Done will never not be a moving target in this ecosystem, and there will always be change. With so many hands in the pie, there's always someone finding a new way to achieve something, some catch on, some fade, but the change always comes. People are getting excited about wayland 'being done', but, it will be as old as x11 was when wayland was started by the time it reaches any real level of maturity, and someone will think it's dead code and start a new replacement. Systemd caught on cuz the big red dog pushed it, but now that redhat is going more corporate, what next? It didn't bring anything new to the table, concurrent launch and watchdog processes are nothing new. Someone will find a new catchy way to do it, and it'll get replaced too. Not really a big deal, just.. never going to be 'done'. And honestly, the second innovation and change stops, might as well just call it windows :) I welcome the changes.

      @pcallycat9043@pcallycat90435 ай бұрын
    • You're just being dramatic about it. Yes, Linux won't occupy 90% of the market share in a year and become the popular OS, like Android is in the smartphones, that's why the “year of Linux desktop” is dumb and always was, since the beginning, but year after year, it becomes more and more decent for people, allowing them to actually use it without having to solve problems constantly because things don't work very well so you have to know basic to advanced commands to be able to solve those issues. I switched to Linux a year ago, I learned a lot on it and because I read and talked to a lot of people about it, I got to compare it with its state 5, 10 or even 20 years ago. And I can confidently tell you that, if I switched a year ago, I would've never switched even 5 years ago (especially for the lack of gaming option), let alone 10 or 20 years ago, if that was its state now. Just to put into perspective, back then: - you couldn't play a single video game that wasn't Linux native, because Wine was still a small project where running a single Windows game was already an achievement, now you can play 90% of Windows games without a significant loss in FPS or stability, if not better performance. - you couldn't run most apps because either they didn't exist on Linux (and their Windows version didn't work with Wine) or they did exist, but on another distro and nobody recompiled it for your distro, so you had to compile it yourself, granted you know how to do it. Now, you can find your Linux app as a flatpak, rpm, deb, pkg, snap, appimage, and it's all up-to-date, you can't complain about not having the choice. And for Windows programs, with the exception of a few (and unfortunately big) programs like Photoshop or Autodesk and such, you can easily run any program on Linux using Wine and an app that make it so much simpler to set up like Bottles. - you could totally forget having an Nvidia card and expecting just a few problems (the “Nvidia patch” or “command for Nvidia cards” for anything wasn't rare), now you can use an Nvidia card and except very specific features like Ray Tracing (something that is being worked on), you won't encounter a single problem (besides some remaining issue on Wayland which isn't a standard now, even if it will become soon) - you couldn't realistically use Linux without knowing the basic commands and without spending some time in the terminal, precisely because you would always run into issues that required you to use the terminal. Now, it's all over: you have distros where you don't have to touch even once the terminal (or know any command) and where you're not supposed to anyway (even if you can always use it: it's not locked or something, just not necessary). - you had a lot of hardware that simply didn't work and either you could find workaround on the internet, or you just accepted you'll never make it work on Linux. Now, as Nick/Linux Experiment said in the video, you will hardly find hardware that simply cannot run at all on Linux, because either it works out of the box, or you can easily find someone who made a driver for your specific hardware. - you always had to dual boot with Windows so you could always switch if something didn't work on Linux, which wasn't uncommon. Now, you can daily drive Linux easily (as I currently do) and even if you encounter a problem, there always will be a solution (VM count, as it's so much easier to set one now, with Virtual Box or QEMU, for more advanced users). There are some other things that I could mention but I think it's already enough to make you realize all the progress that has been made and if you didn't have any problem dealing with Linux issues (or you somehow never encountered any issues or at least, serious ones) since you started using it (since the mid 1990s, as you said it), a lot of people simply can't tolerate half of what Linux was even 5 years ago, like gaming which was basically impossible and is for a lot of people crucial in their OS's choice, because we're not all developers or even computer literate. As a matter of fact, now you can install a user friendly Linux distro to a generally computer illiterate like an old person or a child and they won't encounter any single issue.

      @rigierish3807@rigierish38075 ай бұрын
    • @@sergeykish you really expect an average windows user to figure out pulse/alsa/jack stuff? lmao. windows is miles ahead in HDR, consistent desktop dialogs, audio and gpu systems. i have a place in my heart for linux, but its not even nearly ready.

      @iivarimokelainen@iivarimokelainen5 ай бұрын
    • @@iivarimokelainen no need to figure out pipewire, wireplumber, it just works. Ever heard of Steam Deck?

      @sergeykish@sergeykish5 ай бұрын
  • Glad to here there is standardisation going on in atleast the major areas. Linux being so divided will always be both a great strength and weakness to it. It comes with the nature of Linux open source license, but it can certaintly get better than it currently is. I hope Steam OS comes to desktop, to install anywhere you want. That might become a sort of trend setter for linux and what developers might actually care to optimise and release for.

    @Blackfatrat@Blackfatrat5 ай бұрын
    • it is a weakness , diversity is not good

      @orkhepaj@orkhepaj5 ай бұрын
  • i gotta hand it to you nick, just love your integrity. even on a sponsor for a vpn, you say "i don't (usually) recommend vpn services", and include chapters to skip it. i didn't tho just because i want ur video to get the full playthrough and help out your sponsors too. if i ever do need a VPN i'll definitely go with proton

    @teklife@teklife5 ай бұрын
  • BTW Gnome has a little bit of a drama regarding the accent color standard. The desktops have basically devided into 2 camps: one that wants only pre-defined accent colors to be supported and another one that wants users to be able to choose absolutely any color as their accent. Gnome devs said that the latter is not even in the question and they barely agree on pre-define accents. So far it seems like the open standard will allow any accent color to be set, and more restrictive desktops will just clamp this color to their closest pre-defined one.

    @temari2860@temari28605 ай бұрын
    • Totally custom accent colours provide the user with much more Freedom and make the desktop look more personalised, should be a no brainer.

      @Aresydatch@Aresydatch5 ай бұрын
    • Idk if I should be surprised anymore with Gnome developers madness

      @vocassen@vocassen5 ай бұрын
    • @@Aresydatch On the other side it might create difficulties with contrast and readability, which is what GNOME and Pantheon devs argue for. I think COSMIC devs got the best solution for it currently (be it not released) as they will allow any color as an accent, but will generate the rest of color scheme in such a way to create a good contrast for your accent.

      @temari2860@temari28605 ай бұрын
    • @@vocassen If they want unified desktop with specific look that is not customizable that's fine with me, I just hope we get at least some form of accent colors so that libadwaita apps I use on my desktop won't look too out of place

      @temari2860@temari28605 ай бұрын
    • @@temari2860 Since when did Gnome care about apps looking out of place? They force all apps to draw decorations themselves, so not even the header looks the same across the board (except for whoever uses GTK). They obviously don't care. And what apps would adjust the color scheme based on the preset color anyway (over the fluid one)? At that point, just have this fluid->preset conversion in the code that is supposed to adjust the rest of the theme, done. None of these are an argument for restriction of choice, at best it's hipocrisy

      @vocassen@vocassen5 ай бұрын
  • Gaming has been the one thing holding me back from embracing Linux on my desktop machine. I use Arch on my laptop, since it's not a gaming machine, but that's not my daily driver. I'm glad to hear that gaming support is still improving and I might take another shot at it after I can afford to upgrade my video card.

    @glennthacker3606@glennthacker36064 ай бұрын
    • Nobara works well, but the support still isn't there yet. There are too many games that just don't work or have serious bugs.

      @pythonxz@pythonxz4 ай бұрын
  • I really like this video. The complexity of current Linux eco system make more harder to welcome newcomer. As a veteran Linux user, I feel disappointed as well. My Gaming PC running exclusively on Linux since 2021, but still I have to think about Mac & Windows for my daily driver, since now I don't have much time to invest into Linux to troubleshoot the problem, just like I don't have time to list-out them in this comment.

