Why I Switched To Linux! And How It's Going...

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 30. 10. 2023
  • In this video I share with you guys my experience of using Linux (Pop!_OS) as my full-time operating system.
    ◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾◾
    📚 Programming Books & Merch 📚
    🐍 The Python Bible Book: www.neuralnine.com/books/
    💻 The Algorithm Bible Book: www.neuralnine.com/books/
    👕 Programming Merch: www.neuralnine.com/shop
    💼 Services 💼
    💻 Freelancing & Tutoring: www.neuralnine.com/services
    🌐 Social Media & Contact 🌐
    📱 Website: www.neuralnine.com/
    📷 Instagram: / neuralnine
    🐦 Twitter: / neuralnine
    🤵 LinkedIn: / neuralnine
    📁 GitHub: github.com/NeuralNine
    🎙 Discord: / discord
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 498

  • @udaysinh
    @udaysinh Před 8 měsíci +123

    I have switched from windows to linux a few years back , because my potato laptop couldn't handle windows , but after the switch I got to say it was the best decision ever , never regretted this decision ..

    • @bibekjha5628
      @bibekjha5628 Před 8 měsíci +6

      same for after windows 11 update my laptop don't support.

    • @scar6073
      @scar6073 Před 7 měsíci +13

      The reason Linux dosent have more users is because of the ongoing myth that Linux is for programmers on Adderall unless you master scripting and spend tons of hours reading wikis you shouldn't use Linux which is objectively false. This was probably the case in the 90s but not now. It's accessibility and user-friendliness is a million times better than windows or Mac. Distributions like Ubuntu and Mint require little to no bash scripting on the user's part. What bash scripting you do need is just copying the script and pasting it on the terminal. Way better than googling hours for the exe files because windows store sucks

    • @udaysinh
      @udaysinh Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@scar6073 true , couldn't agree less

    • @yglyglya
      @yglyglya Před 7 měsíci +2

      Same

    • @udaysinh
      @udaysinh Před 7 měsíci +1

      @gherbetto someday they might work on linux too who knows

  • @GroundControlRC
    @GroundControlRC Před 8 měsíci +90

    I'm glad you're testing out Linux. I switched to Linux from Windows 25 years ago and never looked back. Hardware compatibility is something people need to consider and look into first to make sure their hardware is supported. It does take more time to get the system setup and working the way you want but it certainly saves time from that point forward. If you're a Power User or Developer I think you'll feel at home with Linux. Good luck with your Linux System and hopefully it will stick ;-) I use Linux Mint with the Mate Desktop.

    • @FarEvilDee1974
      @FarEvilDee1974 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Dell g5 laptop comes to mind here lol.

    • @GroundControlRC
      @GroundControlRC Před 7 měsíci

      @@FarEvilDee1974 I have an MSI GE75 Raider Laptop. It's my 3rd MSI Laptop and they're all still running.

    • @reynold.lariza
      @reynold.lariza Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@FarEvilDee1974 I love Linux... on the server/cloud side (even in my own home lab server) for serving specific tasks. But as a desktop... "Hardware compatibility is something people need to consider and look into first to make sure their hardware is supported." --- is still a chicken-and-egg situation. Most (latest and greatest) external hardware (audio interface, microphone, electronic diagnostic tools) which I prefer are mostly compatible in either Windows or Mac. While some works on Linux, but mostly at a degraded performance, and it sucks.

    • @bobbyfried7478
      @bobbyfried7478 Před 7 měsíci +1

      i use LM XFCE...been using on one system or another for just over a decade.

    • @felderup
      @felderup Před 7 měsíci +2

      though, considering hardware, some of my hardware stopped being supported on windows while i was in the middle of using it, old driver just uninstalled, can't find the driver to install the older version, even if it'd work. they've been clearing out the old stuff, there's a LOT of broadcom stuff out there for instance, lot of trouble getting it to work on linux, now with the reverse engineering it works better on linux than windows, where it no longer works at all. linux supports stuff in use since the 60's, the newest stuff and things with nda based drivers is hard to get support for. two windows systems and 7+ linux, with linux, 'it just works' once you get it installed, the old transformer netbook i got from my ma(very nice portable) is too much effort to change the os or it'd be one windows 10 system(it'll be converted eventually).
      i'm thinking of getting my old tx-p4x system running again, classic isa cards are worth digging up and some weirdos are actually making new ones, what's the chances windows will work on it?

  • @guilherme5094
    @guilherme5094 Před 8 měsíci +85

    I've been using Linux completely for the last 13 years, and I still have a lot of fun👍.

    • @zeocamo
      @zeocamo Před 8 měsíci +6

      i use Linux for 27 years, it is the best OS is the world.

    • @CyberAndy_
      @CyberAndy_ Před 8 měsíci +4

      i use Linux for 47 years, it is the best OS is the world.

    • @zeocamo
      @zeocamo Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@CyberAndy_ so you is a time traveler

    • @CyberAndy_
      @CyberAndy_ Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@DV-ml4fm 1991 was 52 years ago

    • @CyberAndy_
      @CyberAndy_ Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@DV-ml4fm I was born in 1969 and am 64 years old do math better be better stop arguments about nothing

  • @benjaminsmith3151
    @benjaminsmith3151 Před 7 měsíci +11

    My breaking point came when hitting the "window" key so I could run programs after typing the first few letters. One day, must have been after an "Update", I noticed that it was now showing ads, stock prices, and web site links based on characters I typed! This is more than just a "Privacy" concern, like you described. This means they integrated keylogging into the the most basic functions of the system. I've run Windows for years, always with the task manager open, and still to this day there are windows system-level processes that show up and max out the CPU for no reason. We need to stop treating the problems with Windows, and switching to linux, as just a matter of preference or habit. Do we really think a trillion dollar company, filled with thousands of developers using windows, just "Missed" the dozens of bugs I can replicate on any Windows machine I see? I get it, we're all sophisticated users, but the fact that regular people don't see the problems doesn't make them less real.

  • @ton146
    @ton146 Před 8 měsíci +23

    I moved to linux a few years ago and certainly never regretted the move. The most encouraging thing I heard was that no one knows all of linux/bash. I never knew all of DOS 5 anyway. The complexity means we need to have recipes for easy tasks as we get older. Can’t remember everything anyway. Dont want to have to reread manuals/guides every time I want to do something. I have started a hard file of recipes to not have to remember everything.

    • @larva5606
      @larva5606 Před 6 měsíci

      Nice. Do you think you'll ever share that hard file?

  • @SiarheiAkhramenia
    @SiarheiAkhramenia Před 8 měsíci +23

    Hey, I've been using GNU/Linux since Sep, 2013 as my sole OS (from LMDE Mate then to Linux Mint Cinnamon now). 10 years+ as of the time of writing this. No any regret, EVER.
    Have a bunch of offline UNIX/Linux tools, tried a lot of different distros on other devices. My whole dev/life digital infrastructure is built around and thanks to the unending world of possibilities that the GNU/Linux systems can offer.
    GL to all of you, strangers trying to apply this beautiful engineering gem to your life and work!