    @tuanht89@tuanht895 ай бұрын
  • AI is the exact same thing as smart assistants, as in, it looks cool in concept, and can do some specific things really well, but it's wide usage is very limited. It's not the revolutionary thing some industry enthusiasts claim to be. Linux desktops should definitelly focus in making the best and most user-centric possible desktops.

    @WolfiiDog13@WolfiiDog135 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely amazing video, i recently switched to dual boot windows on nobara linux (fedora fork by Glorious eggroll, creator of proton-ge) It has been the best Linux experience i have ever had now with all the KDE improvements as well as wayland and proton. I totally agree with the issue of having 10000 different packaging formats, it's an absolute pain to have all my apps being in different formats, and some working with my distro with ease, or not, flatpaks are amazing for that, but just like you mentioned, the browser that i use, which is only available as a flatpak on linux, doesn't work with password manager extensions. Your video recaps a lot of my experience, it's way better that it was before, but everything is very much WIP but the overall usability has drastically improved

    @liarus@liarus5 ай бұрын
  • You know, I wouldn't be surprised if instead of Snaps or Flatpak winning, we'd just see a ready-to-use CI or builder that just do a best-effort build and push to both formats. I feel like our go to solution is "making something that can encompass the old stuff," with how we make Wayland to solve x11, then XWayland to solve compatibility, then Pipewire to solve media pipeline in all of them and Portals to solve permissions for all of them, and then there's even xfce-wayland and wlroots which is used for multiple DEs and WMs, heck there's also how even Bottles decided to just move to electron to encompass as many environment as they can. It's not quite THAT xkcd comic, but it does feel like our solution is always "build something new." I guess, the more things change, the more they stay the same. Edit: One more example for this becoming reality - GE made ULWGL to unify the backend of all the game launchers so they can properly use Proton since people kept using Proton despite how it's not supposed to be used outside of Steam and you're supposed to just use Wine instead.

    @FengLengshun@FengLengshun5 ай бұрын
    • We also have console emulators, wine, virtual machines. XWayland is one of these. Portals standardized functionality like "open file dialog", "take screenshot" etc. Pipewire unified PulseAudio and JACK, media streams. Same but better.

      @sergeykish@sergeykish5 ай бұрын
    • The question there to ask and answer is: "Why are things like flatpak or snap even necessary?". The honest answer to this questions reveals everything that is wrong with Linux these days.

      @olafschluter706@olafschluter7064 ай бұрын
    • @@olafschluter706 Flatpak role is similar to Docker, Nix. Updating dependencies often requires fixing code, changes requires testing. Flatpak ships "runtimes" and "extensions" that's different from system version. Nix solves same problem but tracks each dependency independently. Dockerfile layers defined by users.

      @sergeykish@sergeykish4 ай бұрын
    • @@olafschluter706 I don't see how every repo having their own management policy, and thus different format and versions of binary, is something thay is wrong about Linux. It's a good idea - Debian, Red Hat, Canonical, and Arch Linux are made with different design goals and visions in mind. I don't hate any of them, but it makes no sense fo any of them to be the be-all end-all of all of Linux, be it for servers of different purposes, embedded systems, containerized systems, VMs, workstation, handheld gaming PCs, normal desktop, and phones. I think the fact that they're necessary points to the success of Linux - which is a system made by everyone, for everyone, owned by everyone. Flatpak, Snaps, AppImage, Nix, and Containers are the tools to bridge those groups of different interests and preferences. IMHO the issue is just that Snaps isn't as great for GUI desktop apps but Canonical tries to push them while being adamantly against Flatpak.

      @FengLengshun@FengLengshun4 ай бұрын
    • Does anyone even use Snaps?

      @colbyboucher6391@colbyboucher63913 ай бұрын
  • I sometimes feel that whole OSS is like herding cats. Every project that has gone somewhere proper has gotten very good project lead and who's actively put real effort into the overall design and coordination of effort, but ultimately, people are just donating their free time and it's quite an impossibility to ask someone to rewrite large sections of a large software to make it better, so it's all pretty much just fiddling and tweaking for fun. It ultimately inches forward, but without very active effort and some real money behind the effort (to get dedicated full time devs and designers) it's all just like herding cats. It's going to take few decades still.

    @Mtaalas@Mtaalas4 ай бұрын
    • I'm really curious to see how that dynamic changes with tools like copilot (when it gets better than it is now of course)

      @dmt00000@dmt000003 ай бұрын
  • The Linux Experiment... I don't think the word "Experiment" applies any longer, Nick. You have become the premier news source for Linux.

    @davidkachel@davidkachel5 ай бұрын
  • The market share is at a consistent 3% which is the highest ever. That is good going into 2024 as the growth will continue and more software support will come with that.

    @Ralphunreal@Ralphunreal5 ай бұрын
    • The market share has shot up thanks to WSL.

      @MiningForPies@MiningForPies5 ай бұрын
    • Market share has been at a consistent 3% which is the highest ever for the last 20 years

      @idk-sy3iu@idk-sy3iu5 ай бұрын
    • @@idk-sy3iu yes. Thanks to WSL

      @MiningForPies@MiningForPies5 ай бұрын
  • Ahh. Somehow it is starting to feel good that the same list of challenges has been in the year end summaries for a quarter of a century. Never change, Linux! Thanks for the coverage. See ya next year, sir!

    @NatesRandomVideo@NatesRandomVideo5 ай бұрын
    • While the main problems are the same, how things break changes all the time, it’s almost ironic to say never change, it spends so much time changing and fighting those who resist change that it doesn’t get ahead… unless you got chromeos or steamdeck, maybe

      @jaimeCabra@jaimeCabra5 ай бұрын
    • like the next year is linux's year mantra ? and yet linux stays at 2% useage :P

      @orkhepaj@orkhepaj5 ай бұрын
  • There is just one big Problem for all newer Multiplayer Games. More of them are switching to kernel level anti cheat tools. EA did this for example with their most recent/"supported" Titles. So I would say the Problems just have begun. And Games like LOL or Valorant or Rainbow Six Siege or Fortnite or Call of Duty are not going Away for some time to come.

    @netrix64@netrix645 ай бұрын
    • so long as there are morons willing to give kernel access for playing video games, no, they're not.

      @o00nemesis00o@o00nemesis00o3 ай бұрын
  • AI integration in the OS is one of the reasons why I'm seriously considering switching away from Windows, even as a gamer. Been dual-booting Pop OS for around 2 weeks now, and even though I've been having more issues than success at this point, I'm not giving up. I refuse to upgrade to Windows 12 (or any AI-powered OS).

    @Imevul@Imevul5 ай бұрын
    • What's the issue? DLSS is all AI and the future according to Nvidia is AI generative instead of rendering. Do you have any more specifically concerns regarding AI? Imo you should be more concerned about privacy issues.

      @_loss_@_loss_5 ай бұрын
    • Yeah can you like actually explain it to me? What's your specific problem with AI in the system?

      @nnnik3595@nnnik35955 ай бұрын
    • LMAO...."AI" do you even know that is? Do you REALLY believe all the AI-nonsense you've been reading? Better invest in some tin foil stock!

      @atlantic_love@atlantic_love5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@_loss_It's AI, but not trying to replace something else.