    • @girohead
      @girohead Před 7 měsíci

      Same here, LMDE is version 2 or 3 - works well on everything, and snappy.

  • @MyReviews_karkan
    @MyReviews_karkan Před 8 měsíci +11

    Running Linux is like building your own muscle/sleeper car. It might take time to make it fully functional and the way you want it, but once it's complete, you're going to have so much fun. I've been running Linux for 6 years now. It definitely got a ton better in the last couple of years. My only advice is don't distro-hop. Choose one distro and work it on it to make it work the way you want. That way, in a couple of months, you have fixed all the issues that may have popped up and set it up to suit your workflow. Also, keep a windows machine/drive/VM handy.

  • @PEdulis
    @PEdulis Před 8 měsíci +12

    Thanks for this informative video. I would also recommend to anyone to setup Linux either in a dual boot installation or to run it in a VirtualBox for starters, maybe to try different varieties like LinuxMint or PopOs before deciding which of them to install in the dual boot system.
    I also liked your conclusion that it would be harder for you now (after only 5 months!) to switch back to Windows than it was to switch to Linux. Many people underestimate the time they spent on getting their Windows system running the way they want it and claim it would all work right out of the box and then moan about something not working on Linux instantaneously. In reality, we all had our issues to setup Windows perfectly and we looked up what others did in that case or asked a friend and the same is true for Linux. In my view, the learning curve for Linux can be faster and once you got your system running the way you want it, you don't have to worry about much any more unlike Windows that may stop your workflow because it insists on installing an update right there and then or other issues.
    To me, privacy is a much more important point than it seems to be for you. Especially after reading the new MS service agreement that clearly states that MS can and will scan all the files and possibly report them for copyright claims or other issues, I can no longer think of using Windows as my main OS, only when I have to because my employer still thinks it's the way to go.

  • @jamesaron1967
    @jamesaron1967 Před 7 měsíci +4

    I wish I had wetted my feet in Linux back in the '90s when I started being serious about computing. Unfortunately, fate had other plans. About a decade ago, I installed many Linux distros on virtual machines for a project I was doing. For a while, I experimented with them to see if I could ever function as well in the Linux environment as I did in Windows. I eventually realized that was probably never going to happen. I had already become too habituated. More importantly, I was too _dependent_ on the Windows platform and its apps to ever extricate myself from it.
    Fast-forward to the present, I've been hearing a lot about Linux Mint and how it dominates the Linux world, especially for ex-Windows users. I tried it in the past and liked it, but it wasn't sufficiently similar to what I had grown accustomed to making the switch. I am going to install Mint again in a VM and a few other distros, but this time will keep them to continue my research and gain experience. I fully understand your permanent switch to Linux. You are a developer. It makes sense for your requirements. You're also a lot younger than me and perhaps it was easier.
    My question is why bother with a dual boot and not simply run a Windows VM instead? It's much easier to open a VM and run a Windows program inside it. That way you never need to reboot your system. Additionally, you can have multiple Windows VMs in different versions (7, 10, 11, etc). Unless you absolutely need the full performance of your PC, VMs are vastly more convenient since you'll never need to leave your Linux boot OS. Virtualization is so good now and current hardware is so powerful, that I find permanent multi-boot setups are superfluous in most scenarios.

  • @abhimanyu6599
    @abhimanyu6599 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Keep Going!! I have also been using linux for a while. I started out by dual-booting on my new laptop but then windows just broke itself randomly, been using linux since(been around 1 year).

    • @trajectoryunown
      @trajectoryunown Před 8 měsíci +2

      I tried having a dual-boot setup.
      Got tired of Windows hijacking my boot sequence and placing itself first. Had to clear the CMOS every time I wanted to get back into Linux.

    • @abhimanyu6599
      @abhimanyu6599 Před 8 měsíci

      @@trajectoryunown True

  • @vicenteeduardo5598
    @vicenteeduardo5598 Před 8 měsíci +17

    I've been using linux for 8 years now and it is a decision i've never regretted so far.

    • @seguramlk
      @seguramlk Před 2 měsíci

      Me too, man. I migrated to Linux back in 2016 when I installed Ubuntu MATE 16.04 LTS. Don't regret it a bit

  • @sheldonkupa9120
    @sheldonkupa9120 Před 8 měsíci +20

    Pop OS was a good choice! Its a serious distribution which i prefer. Hope their next iteration will be worth the wait.

    • @matthewlee9728
      @matthewlee9728 Před 7 měsíci +1

      pop os is great but linux mint is propably teh best first distro coming from windows

    • @lulube11e111
      @lulube11e111 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@matthewlee9728way too old desktop for modern times. Imo

  • @gand0rfTRZ
    @gand0rfTRZ Před 8 měsíci +56

    Hey. Been using linux as my daily driver for over 6 months now. Only have a dual boot with windows, because cert exam companies are a pain. 100% agree with the development points. It has been much easier and quicker coding in python since switching over. I have also been getting better at bash. to the point of making my own scripts and setting up my own stuff to run at login. I really enjoy the gui editing and setting up my desktop the way I like. Gaming on linux has been great as well. Cyberpunk works better on my xubuntu then it does on my windows.

    • @darrenlefcoe
      @darrenlefcoe Před 8 měsíci +1

      Why is it quicker and easier coding in python on Linux compared to Windows? Surely that's down to the IDE and little to do with the OS ??

    • @DaManCave123
      @DaManCave123 Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@darrenlefcoeopen source, more interactive developers, linux built diff, and generally the developers are better. they even made gaming easy! i play cs2, tf2, cyberpunk 2077(used too, i dont like it that much), gta V, farcry 6, combat master, TABG, minecraft, battlebit remastered and many others.

    • @something_
      @something_ Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@darrenlefcoe python packages are easier to work with, the IDE need to attach a Terminal and also the tools in Linux like diff,tee....it's easy, and also Bash is easier and advanced than Bat or Powershell, though in some cases it's better to code in Windows; like for C, C++ devs in Linux the standard libraries are included by default, maybe you don't want that.

    • @darrenlefcoe
      @darrenlefcoe Před 8 měsíci

      @@something_ I use the same IDE for both. In fact, the most popular IDE (vs code) works natively and seamlessly on Windows... so it is not obvious that Linux is advantageous in this regard ?

    • @googlymooglyman
      @googlymooglyman Před 7 měsíci

      @@darrenlefcoe vs code works on linux as well

  • @marioandresheviacavieres1923
    @marioandresheviacavieres1923 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I really enjoy pop OS, super user friendly. As well your channel is great. Thanks for all the videos!

  • @muddyexport5639
    @muddyexport5639 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Agree and do the same thing along with the MacOS & iOS in the mix via support needs for other users.

  • @derekr54
    @derekr54 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I got shut of Windows for good some years ago after years of dual-booting and now every PC or laptop I have runs some version of Linux. I have never had the need to use Windows and certainly don't miss anything about it. I even put Linux on my old Macbook and it works fine on that also.

  • @jonathanj.7344
    @jonathanj.7344 Před 7 měsíci +5

    I've used Linux since 2009 and much prefer it. I'm just a home desktop user so don't really come up against professional software compatibility issues. For all of the programs I used on Windows, there's Linux equivalents for people like myself. CD/DVD burning, word processor, text editor, GIMP image editor, VLC media player... and of course there's Firefox for Linux anyway. I love the package manager too, there's GUI versions of it like Synaptic (or on my Slackware derived system Gslapt). But there's three big, big plusses which keep me from ever going back to Windows. 1. All of the software available via the package manager is FREE. Free of charge, and free as in open-source. 2. The system doesn't collect tons of garbage which run in the background and clog it up. 3. Anti-virus software is not necessary. So you don't get interminable reminders to update Norton/McAffee etc, or have them grinding away in the background eating at you processor power. Finally, as I say, I'm just an ordinary user. For normal use, I have never have to use the command line, same as in Windows. The only times I CHOOSE to use it are for fun/interest/finding out how it works, or to learn BASH commands, or if I fancy a change from using the GUI package manager.

  • @blaster3744
    @blaster3744 Před 8 měsíci

    I ll definitely give a try to pop os. Thx for sharing

  • @MnemonicCarrier
    @MnemonicCarrier Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thanks for sharing - always interesting to hear people's stories about switching to Linux. I've been using Linux full time for about 15 years now, have never looked back. In regards to "...I would never get rid of Windows completely..." - I used the think the same thing (many moons ago) 🤣Anyway - welcome to the fold, all the best!

  • @terrydactyl7026
    @terrydactyl7026 Před 6 měsíci

    It’s nice to see someone else documenting their travels in switching from Windows to Linux. I am about to start on this journey and have selected Zorin (for a much simpler transition) as my Linux driver. The main issue (as you have highlighted) is that a lot of apps written for Windows are not written for Linux. The Main items for me are Filmora (video editing), NItro Pro (PDF), On1 Photo Raw for Raw / photo editing (i don’t subscribe to the Adobe eco system and thank goodness for that too).The rest of the apps i use I could easily replace with Linux alternatives. I have researched and Microsoft Office could be replaced with WPS Office(and this might just be good enough for the PDF replacement too) so i will give that a test drive for sure. I will inevitably end up running Filmora & On1 in VMware Player as that has 3D graphics pass through. Keep up the good work as you document your switch.

  • @walter_lesaulnier
    @walter_lesaulnier Před 7 měsíci

    Switched to Fedora/ Plasma about 9 months ago on my main PC and LOVE it- not one single issue that I had to fix in that whole time. I have an older PC with Win 10 just for playing several very old games.

  • @BitsOfTruth
    @BitsOfTruth Před 3 měsíci

    Very well done. I would have more trouble switching back to Windows too. I love the quiet experience of Linux Mint without all the interruptions and so much more I like about Mint. Well done..

  • @jeisonsanchez4842
    @jeisonsanchez4842 Před 7 měsíci +1

    16:13 this was my life when I used to run Slackware. I don’t recall there being a package manager at the time and lots of things had to be compiled. Overall, it was fun and reliable. It involved lots of reading and troubleshooting and hanging out at the IRC channels. Learning Linux makes you a better person. 😊

    • @vegetalasbestos7928
      @vegetalasbestos7928 Před 7 měsíci

      Im still using slackware (since 2009 when the 64 bit came out), still rock stable and still no official package manager.There are few unofficial and work quite well since installing/upgrading/reinstalling/removing packages on Slackware is so easy.

  • @patricioeb
    @patricioeb Před 8 měsíci +9

    I've beeing a Microsoft user since my IT professional beginnings, mid '80s. I gave a chance to Linux, trying different distros, about may be 5 years ago but didn't fulfill my expectations. It has improved a lot, so this year I tried a dual boot installation with Linux Mint and I felt very confortable. I switched to Debian 12 (Kde Plasma) and for several months I'm using it as my main working environment using Windows for very specific tasks. Linux is way more efficient with resources, not to say about privacy and security, and it improves on each update. It kinds of makes me feel I "belong" to the community.

  • @stefannilsson2406
    @stefannilsson2406 Před 7 měsíci

    DUDE! Why did I not know about btop earlier!?!?!? This is amazing!!!

  • @user-hv9sg5pl8b
    @user-hv9sg5pl8b Před 8 měsíci +3

    My first install of Linux was in 1997, Red Hat 5.2. I also played around with SUSE, Mandrake, eventually Fedora. These were usually dual boots with Windows.
    I switched to Linux full time back in the early/mid 2000s. Used Ubuntu exclusively on all my computers. Around about 2011, when Ubuntu switched to the terrible Unity UI, I was due for a new laptop. As always it came with Windows pre-installed, so I just kept using it. Linux did everything I ever asked of it while I used it exclusively back then.
    Around March of 2022, when I started getting the full court press to upgrade to Windows 11, I decided I didn't want the invasive "features" that came with 11. At that time, I switched all of my computers back to Linux. I'm currently running Manjaro on one laptop, MX Linux on the other laptop. On my desktop I have Gecko Linux running as the default installation, with Chachy OS as the dual boot option. I'm happy with all of them. Once you get the various flavors of Linux installed and configured (VERY easy today), I'm a pretty firm believer that Linux is Linux is Linux. Mostly minor differences between them, especially if you use the same desktop environment on all of them. My choice for that is Xfce.
    Just for fun, Who was a fan of Leo Laporte and the gang on The Screen Savers and Call for Help - they were our "Influencers" back in the day. LOL

    • @PEdulis
      @PEdulis Před 8 měsíci +2

      I started working with it when the kernel still had a 0 as the main number but I don't recall exactly which version it was. I then used several Suse versions as they appeared and paused for a while since my employer forced us to work with Windows but I'm still happy to work with Linux privately, currently using LMDE since I like the stability of Debian combined with the accessibility of Mint which I also install on friend's computers when they are frustrated again with their Windows experience.

  • @Dave-PL
    @Dave-PL Před 6 měsíci +2

    Great choice bro! I'm working with Linux since 1998. Around 9 years ago I switched completely to Linux Desktop environment. Thanks to companies which gives Linux tools like VariCAD, Cura 3D, Arduino IDE and many more I no need anymore MS or Apple environment 💪💪

  • @dandahl1039
    @dandahl1039 Před 8 měsíci

    I started playing with Linux a long time ago when kernel 2.0 came out. I've taken some classes and played around a lot, but not really much to do at the time. Now I'm retired so I built a state of the art Windows 10 machine, but now they are pushing me to goto Win 11 and I don't want to switch. I'm tired of switching and learning and updating and well another version of Windoze that's not ready to be released, but there it is. So I built another system and installed Pop-OS and have been playing with it for a year now. My life is still on the Windoze system, but I don't spend much time there anymore. Only when I have too. I spend most time on Linux. Anyway thanks for the article.