      @roundabout-host@roundabout-host5 ай бұрын
    • I don't like having my data sent to a server somewhere to process it (not specific to AI services, but yet another reason why I'm switching from windows). Even if processed locally, I don't like that I'm supposed to trust an unpredictable black box to do the right thing. Having tested LLMs like ChatGPT, I have zero confidence in them. Most of the time, the output is wrong, but said with absolute confidence. Until corrected. You basically have to verify everything. As for the comparison with DLSS: if my daily computer use relied on 100% correct visual output, I would not use that either. Fortunately, having my computer do what I expect is not the same thing as rendering a mostly correct image, so this is pretty irrelevant. Not all AI is bad, and not for all use cases, obviously. Seems a little strawman-y to even bring that up. I just want my computer to do exactly what I tell it to. If It's possible to verify the code, even better.

      @Imevul@Imevul5 ай бұрын
  • The roadblock I hit was gaming peripheral support. There's a few alternatives like Piper, but for the most part I cannot configure gaming mice, keyboards, or headsets without access to Windows. I also lack the ability to play a handful of competitive FPS games like PUBG and Warzone. They're not my main games, but I'd like to play them every once in a while.

    @chad_8313@chad_83135 ай бұрын
    • For Logitech mice, the best one has been Solaar. But that only controls the DPI, that’s it

      @reveriec@reveriec5 ай бұрын
  • After years watching many videos of yours, I decided this very year (on 8th of August 2023) to install a Linux distribution (OpenSUSE Tumbleweed with KDE) on my main laptop computer. I did that because I was still asking myself (after checking a list of Distro not based on any other distro) "Why is OpenSUSE not so famous as other mainstream Distros such as Fedora, Debian, Arch... since it has been there for such a long time?". Anyway, this year has been my YEAR OF LINUX. 💻 Thank you, Nick, and to other Linux content creators.

    @christian80gabi@christian80gabi5 ай бұрын
  • Hopefully AI stays out of the Linux desktop, I finally jumped to 100% daily driving Linux rather than dual booting after Microsoft announced the heavy integration in windows 12.

    @Yaarmehearty@Yaarmehearty5 ай бұрын
    • Hopefully it will. But you can always compile without AI. That is not possible on windows.

      @basilcat3111@basilcat31115 ай бұрын
    • @@basilcat3111 I think AI should stay in 3rd party apps / plugins, and I'm betting that's what will actually end up happening. Most popular distros support plugins / extensions, so that's likely will it will go. Still fully integrated into the desktop, but as an extension so it's optional.

      @bluesillybeard@bluesillybeard5 ай бұрын
    • Even if it comes to linux, we'll surely keep forks without it for the foreseeable future.

      @mattsgamingstuff5867@mattsgamingstuff58675 ай бұрын
    • What is the problem with AI? If it's local and open source, it's a great thing.

      @4.0.4@4.0.45 ай бұрын
    • ​@@4.0.4 The problem is in its current form it's a grift, just like crypto or nfts. It's not really intelligence, just a bunch of neural networks trained on questionable data. And while ML has its applications, it's always highly specialized tools with a million caveats attached to them; not some ultimate personal assistant ready-to-use by anybody. Also, I don't understand what's the point of replacing fuzzy search with "fuzzy search but biased and with more bugs".

      @mpx41@mpx414 ай бұрын
  • its not quite there yet, BUT significant leaps in progress made and i am quite excited, keep going everyone!

    @AGRACUTA@AGRACUTA5 ай бұрын
  • Tried out Fedora 39 recently. Gnome desktop with Wayland and Nvidia driver. No problems except flickering in some apps, not sure if it was a flatpak thing or monitor refresh thing but it stayed as flickering, no hang, no crashes.

    @F_Around_and_find_out@F_Around_and_find_out5 ай бұрын
  • I know how you get more desktops: One package that works on all distros. Like Windows. .EXE installers for the most part work, on all versions of Windows, unless some underlying dynamic link layer is missing (.dll) or some language packages, like .NET. It's hard to imagine that it would be hard for the community of linux to support something like Proton, but for detecting your OS, library locations, kernel version and installing a package based on that, but if it requires languages like say C, Go, Perl, Python, C++, just having requirements packaged along with their software installer. NO apt this, rpm that, just ./file.ext or double-click. It's almost like Microsoft doesn't have WAE (Windows Application Experience), keeping a database of Applications and how to make them work perfectly when they don't.

    @lmotaku@lmotaku5 ай бұрын
    • Am I misunderstanding what you're saying here? That's what /opt/ is for and we've had such packages for decades. It's just that the amount of users afraid of their tools, due to not knowing how they work, has increased exponentially during the same timeframe. So they instead opt for the less secure OS that doesn't provide the options.

      @kaoboom@kaoboom3 ай бұрын
    • @@kaoboom I'm sorry to say, any insecurities on Windows today are no different than what could be done on linux. With Windows defender being automatically enabled on all machines and firewall, even files ran as administrator are checked against the Defender database. Someone has to willfully disable defender and install a shady program as administrator for anything bad to happen. On linux it will prompt for a sudoer password and done. There are 3-5 less steps to infect a linux desktop than a Windows one. You have to be willfully ignorant to not know this.

      @lmotaku@lmotaku3 ай бұрын
    • @@kaoboom To reply to the actual question instead of the condescending jab, I mean that the problem with Linux is the problem daddy Linux has with linux. You have too many package managers. Too different software hierarchies. One flavor of linux is not the same as another. Apt, rpm, synaptic, flatpaks, whatever. Instead of one file working across all distributions without requiring them to build it themselves. Developers have this ideology of "If it doesn't work rebuild it", no normal person is psychologically unhinged and wants to do that for every program on their computer.

      @lmotaku@lmotaku3 ай бұрын
    • It's not a "condescending jab", Defender is out of date by the time it matters and the users are regularly trained to "allow all" and bring in executables from random sources even for basic utilities. Meanwhile on most any Linux based operating system you have everything you need available from vetted sources through a unified tool. Also, like I said, there already exists a standard for those third-parties who wishes to bundle all their dependencies themselves. They also have the option of installing their app in the users directory, no root access required there. You don't generally "install languages". Go, C, C++, and most other languages, are executed by the kernel via the aptly named exec system call. What they might require in some cases are shared libraries. These shared libraries, dependencies, are one of the things which the package manager takes care of. Python is generally ran in an interpreter, sort of like the Shell. Perl, like Java, is generally ran in a virtual machine. I've certainly never seen Windows automagically install Python, Perl, or Java when required... See the issue here I think is that you're looking at Linux based operating systems as "flavors", rather than distinct operating systems that share some common core utilities. Apt, synaptic (and aptitude) are just frontends for dpkg. It makes no rewal difference which one you opt to choose, just like how you can use the web browser you prefer There are no rebuilding. The difference between .deb and .rpm lies in the compression format and the manifest. If you want some monolithic entity controlling things then just stick to Windows, Edge and Outlook. What's so difficult about that? @@lmotaku

      @kaoboom@kaoboom3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@kaoboom It definitely is, because your knowledge is misleading or willfully ignorant, like I said. You basically said the exact same thing that Windows purportedly does as if linux distributions don't do the same thing. I have not had an infected system for well over 20 years and you're sitting here saying Windows does all this wrong. The problem lies with people who peddle linux desktops as something that can replace what everyone is already using when it isn't. Yes package managers are vetted, but they can still break your operating system. Nothing on the Microsoft store has ever destroyed user space or how it functions, but something insalled via apt or through synaptic can. It's like you don't believe I've ever used Linux before and I don't use it on my servers. I know what trying to change ALSA to pulseaudio could do to your x Server. Hell, trying to change your video driver used to sometimes make you have to start from scratch. Linux distros sit there and teach you to just input your sudoer password and everything will install. There is nothing that I've ever seen on apt or synaptic that was a daemon or some other functionality that was important that didn't require elevated privileges and that's just the way it is. A stupid person is just as likely to put in their password and run rm -rf */* as they are a Windows program that attempts to delete your C:/ drive. If you don't understand that, then there isn't a conversation to be had here about security. Just because the distro managers vetted a program doesn't mean it can't destroy your installation. Any SINGLE installation source, whether it be from linux or Windows can install dependencies. From .sos to .dlls, and that's not the problem. A developer can bundle their required languages as part of the installer. A program can install java. Minecraft for example. If this is an argument over semantics of which OS handles it better, it was never the argument. But a 12 year old would more likely be capable of installing and running Minecraft on Windows than on EVERY Linux distro. -- Why? because every distribution is different. It's not unified. It's not coherent across distros. That was my argument.