  • @gracc46
    @gracc46 Před 8 měsíci

    Nice review. Good and honest .I'm a Linux man and have been for ever. I'm like you with the make it mine attitude.

  • @SuvobrotoPal
    @SuvobrotoPal Před 8 měsíci

    Very Educative Video, Thank you very much
    🙏🙏

  • @kellypainter7625
    @kellypainter7625 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have Pop OS on my work laptop. I have two SSDs: one with Windows 10 that I never use and Pop on the other one. I have Windows 10 on QEMU/KVM on the Pop drive where I can run some programs that don't have Linux counterparts (like my password manager, mSecure). I just pause the Windows 10 VM when I am done with it. Everything is great on that machine.

  • @DanzzyTechWorld
    @DanzzyTechWorld Před 6 měsíci

    Great video bro. I agree with you 100% on the gpaste issue

  • @centuriomacro9787
    @centuriomacro9787 Před 8 měsíci

    I switched from Windows to PopOS 1,5 years. Enjoyed it so far.
    Have kept Windows in dual boot as well. For example the HD resolution on Amazon steaming isn’t available on Linux.

  • @mage3690
    @mage3690 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I switched to Linux specifically so gaming was _harder._ I thought gaming too much was holding me back in college. It was, but it was a symptom, not the actual problem. How it's going is -- well, I put the line "PATH=' ' " in my bashrc yesterday. It went exactly the way you think it did (I had to live boot in with a USB to delete that line).
    The only thing that didn't "just work™" for me was that I couldn't watch CZcams or Twitch videos, for which I needed to install ffmpeg (and specifically _not ffmpeg-free), which required me to enable the RPMFusion repo since I'm on Fedora.
    Also, if you have the space, what you can do is use Disk Management to shrink your C: drive back by 100 GB or so, leave that space blank, and install Linux on that empty space. It's a surprisingly easy thing to do, actually. Windows will complain about it and maybe tell you to defrag your drive, but I'm dual booted on a single drive now without having lost a single byte of data or needing to reinstall Windows.

  • @Wilhuf1
    @Wilhuf1 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Switched to Mint, then EndeavourOS a year ago. It’s great.

  • @darrenlefcoe
    @darrenlefcoe Před 8 měsíci +1

    the are a multitude of Linux distros, so 1000 users are split into pockets of 10 with fragmented usage and help. Whereas for windows (& mac), there is one version of each so the community, support and motivation is far greater... the one size fits all model is appears to be the popular choice.

    • @bullpup1337
      @bullpup1337 Před 8 měsíci +1

      there are so many linux users today that this isnt really an issue, unless you go to a super small and obscure distro

  • @ryangarofano
    @ryangarofano Před 6 měsíci +1

    For debian based distros i recommend using nala as your package manager. Its basically a wrapper around apt that optimizes speed and makes the output look better.

  • @tohur
    @tohur Před 8 měsíci +5

    I swapped to Linux full time when the steam deck was announced as I knew game compatibility was going to grow. I do keep my windows install in a KVM VM with GPU passthrough when I do want to play a game or use a software not compatible with linux.. have to say I much prefer having windows in the VM and isolated. I do plan on getting a second GPU just for windows so if I want I can have both the host and an vm running at the same time as with my current setup when I am in windows linux is unusable

  • @amirsaid
    @amirsaid Před 8 měsíci +1

    i just have switched from win 11 to ubuntu few weeks ago , and was the best desition i have done ,amazion os ,very fast

  • @oldbeardedtech993
    @oldbeardedtech993 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Congrats on the switch. You won't be disappointed. I've been on linux for 10 years and have used a windows VM for 1 stupid application for work that has no linux alternative for the entire time. 1 W7 for 5 years and W10 for the past 5 years. No issues because it's basically sandboxed. If you're gaming then the dualboot may be the better option, however KVM/QEMU is pretty close to bare metal. Virtualbox is great too. The VM is also better because you can run both at the same time, unlike dualboot so in your case MS office or Adobe suite is right there in it's own window.
    Also the downside to dualboot is eventually a Windows update will mess with your bootloader.
    Good luck and looking forward to the linux content!

  • @mskiptr
    @mskiptr Před 8 měsíci +25

    As for autoscrolling, it's the apps themselves that decide what to do with a middle-click event. Pasting the primary selection is the typical behavior, but in e.g. Firefox you can change that to start scrolling instead.
    On another note, I personally don't use any office suit because I just find them all way too annoying. For writing notes, I typically go with markdown. And when it needs to be something of higher quality, I will bring out LaTeX. Using actual programming languages instead of Excel is also more convenient. (Especially functional ones, since they are naturally suited for calculations.) And presentations | slideshows are fortunately not something I typically need to bother myself with, but for that it would be either LaTeX again, or something like Reveal.js.

    • @Mallchad
      @Mallchad Před 8 měsíci +2

      Middle click is actually normal X11 behaviour it doesn't really have a traditional clipboard. I like klipper and it lets you disable that behaviour and gives you 1000+ item clipboard history

    • @trajectoryunown
      @trajectoryunown Před 8 měsíci +2

      You could theoretically remap the middle click to a different input (to prevent interference from applications) and program it to run a script for scrolling that disables on click?

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@trajectoryunown YT is removing my reply, so here it is in pieces:

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@trajectoryunown Judging by a few threads on Reddit, SE and Arch forums something like this seems to be possible, but also quite hacky and fragile.

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@trajectoryunown The proper way to implement it would be to add this feature to libinput, which coincidentally already implements something very similar to enable scrolling with a TrackPoint (it's called button scrolling).

  • @r3lativ
    @r3lativ Před 7 měsíci

    You can get quick access to emojis either with a Gnome extension, or with rofi. There are also several good options for clipboard managers, either as Gnome extensions, or installing clipQ.

  • @stevesveryown
    @stevesveryown Před 7 měsíci

    Pop is a nice choice. I use it full time. Thanks for the review.

  • @ErikS-
    @ErikS- Před 8 měsíci +5

    I spent zillions on Mac's in the last decade.
    And I got screwed so often that I switched to Linux beginning of 2023.
    And yes, it got some time to get used to, but 10 months in I can say that it's a choice that I should have made many years earlier!

    • @whoshotdk
      @whoshotdk Před 7 měsíci

      Same here, though I switched in 2020 after my last iMac died after a only a couple years use. I always intended to go back, just so I could use XCode to compile games for iPhone e.t.c but I still haven't got round to it. Ubuntu has a couple of flaws here and there but is pretty great.