      @lmotaku@lmotaku3 ай бұрын
  • The Year of the Linux Desktop happen to me on 2003. I found fixes or at least round about ways to get my Linux system the way I want it to run it. Every Linux Guru can do this. I don't do the mix and match of packages. I stuck the old way before all those containers stuff. It works great this way, going to stick with my guns and keep it that way. The old way works, I'm one of those, if it ain't broken don't fix it.

    @gimcrack555@gimcrack5555 ай бұрын
  • I'm a sucker for theming and visual consistency but realistically we will never get a single toolkit with single visual language across all existing apps, and frankly it will be somewhat boring even for me. Having light/dark mode + accent color should be good enough for most people to feel like their desktop is personal and coherent, while still allowing for different toolkits to co-exist. I wonder if other proprietary toolkits will also implement that at some point, like electron and stuff.

    @temari2860@temari28605 ай бұрын
  • KDE has been magnificent for me on CachyOS. It's the first DE I found that really scaled nicely on my 4k 32" display. Really enjoying CachyOS itself also.

    @pogsee@pogsee5 ай бұрын
    • cachy os... omg

      @orkhepaj@orkhepaj5 ай бұрын
    • KDE is disgusting

      @DanielAnderssson@DanielAndersssonАй бұрын
  • I’ve tried loads of distros and DEs, and the one that kept me from returning to windows was arch and xfce, of all things. I guess the point is that with Linux, there’s so many possibilities, that I’m sure there’s something out there that works for everyone

    @ProteinFromTheSea@ProteinFromTheSea5 ай бұрын
  • This "unification" thing on several fronts (User Interface consistency, Packaging Formats and others) are usually what people argue against because of Freedom So, not seeing it soon as something that is welcomed/applied by all

    @Mithferion@Mithferion5 ай бұрын
    • Unification doesn’t have to come at the expense of choice, we just need to have the big distros unified, anyone will still be free to run WeirdOS and use whatever they want :)

      @TheLinuxEXP@TheLinuxEXP5 ай бұрын
    • Flatpak is that tool for graphical apps. Snaps will probably either fade away, be only on Ubuntu, or be used only for CLI apps. Meanwhile, for 90% or more of graphical apps, I can't see any issues with Flatpaks.

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
    • @@TheLinuxEXP unification is in progress.... Most major distro are in fact systemd... We will see what happen with the package manager, but with immutable distro and user app installed through flatpak maybe we will see some change here too.... At least for the "end user"...

      @LtSich@LtSich5 ай бұрын
    • Freedom can be efficient if everyone can use something that will help interaction between groups, like common language, that's why protocols like Wayland is the way to go. Otherwise we'll be lagging behind world when everyone would still be writing their own text editors for their fancy shell when even basic stuff that Windows or Mac has for years is hard to implement in this incoherent zoo.

      @ArtemMelanich@ArtemMelanich5 ай бұрын
    • @@TheLinuxEXP It depends on the level of unification. But I have to say that I'd love to have a more solid and consistent ecosystem, even if it's "boring", because that might attract more Software Developers from stablished companies

      @Mithferion@Mithferion5 ай бұрын
  • Pretty nice Overview! Thanks, Nick! :)

    @THeck_23@THeck_235 ай бұрын
  • Great video. Couldn't agree more. You just missed Pipewire 1.0, which is a huge milestone for Linux audio, in my opinion. It's better then Pulseaudio, for regular users, and works well as a Jack replacement, for pro audio users.

    @RodrigoCarvalhoSilva@RodrigoCarvalhoSilva5 ай бұрын
  • 3:10 Almost no distro forces another theme on every app Except for the most important one. Ubuntu overrides both the color stylesheet, as well as the icons on third party apps. Has lead to a bunch of headaches on the application I maintain (Graphs).

    @Sjoerd1993@Sjoerd19935 ай бұрын
    • not if you install debs.that happens with flatpak

      @sixdroid@sixdroid5 ай бұрын
  • 2024 and 2025 will be a big year for Linux as windows 10 is reaching EOL and many users don't want to upgrade their systems and just want to browse the web and do some word processing I hope by Nov 2025 all Wayland issues and other issues get fixed Wine / Proton will be also much better thus making Linux an option for new users to try

    @VEKTOR_87@VEKTOR_875 ай бұрын
    • I've been hearing this cope for 20 years. People said this about the Windows 7 to 8 transition.

      @johncalla2151@johncalla21515 ай бұрын
    • sure :D this mantra was said each year , good luck reaching 3% userbase in 2025 mate :P people are smarter than to waste their time on configuring/fixing linux nonstop

      @orkhepaj@orkhepaj5 ай бұрын
    • @@johncalla2151 It's not the same story. The state of both Linux and Windows are much better and worse respectively today. - It's not "cope", "bruh", it's just the way it is. People will either put up with what Microsoft hands them, or they'll look for better alternatives. And at this point, what Microsoft offers might be bad enough to push many users away. - Worse features and hardware-support?... Data-collection and ads??... Paying for extended support???... Yea, no. Not for many people. - I'm not saying an overnight shift to Linux for everyone. I'm saying a gradual shift for a significant amount of Windows-users as they become aware of how viable a Linux-distro is without a hassle is these days.

      @michaelmonstar4276@michaelmonstar42765 ай бұрын
    • @@orkhepaj Your comment shows that you know nothing about different Linux-distros. - Today, you can easily just recommend ones like Pop!, Mint, or Zorin, and most Windows and Mac users could just use it without getting lost. - Configuring WHAT??... Windows is much more of a hassle in some ways. It's a very stubborn operating-system that has terrible design in terms of finding settings. They just seem to hide stuff and lock things away. - Some Linux-distros, like the ones I mentioned, were designed to be user-friendly. That's what it's for, to customize to what the users want, not what one singular company wants.

      @michaelmonstar4276@michaelmonstar42765 ай бұрын
  • I have a handful of assorted Linux machines for build testing, and at least once a month something breaks on one of them. The last stable distro I used was Ubuntu 18.04.

    @adamschackart6859@adamschackart68595 ай бұрын
  • I'm considering giving Linux another (3th) try and this video gave me a good overall view of the current state of the Linux world. Thank you for that! It didn't give me much courage to do the step though 😀

    @IvoPavlik@IvoPavlik4 ай бұрын
  • Wish ngreedia would at least open source the firmware for the GTX cards in the future so they wouldn't be complete ewaste

    @PlayNeth@PlayNeth5 ай бұрын
    • Given their greediness and their recent focus on AI, you might as well just go for a newer GPU from Nvidia, AMD, or Intel. Arc GPUs aren't that expensive anyway and most of their drawbacks are Windows specific!

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
    • Imagine a company wanting paying for their work. What monsters. Don’t like it? Learn to code and contribute to the open source drivers or put your money where your mouth is and fund developers who can. I’d hazard a guess you’ve never paid a penny towards any software project, you just sit there in your mum’s basement calling other people greedy while leaching of the work of others.

      @MiningForPies@MiningForPies5 ай бұрын
    • @@MiningForPies I sort of concur with you, but you also have to remember that most laptops with a dGPU sold since 2012 or so are using Nvidia dGPUs.

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
    • @@cameronbosch1213 loads available without.

      @MiningForPies@MiningForPies5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MiningForPies Bro got that early access AI brain implant from nvidia ain't no way 💀

      @PlayNeth@PlayNeth5 ай бұрын
  • I'm on KDE and while you were talking about how good wayland support is i decided to check it out.. I have a GTX960 and am using the latest NVIDIA drivers and no, it does not work. At all. It just crashes. As much as I want wayland to succred, until slightly older hardware isn't supported i'll have to stick with x11

    @jboi7656@jboi76565 ай бұрын
    • Honestly, if you're still using an Nvidia GTX GPU, maybe it's time to upgrade to an Nvidia RTX, AMD Radeon, or Intel Arc GPU.

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
    • That’s why I said older cards aren’t there yet. GTX are basically abandoned by nvidia on Linux

      @TheLinuxEXP@TheLinuxEXP5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@cameronbosch1213not affordable in my country

      @heisenberg-hk6nt@heisenberg-hk6nt5 ай бұрын
    • @@heisenberg-hk6nt What about Intel Arc? That's pretty damn affordable relative to recent GPUs. The Arc A770 should be just fine for most gaming at 1080p and even some 1440p with XeSS or FSR use cases.

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
    • @@heisenberg-hk6nt What country are you in? India?

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
  • I've tried a lot of distros, but I keep coming back to and finally settled on Fedora Cinnamon Spin.

    @williedells@williedells5 ай бұрын
  • Thx Nick. Really solid ep. :)

    @ukaszpalczewski7588@ukaszpalczewski75885 ай бұрын
  • Tell those quims at Proton to get it together and make a Proton Drive client for Linux.

    @BankstonSkooma@BankstonSkooma5 ай бұрын
  • One thing I would like to have is a text selector in the image viewer. Any phone has that nowadays, why can't a desktop have it? It is a very, very useful thing.

    @FlorinArjocu@FlorinArjocu5 ай бұрын
  • We need more security tools and them being managable easier as well soonTM in Linux Hardware access, internet access, isolation of system services, user data ect. ect.

    @stevenwinderlich2891@stevenwinderlich28915 ай бұрын
  • hey nice jacket! Looks really good, also good video :D

    @inuyashatoast6246@inuyashatoast62465 ай бұрын
  • I am just now playing with Linux and I'm starting with Arch because it's hard. It does what I want it to do. It pulls no punches, you can actually break things. It is well well documented for things I would never need. Simplicity is key. Features are fantastic but they are layers over a predictable and well managed system that day to day application using shouldn't need to interact with. Finally. I learn better when I break stuff. Training wheels would make it nicer but if you read a little and don't assume things, training wheels aren't necessary. Two mirrored drives. One good Arch. One experimental. When I make system changes and I fuck up beyond snapshot's ability to cure, clone back and try again. Don't daily Linux until you have fucked up several times. Start slow. Always have a clone of stable to return to previous regardless of snapshots (Edit: I do this with Windows regularly and there's hardly a shapshot there). Even Arch isn't all that intimidating if you read their stuff and move to more complex interactions step by step. Never all at once unless you already know what you're doing.

    @miinyoo@miinyoo5 ай бұрын
    • "I'm starting with Arch because it's hard." - I can tell you've spent time on Linux-forums... You've clearly been influenced by the pretentious talk from the elitists. You know what I use?... Pop!_OS, cause it's simple and easy to use. - That said, I will probably move to a distro that has some more fleshed-out options next year, but I'm not gonna "use a distro because it's hard". - Hey, maybe you want to punish yourself or teach yourself programming or something. - I don't, I just want to use an operating-system that just does things out-of-the-box and preferably just as well or better than Windows. - There's no need to "fuck up" or "start slow". That's such nonsense. There are literally entire companies that make Linux-distros to just install and use. Stop pretending that it all needs to be like a minefield of risks and a whole learning-experience. It's not the case.

      @michaelmonstar4276@michaelmonstar42765 ай бұрын
  • Feels like the biggest burden in all this right now is distros and devs still sticking to older package formats for non-elemental software like Firefox, as well as GNOME of all DE's being super nitpicky about standards. Even for Linux standards can be a good thing, distros no longer having to maintain userspace software on their own frees up a ton of resources and saves on server capacities for distribution too. For 2024 I want Valve to make their Quest SteamLink tool work with Linux too as well as InputLeap actually finally working as its Barrier for Wayland, so I can switch too without headaches.

    @MegaManNeo@MegaManNeo5 ай бұрын
    • Unless Valve release a steam deck capable of running VR and a headset that's practical to use with it, I doubt they have much incentive to port it.

      @jbritain@jbritain5 ай бұрын
    • The issue isn't package formats. It's continued abandoning and forking distros. I don't know why so many Linux fanbois think that coming out with a new package format is going to change anything. The problem is your OS!

      @atlantic_love@atlantic_love5 ай бұрын
    • @@atlantic_love Hey, don't be a weirdo watching a video on a subject you dislike anyway and then insult others, I use Windows and Android too, plus I don't mind if people use Apple products. The redistribution thing is an issue though and certainly all these minor hobby distros won't help either but having a platform like Flathub and additionally AppImages at least can minimize the urge by some to come up with their own variations.

      @MegaManNeo@MegaManNeo5 ай бұрын
    • @atlantic_love Some things _do_ need to be forked, like with XFree86 and OpenOffice, because there literally is no other option.

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
    • @@atlantic_love Because proper unified package format is all you really need to be able to run your apps on every linux distro.

      @bionic_batman@bionic_batman4 ай бұрын
  • I still use Windows on my main PC, but I recently started dual-booting Linux for my laptop. Only keeping Windows on there for a few other games and apps I need for work.

    @GorgeousGary@GorgeousGary3 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing and explaining the state of Linux so well. I think exactly the same way.

    @CompuB1t@CompuB1t5 ай бұрын
  • I was recently saying to a friend of mine as annoying as supidphones are with constantly bugging and nagging you with requests and "advice" and interrupting you with stuff that's pointless, once they have built-in A.I. they are going to be sledgehammer-to-the-screen level of annoying. I can only imagine how drop-a-nuclear-bomb-on-Redmond annoying Windows will be with A.I. It will make the paperclip look like your best friend.

    @WaterShowsProd@WaterShowsProd5 ай бұрын
  • Currently, my only driver issue right now are the Intel webcams used in All-In-One laptops like the Dell 5290 and Microsoft Surfaces. If support for them was added somehow, I'd have zero issues. Otherwise, WiFi and Bluetooth usually work fine.

    @FlameSoulis@FlameSoulis5 ай бұрын
  • The problem with Wayland is on the back end X11 still being used to run it.

    @slim_2280@slim_22805 ай бұрын
  • Running on wayland still has many issues to sort out, so fedora dropping it seems very bizarre, I tried it recently with the latest kde and hardware accelerated video playback didn't work in chromium, scrolling in chromium wasn't very smooth, scrolling through youtube with a video playing in mpv in the bottom corner of the screen would result in a random unresponsive browser until you focused your mouse back on mpv, hardware accelerated video playback in librewolf resulted in spiky cpu usage, window shading still doesn't work in kwin, window position settings in mpv don't work either, also hardware acceleration doesn't work well in mpv, I can play back a 4k video with the high quality gpu profile setting in mpv on x11 and only use about 2% of the cpu, but on wayland the same video is stuttering, so I went back to lxqt with kwin on x11, where everything just works.

    @benjy288@benjy2885 ай бұрын
  • As time passes i stick more and more to the linux desktop to the point using windows is a pain for me, because the ease of installing apps through the store is one of the best ways to get things done fastly, and the gnome is so beautiful and fast.

    @iWisp360@iWisp3605 ай бұрын
    • LOL, keep trying.