    • @TheMaxKids
      @TheMaxKids Před 7 měsíci

      What was the best feature Linux had that made you stick with it. I am a Mac M1 user and am really frustrated by it's developing issues.

    • @whoshotdk
      @whoshotdk Před 7 měsíci

      @@TheMaxKids For me it was mainly about the price. I didn’t want to spend any more on Apple hardware. I have encountered more issues with Ubuntu than with Mac OS and it can be equally frustrating. However if you have just enough technical know-how to solve relatively basic issues, you can have months of hassle-free computing. Until some random update kicks in and breaks something new. Some time ago I booted my PC and got only one out of three screens working all of a sudden. Turned out an update borked the graphics driver and a re-install of the driver fixed it. Stuff like that doesn’t happen too often, fortunately. I’m still using Ubuntu as my daily-driver and overall I’d say the experience, though marred with a few technical issues, is more-or-less equal to that of Mac OS, if not better. I do miss the device synch features of MacOS/iOS though.

  • @AdenMocca
    @AdenMocca Před 7 měsíci +1

    Good video, I found it interesting that you found linux more glitchy than windows, probably some hardware being un-optimized. I've had some issues with Linux, but in many ways I think it is a lot more predictable than Windows. I also agree with "I would have a harder time switching to Windows than I did to Linux". Once you have something that only updates when you want, then go back to Windows that updates whenever it feels like it.... I once had a meeting and the other attendee told me they need to delay for about 10~15 mins while the computer is updating.
    On software compatibility, Linux has become the server OS, so while it is true there are a lot of client apps that might not be in Linux - and that gap is shrinking a lot with Proton and Valve's efforts - there are also a lot of server-side applications that can't be run or compiled in Windows - Redis I think is an example that can't be built with Windows natively. WSL helps overcome this, but WSL is a Linux VM that was highly customized to not look like a Linux VM. Windows can't be torn down into modular components, preventing a modular LSW (Linux subsystem for Windows), so the fact that WSL is a thing, is in a large part thanks to the customizability, and modularity of the Linux operating system.
    At the end of the day, users need to use what they like. It is sad more people don't have visibility into Linux because it is the only option where the users can control their choices, learning the system once can apply to hundreds of distros, and is - as mentioned - the most privacy-minded option.

  • @CristobalWatsonHernandez
    @CristobalWatsonHernandez Před 8 měsíci +6

    One point that is always raised which I both agree with and disagree with, is customization. Yes, Linux is very good for being very customizable, which is good for people who want this, but it is little more than confusing for people who just want to install a system and work with it out of the box (such as in corporate environments).
    I personally think a better way of putting this point would be to say that Linux is infinitely customizable for people who want to have their own look and feel, however, there are also several environments that you can use out of the box without customization. Like the Windows layout? Try cinnamon or KDE, like Mac OS? Pantheon and Gnome should be up your alley.

  • @gwgux
    @gwgux Před 7 měsíci

    Pop!_OS is still one of the go to distros I recommend to people trying Linux for the first time. It's great. I've been running Linux for over 20 years and I've run a lot of different distros over the years, and it was Pop!_OS that I settled on for my laptops.
    There may be a time when you stop booting into Windows. I used to keep Windows around for gaming and some other software too, but for my needs, I no longer need to with what we have on Linux capable of doing all that I need. Plus, many applications are going web based now too making the underlying OS less important to run them.

  • @markuszeller_official
    @markuszeller_official Před 8 měsíci

    2:00 best point! There are still 2 apps left I need Windows for.

  • @YannBOYERDev
    @YannBOYERDev Před 8 měsíci +2

    I'm a full time Linux user and I will never switch back to Windows, all my software works under Linux... And as a C and C++ programmer I'm just in love with the terminal and package manager !

  • @lebranding
    @lebranding Před 7 měsíci

    I had Bluetooth problems on Ubuntu as well. I switched to Fedora, and everything has been running smoothly since.

  • @davorbokun
    @davorbokun Před 8 měsíci +21

    For developers, the first time you setup your ssh keys and start using remote machines like they're local, you'll never look back. I still use Windows occasionally but it's such a pain in comparison. Great overview btw!

    • @darrenlefcoe
      @darrenlefcoe Před 8 měsíci +2

      agree with this as a motivation, but outside of this, windows is far more convenient (out of the box).

    • @dtreezy
      @dtreezy Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@darrenlefcoe I would have agreed with you until Windows 11....that OS is a mess

    • @darrenlefcoe
      @darrenlefcoe Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@dtreezy apart from the taskbar being in the middle (which i have now got used to), it is excellent... what makes you say that it is a mess ?

    • @darrenlefcoe
      @darrenlefcoe Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@mythbuster6126 as soon as I saw WSL I thought exactly the same. Have windows with Linix embedded.
      How is the experience?

    • @stevea1708
      @stevea1708 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@darrenlefcoeyou can move it you know...

  • @jesavius
    @jesavius Před 8 měsíci

    linuxbrew(back in the day), now homebrew officially, is what convinced me to go linux full time way back when!

  • @cesoirg
    @cesoirg Před 8 měsíci +3

    we are alike! I also like to use alias in terminal ! for the short-cut to oepn commandline in windows... I think you can create a regular short-cut then assign a keyboard short cut via property tab.

    • @archgirl
      @archgirl Před 8 měsíci

      For some reason, that’s never worked for me. No idea why. I make shortcut to CMD in Documents or somewhere similar, then set a shortcut to access it. Shortcut never worked, and I’ve no idea why.

    • @distant6606
      @distant6606 Před 8 měsíci

      @@archgirl i dont know if im understanding ur comment correctly. r u trying smth like (i use alacritty terminal for this example) `alacritty -c "cd Documents"`? If thats the case, then for me too, it doesnt work. i think the shortcut panel doesnt like spaces/args in the exec field. what i did is just make scripts to do the same thing, and added the script path in the shortcut panel to be executed instead.
      For example(using alacritty for default terminal emulator):
      1. Create script at: `~/scripts/documents.sh`,
      2. Write the script(replace
      with actual newlines): `#!/usr/bin/env bash
      alacritty -c "cd Documents"`,
      3. (run in the terminal) chmod +x ~/scripts/documents.sh,
      4. (in shortcut panel) add: `/home//scripts/documents.sh` to the executable field.

    • @archgirl
      @archgirl Před 8 měsíci

      @@distant6606 No, apologies for the confusion; I was talking about Windows CMD, like the example given by the OP.
      On Windows, you can create a shortcut to a file, somewhat like symlinks in Linux. Then you can set a keyboard shortcut that triggers that shortcut, because you can’t set a keyboard shortcut directly to the actual CMD executable in System32.
      So you make a shortcut to the CMD executable, save it somewhere else, like My Documents, and then in the settings for that shortcut file, you can assign a keyboard shortcut to trigger and follow through to the actual executable.
      But for some reason, it’s never worked for me. I make the shortcut, set the hotkeys up, and nothing happens when I press them, every time. That’s all I was talking about.