      @atlantic_love@atlantic_love5 ай бұрын
    • Trying to gaslight yourself into thinking linux is better than windows is crazy

      @Azertyyys@Azertyyys4 ай бұрын
    • @@AzertyyysWhat these clowns do is copy and paste the same garbage from other comments from other videos and off reddit and the like. They know that the garbage they're spewing is just that ..... garbage, but hey, likes! Linux is a broken community of lonely, unsocial nerds, with a broken ecosystem and broken user experience. Their only lot in life is to tinker their way to a working desktop :D

      @atlantic_love@atlantic_love4 ай бұрын
  • I quit using desktops years ago. Within the first six months of using Linux, which was around the time Windows 8 was released, I learned of i3wm and stayed with it ever since. One fun issue this caused, whenever I see a desktop now I feel as if my mind is cluttered and I just can't work on such a system anymore. Yes, I am sure I am weird.😅

    @Storin_of_Kel@Storin_of_Kel5 ай бұрын
    • PopOS has tiling manager. Would you be interested in that?

      @MrQuay03@MrQuay035 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MrQuay03why would they if they're over the hump with a tiling wm? If you have a wm set up in the way you like, you know all your keybinds and you've figured out how to configure everything why would you go back to having a gui you're probably not going to use and have it take up space and ram.

      @stugeh@stugeh5 ай бұрын
    • @@MrQuay03 thanks, but I tend to stick with Debian. :)

      @Storin_of_Kel@Storin_of_Kel5 ай бұрын
    • @@stugeh aye. I got over that hump long ago lol. I wouldn't want a desktop anymore.

      @Storin_of_Kel@Storin_of_Kel5 ай бұрын
  • I would say in late 2023 KDE Wayland has become good enough for everyday work - KWin not crashing often and the apps dying with compositor is being resolved at various levels. Remote access (not desktop sharing) is still something to be improved (built-in VNC server sucks, waypipe is slow and does not handle entire-desktop scenario well).

    @JanuszKrysztofiak@JanuszKrysztofiak5 ай бұрын
  • my sister can't move to linux because of a few app issues. for example, zoom flatpak with wayland doesn't let you use annotations when sharing single windows, only when sharing the entire screen. sure, she can use x11 but that has its own issues with zoom. using web client doesn't have screen share annotations.

    @mataznuiz@mataznuiz5 ай бұрын
  • 5:40 *Debs, rpms* and whatever Arch uses via *pacman* can and should stay - they're fast, light, integrated and most importantly, vetted by the distro maintainers themselves. *Flatpak* is good for the odd app your distro doesn't ship or for newer versions of said apps. Under any Arch based distro, flatpaks are usually rendered obsolete and redundant since Arch ships more packages than any other distro and they are typically as up to date as flatpaks, if not more so. *Appimages,* I don't really like because it's hard to keep apps up to date individually, though this might be changing. At any rate, I don't think appimages solve any problems not already solved better by flatpaks. *Nix* package manager sounds cool and seems to be trying a new approach which is not a bad thing, but it's kinda niche and anyways most distros don't shove it in your face so it's a non-issue to me. *Snaps* can die in the deepest pit ever dug. Not only do they, like appimages, not solve any problems that flatpak hasn't already solved, but they're built around a single proprietary store unlike any other packaging format mentioned. I will never support that, and even if they were 10x faster than any other option, I would still oppose its adoption based solely on that fact. That's my thoughts on the most popular packaging formats.

    @soulstenance@soulstenance5 ай бұрын
    • I agree with you, except for the AppImages. To me they're basically the Linux equivalent of PortableApps... Stuff you can put on a usb stick and move them around between Linux computers. You can't really do this with flatpak or snap, and doing it with executables is tricky because they need to be fully statically linked among other things. They have their place and they're useful as an addition to all the other packaging formats

      @9a3eedi@9a3eedi4 ай бұрын
    • @@9a3eedi That's fair. Good point! I rarely used portable apps even in my Windows days so I didn't consider this.

      @soulstenance@soulstenance4 ай бұрын
  • Kubuntu 23.10 Kernel 6.5 Hardly ever go to Wayland session atm because Wayland is sluggish compared to X11. Can see some interesting improvements with different refresh rate and scaling for different screens connected etc in Wayland - but the sluggish and jerky cursor movement is a deal breaker atm.

    @isrbillmeyer@isrbillmeyer5 ай бұрын
    • Nvidia card?

      @MrQuay03@MrQuay035 ай бұрын
    • @@MrQuay03 Yip. But was same with the Intel graphics.

      @isrbillmeyer@isrbillmeyer5 ай бұрын
    • @@isrbillmeyer i had good experience with AMD card. Nvidia is still a mess with KDE

      @MrQuay03@MrQuay035 ай бұрын
    • wow, I have almost the opposite experience. If I don't use my NVIDIA card (which most of the time I don't), Wayland is much smoother. Also no screen tearing. I don't why it's the opposite for you.

      @studybuddy7060@studybuddy70605 ай бұрын
    • @@studybuddy7060 could it be that you are using RTX card? I'm using GTX 1060 on desktop and GTX 1650 on laptop. Both have screen tear issue and poor performance

      @MrQuay03@MrQuay035 ай бұрын
  • installed endeavour (w/ xfce4) on an old thinkpad carbon x1 earlier this summer and i've ended up using it more than my m1 macbook air

    @susiebaka3388@susiebaka33885 ай бұрын
  • I now use mainly Ubuntu 23.10, thanks to your channel. It's really good 😊

    @KLiNoTweet@KLiNoTweet5 ай бұрын
  • I think linux is excellent if you are at least an intermediate user, you do not need to be super advance to be able to use or troubleshoot in linux just follow youtube guides and wikis like this channel. But for 0 tech people is still a struggle, I tried to migrate my dad pc to linux but it was too hard for him :p As a somewhat competent computer guy I am in love with linux (fedora user) and new technologies like flatpak and more mature ones like wine and proton. I am careful optimistic for the future of linux with products like the steam deck that targets non tech people because I do not see them installing linux from scratch, they need something ready to use.

    @jorge86rodriguez@jorge86rodriguez5 ай бұрын
    • I think for 0 knowledge people, Linux is the best choice OF it comes preinstalled

      @TheLinuxEXP@TheLinuxEXP5 ай бұрын
    • @@TheLinuxEXP thanks for the reply and yes you are right, the steam deck is prof of what you said

      @jorge86rodriguez@jorge86rodriguez5 ай бұрын
    • ​​​@@TheLinuxEXPGnome based Linux Distros like debian are the best choice for the beginner on computers, they are more intuitive than windows

      @iWisp360@iWisp3605 ай бұрын
    • @@TheLinuxEXP ...until they want to install some Windows software or game. Then the zero knowledge will kick their ass so hard they'll have their last meal come up again.

      @wombatdk@wombatdk5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@wombatdk no such issue on Nintendo or Sony consoles, Android, macOS, iOS.

      @sergeykish@sergeykish5 ай бұрын
  • I wonder why there's no general interest for using an intermediate binary format to ship applications. eg. WASM, which can be compiled during install to actual machine code. (WASI also seems to fit nicely into the containerized abstract system API direction). Now that ARM is starting to pop up in desktop systems and also RISC-V is on the horizon, it would make more sense than ever.

    5 ай бұрын
    • Packaging is not a problem of actually running the apps as that's the easy part. The hard part is getting all the files in the right places, setting up app configs for all the different distributions etc. Sadly, there's no standard for that and flatpak/appimage/snap were made to address that. Of course, they made 3 standards (and ubuntu made the worst by a long shot) so...

      @FOREST10PL@FOREST10PL4 ай бұрын
  • My old lenovo is running tuxedo OS. I have not tried one of their computers. The last computer I bought was a think Penguin pc. I use it for gaming but the distro I use on it is voyager linux.

    @fredseekingbibleturth@fredseekingbibleturth5 ай бұрын
  • at the very start of this month i moved completely to linux as my daily driver on all my tech. Still using X11 cause nvidia. Been really great and i can pretty much play and do mostly everything i could, except my huge reliance on Visual Studio for building C++ and C# software, but im getting there with CMake

    @WeirdDuck781@WeirdDuck7814 ай бұрын
  • How linux desktop will handle AI is probably the only safe way out for privacy.

    @Beryesa.@Beryesa.5 ай бұрын
  • app images are the way. fuck ai integration.

    @user-pg5sz2vn1w@user-pg5sz2vn1w5 ай бұрын
  • I'm using Linux exclusively for eight years now. The only things I miss is the fast indexed search and the Windows 7 theme with the frosted windows.

    @negirno@negirno5 ай бұрын
    • Plasma and GNOME both have fast indexed search, BTW. And Plasma has theming, so I'm sure you can find something that emulates the Windows 7 look.

      @nategraham4027@nategraham40275 ай бұрын
  • 15:00 For AI integration and assistent, some good projects are chatgenie and mycroft (in development hiatus i guess)

    @RafaCoringaProducoes@RafaCoringaProducoes5 ай бұрын
  • im hoping Linux becomes completely usable for gaming soon, it seems really nice but for now Windows is all that many developers of game media care about

    @ShadowTheLight@ShadowTheLight5 ай бұрын
    • The situation won't improve if multiplayer game developers decide not to support Linux. The Finals has just been released and the game would work fine if we weren't kicked by easy anti cheat.

      @marcelorauber8397@marcelorauber83975 ай бұрын
    • @@marcelorauber8397 yeah i was just having a convo with my friend about this, anti cheat has gotten so aggressive and often is so scared of linux they just dont let you use it and it sucks. like i was saying i wish devs would care more about Linux as they only seem to care about Windows but i worry that wont change because they probably dont see it as where the money is

      @ShadowTheLight@ShadowTheLight5 ай бұрын
    • @@ShadowTheLight Since modern dev cycles are something like 5 years+, it'll probably take some time for the populatirty of the steam deck to affet game releases

      @The8BitPianist@The8BitPianist5 ай бұрын
    • @@The8BitPianist oh i didnt think about the steam deck, that could definitely help prove linux as an os system to be next to windows for sure. though sadly it will not help with vr support

      @ShadowTheLight@ShadowTheLight5 ай бұрын
    • @@ShadowTheLight I know it doesn't cover the whole market but Linux and MacOS are are both tiny percentages of their user base according to Steam survey data. Need more gamers on Linux for it to matter enough for dev's to develop for it. Valve and SteamOS might help with that but SteamOS isn't really meant as a desktop Linux and is more specific in it's hardware support so it's kind of a one step forward 2 steps back kind of thing I guess.

      @nadtz@nadtz5 ай бұрын
  • I've been learning GTK4+Libadwaita for Rust and am interested in contributing to developing some desktop applications. The development experience isn't the best, probably because gtk4-rs is a C library coerced into Rust. While I am willing to push through the oddities, from an adoption standpoint, it would be wise to improve the development experience so more people feel encouraged to make applications for Gnome.

    @DavidAlsh@DavidAlsh5 ай бұрын
    • How does PopOS solve this? Does it also use gtk4-rs for its Cosmic desktop? If not, then looking into their tooling and approach may be beneficial.

      @Psychx_@Psychx_5 ай бұрын
    • @@Psychx_ I actually did look into this. They have a framework based on a UI toolkit called iced. If you've used React+Redux on the Web it's very similar. I personally find it too opinionated and I don't like the MVU architecture so it wasn't for me. Gtk is very very similar to building an interface with vanilla JavaScript - however it has a lot of gotyas inherited from it's C roots (like, you have to have 2 different async runtimes to do anything). It's going in the right direction though so I can imagine if gtk5 was written with rust consumers in mind - it would be a very nice UI toolkit to use

      @DavidAlsh@DavidAlsh5 ай бұрын
  • The ONE thing keeping me crawling back to windows is the Adobe apps (especially Substance 3D Painter), I have to use Adobe programs for school and I have tried to use alternatives but they all miss features I need or have different keyboard shortcuts so I would have to relearn EVERYTHING.

    @claranymark@claranymark5 ай бұрын
  • I switched to windows 11. Through WSL now I can run and do all of my work on Windows. No more distro hopping bullshit, buggy ecosystem of desktop environments, x11 vs Wayland hell. I'm so much happy now and I value my time more. Now I use Linux on VM, if wsl2 doesn't work.

    @-Engineering01-@-Engineering01-5 ай бұрын
  • I've started development work and am still using Windows. But the moment I see the disk space it consumes and the bloatware that is painfully hard to get rid of, I have set my mind to switch to Linux for development. I've used Linux before and I still love it. The only reason for using Windows is because of work specific software. But I decided it's better to run a Windows VM on my Linux (should the need arise) than using WSL on Windows

    @ariqahmer@ariqahmer5 ай бұрын
    • Flatpak takes a lot of space as well

      @zepar6076@zepar60765 ай бұрын
    • Yess nonexistent bloatware that every REAL! linux user talks about

      @Azertyyys@Azertyyys4 ай бұрын
  • Is it possible to screen share from Flatpak version of Slack or Discord on Wayland?

    @SirRFI@SirRFI5 ай бұрын
  • man, i heard "wayland : soon!" for well over a decade now... as for the rest of your video well done!

    @newkfromrotterdam@newkfromrotterdam5 ай бұрын
  • Bottles is an amazing piece of software. And its on Flatpak and works well. In terms of packaging managers think more adoption is needed for flatpak appimage etc for it to take off. But from start of 2023 to end the improvements in flatpak is amazing. Biggest issue is snaps vs flatpaks. Snaps are abyssimal outside of ubuntu whereas flatpaks just work the same everywhere. I feel like the community is behind flatpak but if snaps do get advantages then i hope they work on working better on non ubuntu systems

    @cynricsaxon2945@cynricsaxon29455 ай бұрын
    • lutris

      @sixdroid@sixdroid5 ай бұрын
    • Always had issues using Bottles, games just not launching at all, no response, or in case they run, they ran only once and wouldn't work again, tho they work fine with Lutris. Using both as flatpak.

      @stalkerscarface@stalkerscarface5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@stalkerscarfacebottles is really buggy for me as well, I get the same issues you get. Also when I install DLLs through their GUIs, it doesn't override it sometimes, that's what really keeps me away from it. Also one last thing to add, they should allow in the future to post scripts to install applications via wine, this way we could install software that is hard to configure through wine with just a click install.

      @draftofspasiba2@draftofspasiba25 ай бұрын
  • FOSS doesn't work for such big but niche projects like a desktop environment for a server OS

    @9ix1@9ix15 ай бұрын
  • Linux Mint 21 Cinnamon as primary system for >6 months now and it still manage to blow me away some days when I find a great attention to detail hide somewhere. What started as an experiment is now a f*cking needed breath of fresh air when I use my laptop compare to the Windows system I managed at work during the day.

    @glmchn@glmchn5 ай бұрын
  • The only way for Linux to get those big proprietary apps is if Flatpaks or Snap improve a lot or WebAssembly takes off.

    @marufbepary100@marufbepary1005 ай бұрын
  • Hopefully achieving feature parity between Flatpak and distro specific apps is the highest development priority of 2024. I definitely think Flatpak is the most promising app distribution option.

    @RipCityBassWorks@RipCityBassWorks5 ай бұрын
  • Yea currently I’m gonna use windows until like collage because I never know when my school is gonna change to a software Linux doesn’t support or you could say software that companies don’t want Linux to support

    @littleharry7977@littleharry79775 ай бұрын
    • I dabbled with Linux a bit in college for one of my CS classes long ago and it was sufficient for general college stuff at the time. That was over a decade ago though. Ended up going back to Windows when I finished that class until this year because gaming wasn't feasible back then like it is now.