    • @somesalmon5694
      @somesalmon5694 Před 8 měsíci

      Yeah I think the windows shortcuts he's looking to make would be easily possible through ms powertoys would it not?

  • @DenisTrebushnikov
    @DenisTrebushnikov Před 5 měsíci

    I use both: PC: Win10 (I still need it), Laptop: Manjaro Gnome (almost two years, I use xfce first, but love with Gnome for 1,5 years).

  • @Blan_11
    @Blan_11 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I recently switched to linux. But, I'm currently using Endeavour OS and it works well. I also like pacman and yay. When I started using linux, I started to create scripts to speed up my tasks.

    • @Professor762
      @Professor762 Před 3 měsíci

      I made a script to automate my settings and program installs for a fresh install. I felt so proud of myself and it worked well on the first run.

  • @ruslansmirnov9006
    @ruslansmirnov9006 Před 8 měsíci

    imho terminal workspaces are more suitable for administering, while windowing managers are more like for development
    terminals -> short scripts, much help, much auto-completion
    windows -> long programs, large projects, build stacks, etc.

  • @jmirodg7094
    @jmirodg7094 Před 8 měsíci

    Been using linux for a while now. do not have dual boot anymore, nothing that I really need is on windows. The middle mouse button is the linux copy paste quicker than the ctrl-c ctrl-v and on a different buffer so you can use the two with different content I love it. Pop-os dose not handle the middle button very well though.if you really need to run a windos app you can always try your luck with wine.

  • @hoteny
    @hoteny Před 8 měsíci +1

    Congratulations. Waiting for you to come back to windows!!!!!!!

    • @dtreezy
      @dtreezy Před 8 měsíci

      Windows 11 will force people off of their ecosystem. It is abominable

  • @shahnawazali9281
    @shahnawazali9281 Před 8 měsíci

    Been using Linux from 2021 for astronomy projects. It's my primary OS now.

  • @Onjiii
    @Onjiii Před 8 měsíci +2

    With lutris + steam and the modern wine and proton layers I have been able to perfectly run all games I've played so far. I would probably use windows for DaVinci resolve but other than than no reason to go back.

    • @bobmcbob4399
      @bobmcbob4399 Před 5 měsíci

      Ever been able to run Blasphemous with the cutscenes that use Windows Media Foundation here on linux? I could not. I just get that test pattern image inplace of cutscenes. Had to use Win7 to get glorious Blasphemous experience.

  • @Xaito
    @Xaito Před 7 měsíci

    Switched over to Linux desktop over 3 weeks ago. Hopped distro once in that time already. ;)
    Started with Fedora based Nobara and it worked well at first, but I've somehow managed to make Steam stop starting windows games with Proton. I suspect it was either me playing around with the Nix package manager too much or some update broke something because I've installed qtile on top of the KDE Nobara came with, which is something the dev of Nobara discourages due to possible package mismatch. I was hoping to avoid issues by installing qtile through nix, but eh...
    I'm now on Arch (btw) based distro Garuda and I love it. It feels way more snappy - probably because I didn't need a single flatpak so far. The AUR is sweet.

  • @ekaterinaburakova8629
    @ekaterinaburakova8629 Před měsícem

    You can customize shortcuts on any Windows system - although it may be ot as efficient as on UNIX-based ones. You go to the Properties of any shortcut icon and assign your key combination on the default tab.

  • @ericjohnson5990
    @ericjohnson5990 Před 8 měsíci

    Been using Linux for that the past two years, and have been enjoying it ever since. I've rarely had any serious problems, except for those early days with pipe-wire. I've just been debating on whether or not to go back to Ubuntu from Pop Os.

    • @sshivam6955
      @sshivam6955 Před 8 měsíci

      Is it because of gnome 45?

    • @ericjohnson5990
      @ericjohnson5990 Před 8 měsíci

      @@sshivam6955 I’m using pop os at the moment, but the reason I haven’t installed Ubuntu or Fedora is because they aren’t officially tested on my darter pro from System76

  • @RakibHasan-hs1me
    @RakibHasan-hs1me Před 7 měsíci

    I used Zorin. For six months worked fine. Later went to distro hoping spree. Currently using Q4 os with mate desktop. Finally, inner peace.

  • @ytfeelslikenorthkorea
    @ytfeelslikenorthkorea Před 7 měsíci

    10:55 if you are a heavy office users, that's a problem. I completely moved away from that mindset, it's not 1990s anymore. But during the transition period I did use the simplified o365 through a browser.

  • @sasqwatcher_AtTheSource
    @sasqwatcher_AtTheSource Před 7 měsíci

    Yes I totally agree with this assessment of using Linux full time. I have been using Linux since 2014, have tried numerous distros... But, in all this time, I have had a two disc setup just like NeuralNine suggests (one for Windows and the other for Linux with the Linux being the default boot system). He is absolutely correct about the reasons to have access to a Windows system. There are some situations where Windows is essential. Using Linux is, by far, so much better if you are a developer. I do like PopOS but I have been using the Linux Mint Debian Edition (LMDE 6) lately and find it to be excellent. This distro is based directly on Debian rather than having Ubuntu as an extra layer. I really like the direction that Linux Mint team is going with this. As for the Office suite, I have been using LibreOffice for so long now that I don't even know and therefore, don't even care about the differences between Libre and MS Office. I do save my docs in MS Office format by default. But that may be a bone of contention for some people. I guess it depends on your use cases. I'm a 40+ year veteran in IT and have developed systems mostly on Windows OS systems (IBM initially - boring). Learning how to work on Linux systems is very empowering to me. I wish that I had worked on Linux for most of my career. Anyway, this is a good overview of why it would be good to consider switching. Even for normies (non-devs), many distros are quite user friendly. There have been huge improvements to Linux distros since 2014. Thnx.

  • @d.wolfin152
    @d.wolfin152 Před 8 měsíci +2

    With the growth of SaaS, more and more will become available to any operating system that runs a browser.

  • @anonymouscommentator
    @anonymouscommentator Před 8 měsíci

    this is exactly how i feel about my switch to linux too!

  • @derekp6636
    @derekp6636 Před 7 měsíci

    Only downside at the moment for me on pop os is the back/forward button on the mouse not working on web browsers....works fine out of the box on Mint and Ubuntu 23.10 though! Considering a distro hop until they release a newer version of pop os since I'm not really gaming at the moment anyways.

  • @pietraderdetective8953
    @pietraderdetective8953 Před 8 měsíci

    I've been contemplating to install PopOS as well...but I couldn't find my USB stick.
    Is there anything better than PopOS for a linux newbie? I omitted Mint as one of the alternatives but I cannot remember why...

  • @blendin.studio2508
    @blendin.studio2508 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Cool, after training to become a Microsoft Certified Engineer, I quickly became disillusioned with the whole ecosystem. I switched to Linux 15 years ago and never regretted a thing. My distro's of choice have been Ubuntu and Mint.