      @ordinaryhuman5645@ordinaryhuman56455 ай бұрын
    • What software do you use that you'll need Windows? Other than games and an office suite?

      @Ironpants57@Ironpants575 ай бұрын
    • That's their problem. An OS should be a tool to get work done. If it gets the job done, why should they care if was done on Linux or Windows?

      @cameronbosch1213@cameronbosch12135 ай бұрын
    • @@Ironpants57I generally use stuff like PowerPoint Word and I use a Wacom product which Wacom drivers are hard to get for people like me with little terminal experience

      @littleharry7977@littleharry79775 ай бұрын
    • @@cameronbosch1213 Some people are too worked up with X software and cannot handle change. Linux handles 90% computer use cases, video content/movies/some games/etc.. However certain software is better than others.. Media software like 3D modeling/Texturing, Video editing, and Animation is very crucial to certain workflows. It's a crutch but also a kryptonite for most. Like or hate it, most wish there was an easier way and not to worry.

      @Ironpants57@Ironpants575 ай бұрын
  • Well I would say that an app developer can just say "We use snap/flatpack, and only that." This massively reduces issues for them to fix because they can ship one single known good version, much like Windows software is shipped in one version with a specific set of dependencies, such as DirectX for games. It lowers the development time needed to offer Linux versions, and yes, it does suck a little for users, but you can get snaps to work pretty much anywhere, and it means you at least get A VERSION of the app. Photoshop would be a good candidate. So many of us want it on Linux, and would be willing to use any of these formats to get it.

    @hummel6364@hummel63645 ай бұрын
  • 2024 will be the year of the Linux Desktop.

    @mx338@mx3385 ай бұрын
    • just like 2023 was, and 2022, 2021, 2020... EVERY YEAR WILL BE THE YEAR OF THE LINUX DESKTOP

      @SilverSeleucid@SilverSeleucid5 ай бұрын
    • 😳

      @bluebird1954@bluebird19545 ай бұрын
    • ​@@SilverSeleucidjust like yo mama 😹

      @bluebird1954@bluebird19545 ай бұрын
    • @@SilverSeleucid yes

      @mx338@mx3385 ай бұрын
    • No, 2023 was the year of the Linux desktop.

      @ordinaryhuman5645@ordinaryhuman56455 ай бұрын
  • If Linux had a stable solution for running Adobe programs - I would immediately switch to Linux

    @igorek_belarus7552@igorek_belarus75525 ай бұрын
    • That's been an issue with Adobe for quite a while. They seem to want to push people to their web suite.

      @lua-nya@lua-nya5 ай бұрын
    • It's Adobe at fault. Adobe is likely being paid off NOT to port to Linux. Quickbooks CERTAINLY is.

      @fuzzywzhe@fuzzywzhe5 ай бұрын
  • Few days ago I found plasma 5.27 non-default setting that fixes all my issues with fractional scaling. Just one click “allow applications scale itself” and no blurring apps. Why not to make it default in plasma 6? Old windows apps have the same behaviour on hidpi displays.

    @vadymmudryi7978@vadymmudryi79785 ай бұрын
  • I'm very happy with my EndeavourOS Cinnamon low-spec $225 laptop. It just works. The again, my needs are fairly basic. My Win10 machine is now only a music streamer.

    @MarkDavidMcCoskey@MarkDavidMcCoskey5 ай бұрын
  • I've been saying this for years and it looks like it's still true. Linux will never be ready for PRIME TIME! And it's unfortunate because we need a free alternative to Windows / Mac. To be clear, by Prime Time I mean I can install Linux on any family PC and not have to worry about said family member not being able to operate the computer properly. Zero chance my parents now would want to even try worrying about Install Packs and compatibility issues. I'm still happy to see such great progress and promise. My fear is that I'll never really be able to recommend Linux as a free option to most of my friends, family or clients. It's still not there yet.

    @DarkMikaruX@DarkMikaruX5 ай бұрын
    • Honestly, it depends on the usage. I installed a dual boot on my father's old 7 years old laptop because he was complaining his computer was slower and slower. My father is 67 yo and he was not a fan of the idea at first. He still had that image of Linux from 20 years ago, where you have to use the terminal every time you want to do something. He doesn't do much with his computer : surf the web, watch videos, save his phone's photos on an external drive, print some pdf documents. He doesn't use Windows at all anymore. The printer just works now contrary to the battle it was on windows. The computer is notably more responsive, faster to start the os and start the web browser and he was able to display his photos and videos on his tv with no help. Only problem he had so far was to update his GPS, I had to add executable right to the file he downloaded. And in that case he probably would have succeeded on his own on windows.

      @Gatsu563@Gatsu5635 ай бұрын
    • @@Gatsu563 My dad will be 71 this year and he sounds a lot like your dad. Reluctant at first with new tech things but seems to pick it up quickly. I'm happy to hear that your dad has made that transition and is happy with it. Ultimately, that's the goal. But your last statement about the GPS is exactly what I'm talking about. There WILL be a time they buy something and bring it home to use and find out it doesn't work out of the box like it would for Windows. Weather it be your example of a portable GPS, or some adapter, etc. I'd want people I recommend Linux to to have ZERO issues like that. And yes, Linux has come a long way I just don't think it's ready for me to trust it to recommend to people yet. Dual Booting.. it's been a long long time since I've done that. Nowadays I just run Ubuntu (insert distro here) in a VM to see how it runs. With regards to speeding up a lower spec system I've also struck out on that front too. There are still systems not even Linux can save. I would have just purchased an SSD ( 500GB SSDs are $35) clean installed Windows 10 / 11, optimize the settings and called it a day. Finally, now that I have a reliable source for 10 dollar Windows Pro keys I just haven't looked back to Linux. But I'll def keep an eye on it as I'm rooting for it.

      @DarkMikaruX@DarkMikaruX5 ай бұрын
  • Seeing Linux make its way closer and closer to the point where I can finally switch to it makes me happy - it's just not there yet. Due to video games being my source of entertainment in my spare time, I do need to have a dual boot of Windows for games that will just absolutely not run on Linux, even through proton or even a virtual machine. Additionally, the state of software packaging is really, really annoying, and users of XLR microphones know how much of a pain in the ass lower end audio interfaces can be. That being said, a lot of games that I've been playing lately - Path of Exile, PSO2, and a garden verity of indie titles work on Linux, either with issues or even none at all, and the migration to Pipewire and Wayland, while not complete, is moving those areas in the right direction, and the driver support is getting much better. I only have one NVME SSD and one, smaller SATA SSD. Even if I dual boot, one of the OS's on my machine is going to get the short straw. And for me, while we've come a long way, Linux hasn't quite made it to deserving that golden spot just yet.

    @EnternodeCS@EnternodeCS5 ай бұрын
    • Amen. My exact thoughts. I tried dual booting. But due to my games not working or the performance losses in games that do run, I just end up stuck in Windows and rarely boot into Linux. I look forward to when that is not the case.

      @V1CT1MIZED@V1CT1MIZED5 ай бұрын
  • Bro. currently what distro do you use? I use Fedora. And thinking of shifting to something new.

    @Prnexists@Prnexists5 ай бұрын
  • i switched over to Linux on Linuxs birthday 9/7/2023 hopefully more people like me have so we can get more attention from developers.

    @Anarchistcowboy@Anarchistcowboy5 ай бұрын
  • If I had to summarize the current state of desktop Linux in a single sentence it'd probably be this: We still have a long way to go but we already came so far.

    @marlonese@marlonese5 ай бұрын
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