  • @Prophet6000
    @Prophet6000 Před 7 měsíci

    Windows 10 pushed me to switching to Linux. I've been so happy just having freedom on my computer. If I don't like something, I can change it. I still have to use Windows for some gaming stuff like Valorant.

  • @maybe_raj
    @maybe_raj Před 7 měsíci +1

    Auto scroll is the biggest thing I miss in Linux. It just makes sense to press scroll button to enable auto scroll!

    • @barry5
      @barry5 Před 7 měsíci

      Good news, its still there. There's browser extensions for it that you can install, and i think its just a setting you can turn on in firefox, but im not sure about that one.

  • @c0t1
    @c0t1 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I'm a programmer who learned on Unix in the 80s, wrote code for DOS (in C) long before Windows arrived. When Windows finally came out, I hated it - it has never been a decent OS for development, imo. Switched to Linux in 1997 and have been using it ever since.

  • @stillmattwest
    @stillmattwest Před 7 měsíci

    I had a dual boot system for a few months but I never ended up using Windows and I knew that I was looking at half a day of updates if I tried, so eventually I just overwrote the partition. Linux does it all.
    Pop OS is very good. Mint might even be a little better but a lot of that is subjective.

  • @enzanto
    @enzanto Před 8 měsíci +1

    I run dual boot, Pop!_OS and win10.. win10 is ONLY used for my xbox gamepass games. I play my steam and blizzard games in linux. i am a few years in to this setup. love it!

    • @kolz4ever1980
      @kolz4ever1980 Před 8 měsíci

      😂 windows 10 still..

    • @enzanto
      @enzanto Před 8 měsíci

      @@kolz4ever1980 i use it.. Like once a month or so? I don't need to upgrade it

    • @bobmcbob4399
      @bobmcbob4399 Před 5 měsíci

      @@kolz4ever1980 Yeah I know right? I use Pop OS mainly and my backup for games that I cannot do in linux is Win7! hahaaha. And I browse with it too hehehe

  • @thomasgoodwin2648
    @thomasgoodwin2648 Před 8 měsíci

    My 1st O.S. experience was called "Whatdoesitdo". The entire OS, Tiny Pilot language and enough space left over to run a 'Nym' script all fit into 256 bytes. Yes, that's bytes, not K or M or T or P, just bytes. Ran on a homebrew 8080. (1976-77). Lost count of the number of OS s I've seen since then.
    IMO Linux is far superior for dev, but I prefer a more visual style for my regular interactions. Dual boot is really the way to go, but you have to set it up that way from scratch. Trying to tack it on later just doesn't seem to work too good in practice.

    • @bobmcbob4399
      @bobmcbob4399 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Adding later is fine. I select my boot OS from my motherboard boot selection hotkey during startup. Most times its linux, but I do occaisonally hop into windows. Just mash F8 in my case and I get a selection of available OSes to boot from the UEFI boot select menu. No grub menu, no issues. And with linux being the default, I just power on PC and walk away and its all there for me.

  • @ynno66
    @ynno66 Před 8 měsíci

    i think WPS is the best office suit that works well in Linux. Give it a try if you don't know although not open source. It's free and there's an optional pro version.

  • @asthmatic2455
    @asthmatic2455 Před 7 měsíci

    Hi :) sorry, you ment neovim or
    ? "nv newfile.txt"...Please, which program exactly should I install?

  • @symmercy6782
    @symmercy6782 Před 7 měsíci

    I switched to linux 2 years ago. I am dualbooting because I just need windows for some stuff like: VR (I have a nvidia gpu), Some games because (my nvidia gpu). Now i'm running ArCh BtW (sometimes debian) with dwm.

  • @louisfifteen
    @louisfifteen Před 7 měsíci

    I have the exact same setu0p except I run Fedora 39 desktop. I use windows only for gaming. Every day work is so smooth and fast in Linux that I almost forget that I have Windows on my computer.

  • @lancercncs1822
    @lancercncs1822 Před 7 měsíci

    As a long time Microsoft Office user and academic, Libre Office is a little different in feel BUT it does everything I ever used to do in Microsoft Office.

  • @kabirycreator
    @kabirycreator Před 7 měsíci

    i completely use linux from past 3 years, no windows at all in any of my computer!! i have to set up many things after installing linux as per my need but all of our hard drives and everything is only linux. and it is working great!!

  • @Chalisque
    @Chalisque Před 8 měsíci +2

    Even on Windows, I do my file management using bash and a few python scripts (cygwin or WSL). I have a collection of old Thinkpads running Kubuntu beautifully, and a couple of minimacs. I use all three of Windows, Linux and Macos daily. The macs get the least use, one of the refurb minimacs is just a media player for my TV. For coding and writing I use Kubuntu. I'm writing this on Kubuntu on one of those Thinkpads. But I find there are various use cases where I need one of the three, so I like to have all three available. If all the music software I use was available for Linux, my music workstation could easily be running Linux not Windows. One thing that is telling in the comparison between a T450 running Windows 10 and one running Kubuntu is the amount of bloat in Windows: the CPU never truly idles, whereas with Kubuntu it does, so the battery lasts much longer (exactly the same battery in each, so it's not that the Kubuntu T450 has a better battery).

    • @Mallchad
      @Mallchad Před 8 měsíci

      You have to... file explorer is useless and crashy....
      it's a bit better if you use 3rd party file managers like xyplorer but it's becoming harder to care when I can just install portable bash

    • @Chalisque
      @Chalisque Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Mallchad a) having to grab the mouse is annoying; b) not being able to grep the directory listing; c) not being able to find ... | grep to recursively search for files matching a regex; d) not being able to automate common tasks via functions and scripts.
      Example: (filesrx is a power rename I wrote in Python)
      filesrx ' \[.{11}\]' '' *
      will take all files with a youtube id at the end (i.e. yt-dlp), and remove that id from the filename.
      filesrx '^' 'Boing_' *flibble*
      will take all files with names containing 'flibble' and prepend 'Boing_' to them.
      The thing then, is that once you have bash and python at your disposal, you can easily hack new features into your power rename, or write a separate script. Sometimes doing mass renames, I'll write a specific python script (e.g. renaming video files to include the vertical resolution and duration in the filename, which you get via ffprobe).
      Then being able to make a text file containing a list of files which I can then manually edit to give a list of files I want to do something with (e.g. put into an archive).
      GUI file management sucks.

    • @Mallchad
      @Mallchad Před 8 měsíci

      @@Chalisque I don't really agree that GUI file management suck, having a GUI is objectively better in theory because of the flexability to provide more info and input options to the user.
      But a lot of the options actually provided (gnome files, Windows Explorer, Sinder, Finder) are straight garbage where they often fail to even let you navigate the filesystem properly. All 3 hid the absolute path editor by default which is beyond annoying -.-
      Also Really resonate with the grep thing, Windows and gnome file searching is so bad I just don't use it because it doesn't save me any time
      Also there is no reason you couldn't provide scripting functionality in a GUI app. Dolphin for example just gives you a popup terminal to play with. Side note. I _really_ don't like python or bash scripting, they are both horrendeous to maintain and bash doesn't even attempt type safety which basically just becomes a built-in bug generator

    • @Chalisque
      @Chalisque Před 8 měsíci

      @@Mallchad The thing with adding such functionality to a GUI app is that you're talking of a multi 1000-line project to replicate what can be done in under 10 lines of bash or under 100 lines of Python. Then making it efficiently controllable by keyboard is something that basically never happens. The main thing that a GUI file manager can do that a command line can't, and this is my major use for them, is dragging a file into an application. Naturally I have the one-letter function o defined to open a folder. (o on its own opens the current directory in the relevant file manager).
      I do wish for better integration between the two: select files in explorer, and have them bound to a variable in a shell session.
      But overall I rarely use the GUI file managers for file management since nearly everything just takes significantly longer. And the mouse is so limited: it has basically two buttons where the keyboard has dozens and can be used with both hands.

  • @rons96
    @rons96 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Finally, windows was creeping me as a programmer that see another programmer using Windows for developing. I don't know why pop os, since it's a bit raw system, like ubuntu. I picked mint not because similarity to windows, but because sometimes I reinstall the system and have no patience to everytime set some shortcuts that are builtin in mint.

    • @Chalisque
      @Chalisque Před 8 měsíci +1

      Something I did eventually was to take notes on exactly what I do to a fresh install, rather than from memory. It would not be hard, in principle, to take an image of a running system as a tarball, plus have a small script which sorts out grub and the boot partition. But doing that is beyond me as I don't understand the boot process well enough. I will, at some point, experiment by just tarring up /home, /usr/jda (where I stick all my personal scripts), and grepping /var/log/apt to get a list of installed packages. What I should do as an experiment is to put /etc in git (rather, take a copy of it, and make that a git repo) so that I can git diff the /etc on a fully setup system, and the original to see what changes I've made. But I don't install enough times to justify the time and effort.

    • @rons96
      @rons96 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Chalisque all this is beyond me, that's why I use mint lol. I already think about create a custom iso to install all i need automatically, but, too hard for me.

    • @Chalisque
      @Chalisque Před 8 měsíci

      @@rons96It's not a custom iso. Just a single tarball, and two scripts. One script is run as a user, the other script as root. That does everything given a fresh install of Kubuntu. I've done this before (I think for Ubuntu 18.04.)

    • @rons96
      @rons96 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Chalisque interesting thing

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před 8 měsíci

      @@Chalisque If you want that level of control over the state of your system, you might enjoy GNU Guix quite a bit

  • @klausperner8458
    @klausperner8458 Před 8 měsíci

    i´m a Linux user for 30 years now ! at the moment i use Debian 12 as my daily driver. i never missed Windows....

  • @ebg100
    @ebg100 Před 8 měsíci

    I've heard most MS office products and Adobe products can used online now. I don't personally use any of them, but just a thought for those that can't live without them.

  • @openm1ndead
    @openm1ndead Před 8 měsíci

    Interesting what would you say when you try KDE Plasma instead of Gnome-like desktop environment...

  • @wyfyj
    @wyfyj Před 7 měsíci

    This was me, March of 2022. And now I run Gentoo. And Pop still, but I daily drive Gentoo.

  • @gorrumKnight
    @gorrumKnight Před 7 měsíci

    I use CachyOS (Arch based) with hyprland. I ended up going to Linux for one simple reason: Spite. I do system repair for a living and dealing with Microsoft's shenanigans finally pissed me off enough that I have become our shop's Linux tech.
    I do some LLM stuff locally and a healthy amount of gaming. And best of all, I have full control over my system's updates. It's made data recovery work better too given the ability to touch any file system.

  • @AbdelhakOussaid
    @AbdelhakOussaid Před 8 měsíci

    I've been a Linux user for years now, and I didn't know that the middle mouse button is used to paste ! lol

  • @cryptocurrents946
    @cryptocurrents946 Před 8 měsíci +2

    BTW, in Document Viewer (PDF) you can use the Vim navigation keys, including "gg" and "G", as well as "Ctrl+U" and Ctrl+D"

  • @BWGPEI
    @BWGPEI Před 7 měsíci +1

    That dual-boot setup is one of the things that I also do. At 70+ I have some seriously old games that will only run under MS Windows. But our daily driver is Linux MInt / Cinnamon and we're really happy with that. Different reasons but similar result in that we own our systems and no longer answer to Microsoft.

    • @chimagamer4157
      @chimagamer4157 Před 7 měsíci

      ever tried using wine to run those games, in many cases they might run better under linux then windows, especially if fine tuned.

    • @BWGPEI
      @BWGPEI Před 7 měsíci

      I have a very spotty experience with Wine. Some times works once & sometimes not at all.@@chimagamer4157

  • @matiasgatti1987
    @matiasgatti1987 Před 8 měsíci

    Being using linux for last 10 years. Is the best. I use Ubuntu cause i used to it. Y love the stabilty my os is installed since years ago and works same like the first time. The thing I love the most is than i have contol of my computer, I power it on and can use it always. No problems, no updates, Computer respond to me. And the best of all: for free. No cracks, no piracy warnings.Love it.

  • @rezapanahi553
    @rezapanahi553 Před 7 měsíci

    What is the gnome extension that shows OBS icon on the top bar?

  • @Jack_Warner
    @Jack_Warner Před 8 měsíci

    I have 3 operating systems on my desktop pc. Windows 10, Linux Mint and Linux Feren. A word of warning when you dual boot with Windows. You need to disable OS Prober in linux and update the grub file when you've done it. You need to boot into your OS using the bios boot menu, not the Linux Grub, otherwise it will overwrite your Windows boot menu and you won't be able to get back Windows unless you have the original installation disk / usb for windows.

    • @ligaman1
      @ligaman1 Před 7 měsíci

      Hey Jack - Feren is a very unique choice - how do you find it ?

  • @parthokr
    @parthokr Před 8 měsíci

    tried quite a lot of distros
    almost anything debian based
    then i found myself really into arch
    really love pacman and AUR is just a cornucopia of anything you name it
    EDIT: i use arch btw

  • @UncleDavid
    @UncleDavid Před 8 měsíci

    Can you integrate an LLM into the source code of a Linux system and give it agency with cli tools?

  • @AndrewBlucher
    @AndrewBlucher Před 8 měsíci +2

    Privacy ... M$ tries to force us to login to their servers. That's a game breaker for me.

  • @sahebbeshra7659
    @sahebbeshra7659 Před 8 měsíci

    same I have switched to mint 3 months ago