7 areas where Linux is JUST BETTER than Windows

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2024
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    #linux #windows
    00:00 Intro
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    01:28 Software Management
    03:01 Monetary Cost
    04:56 Open Source and Free Software
    06:24 Performance
    07:56 Configuration & Customization
    09:44 Privacy and Security
    11:31 Command Line
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    The first area is software management. You can install anything in one click, update the system, and the apps in the same place. Imagine having to update each app from its own GUI instead of having a central update place. Imagine having to avoid malicious installers distributed by websites. Imagine being forced to update your system instead of picking when to do it.
    Second area is monetary cost. Linux, in 99% of cases is free of charge. Windows is never free.
    Another big win for Linux is its open source and free software nature. It means people can fix stuff quickly. If an issue is detected, and it's a big problem, it will be fixed in days, sometimes in hours.
    And this also means that if you know how to code, you can also try and fix the issue yourself.
    Open Source, and to a higher degree, free software is a demonstrably better option than full proprietary apps.
    • Linux gaming is better...
    Now, let's talk performance. Because Linux can be way more efficient than Windows.
    In terms of disk size, a clean windows install will use 20 Gigs. Most Linux distros use about 4 or 5 gigs, sometimes up to 10. And some lightweight distros just use upwards of 20 megabytes, like Tinycore.
    Linux can also run on super old computers, without making them unusable.
    Linux is also vastly more customizable and offers more choice than Windows
    Why is choice important? Because we all use our computers to do different things, and having a one size fits all desktop will never serve everyone perfectly. You end up with something that kinda works for everyone, but is perfect for no one.
    On Linux, you can choose from an enormous number of distributions, and desktop environments, and tools to make sure that your experience is the one that works the best for you.
    Linux is also a more private system. When you install windows, you have to go through about 10 screens of configuration, most of which will ask you if you want to have your data collected, and most of them only letting you limit the data that is collected, not completely turn it off.
    WIndows also requires a microsoft account, or at least hides the option to do away with that so that 99% of people will create that account.
    None of that on Linux.
    As per security, it's not an inherent advantage of Linux, but it IS targeted far less than Windows by malicious actors.
    Ok, last area where Linux is just better, is the terminal. The Linux command line interface is just insanely powerful, bash scripting is super easy, and can automate tons of stuff for you, and there are tons of tools you can add to the default utilities to make the terminal even easier to use, and more powerful.
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @TheLinuxEXP
    @TheLinuxEXP  Před rokem +54

    Make sure your Python applications stay relevant for longer: bit.ly/3CyfKnL

    • @Pridetoons
      @Pridetoons Před rokem +1

      Your Video gives me Nerdgasms! Eh Linux! Yes Linux!!! Also thank you for telling me about Tuxedo I needed a Linux Laptop!

    • @None17555
      @None17555 Před rokem

      Where is that Software Repositories settings window in ElementaryOS?

    • @apina2
      @apina2 Před rokem

      My scripts are fine, thanks for the concern tho

    • @nullmod1
      @nullmod1 Před rokem

    • @nullmod1
      @nullmod1 Před rokem

      hunting exes🤣😂

  • @DocKingliveshere
    @DocKingliveshere Před rokem +93

    I love when people tell me that Linux is hard for an "older" persons to learn and use. I've been using versions of Mint for the past 6 year or so and now I'm 70. I also like setting up Raspberry Pi's for my "older" friends that can't really afford a desktop.

    • @pilchard2000
      @pilchard2000 Před rokem +14

      Don't to forget to remind the Youngsters that our generation started software development , the PC industry and Solid state Electronics to name a few .

    • @stabokbose
      @stabokbose Před rokem +3

      Huge respect for you sir ❣️

  • @piruk96
    @piruk96 Před rokem +175

    The most underrated part of your channel is the chapter/section inclusion. Never fails and is so helpful to skip or rewind a part of a video. Thanks Nick

    • @wumwum42
      @wumwum42 Před rokem +3

      Luckily most youtubers use them nowadays

    • @TheKodeToad
      @TheKodeToad Před rokem +7

      Good for skipping the sponsor.

    • @bumpsy
      @bumpsy Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@wumwum42 many don't unfortunately

  • @randomname2437
    @randomname2437 Před rokem +276

    Mascot is number 1 reason

  • @joshuapettus6973
    @joshuapettus6973 Před rokem +487

    You forgot the biggest area where linux is better. It takes me a few minutes to update my linux box and really means all the software that is installed through it, not just the operating system. And, so long as it's not a kernal update often I do not need to reboot. Windows generally takes quite a bit longer to install a cumulative package update and needs to reboot to update anything operating system related. And then the reboot and install takes quite a lot of time! I spend a lot less time keeping my system up to date in linux than windows.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Před rokem +72

      True, there's that as well!

    • @flinch622
      @flinch622 Před rokem +25

      So true. And as a bonus, you don't have to reboot to reboot!

    • @robonator2945
      @robonator2945 Před rokem +16

      this. In an arch based distro like endeavourOS, I can literally just start an entire operating system update, keep using my computer, and even if I completely update core packages, restarting is still pretty optional, I can just restart whenever I want, and even with full disk encryption and minimal hardware acceleration, it still boots in under a minute, and I can get everything open and running within a minute and a half. My internet connects instantly even over wifi, it doesnt take 5 seconds before actually registering a hardline, my VPN connects instantly, my browsers restore perfectly, etc. The only thing I genuinely missed from windows was task manager's ability to kill programs on demand without letting them shut down (particularly useful for if I want to be able to restore my browser session but don't want to keep my browser open) but then I found KSysGuard which does exactly that, so after quickly adding a shortcut so that Ctrl-Shift-Esc opens it like the command opens task manager in windows, it's just a flat better experience.

    • @JanVerny
      @JanVerny Před rokem +5

      I just cannot understand the obsession with stuff around updates. Just about yesterday I spent an hour updating my raspbian install (400 packages). I also had to lookup guide on how to do that, as dist-upgrade won't actually pull new packages. I also always have to reboot my linux machines if I actually want the updates to do something. So I wouldn't really say there's much difference. Windows does auto update if outside active hours, which I can understand may be uncomfortable for a rendering machine, but in general for a normal user who turns off their computer every day isn't much of a problem.

    • @MiningForPies
      @MiningForPies Před rokem +5

      @@JanVerny yeah but people argue arch is more stable than windows, while keeping a straight face 😑

  • @marufbepary100
    @marufbepary100 Před rokem +167

    I consider myself a simple Linux user nowadays. If you don't tinker with it, then there is no troubleshooting that needs to be done. My dad who doesn't understand much about computers has been using Fedora for years now and never run into any issues.

    • @alexatkin
      @alexatkin Před rokem +15

      I moved my mum to Fedora a few years back, the only real problem shes having is migrating away from Paintshop Pro 7, which inherently is glitchy due to being very old software running under WINE.

    • @TheExileFox
      @TheExileFox Před rokem +8

      "no troubleshooting required"
      Yeah, you just wait for nvidia to completely brick the GUI for you, leaving you stranded in TTY until you do said troubleshooting

    • @Fluffy_Eevee
      @Fluffy_Eevee Před rokem +3

      @@TheExileFox amd however doesnt have that problem but being an nvidia user i know your pain well, or accidently installing drivers for the wrong kernal and then your system cant boot

    • @kurushimee
      @kurushimee Před rokem +1

      @@alexatkin kinda same here, my dad installed Fedora on my mom's very very old laptop and it's just working for her

    • @FADHsquared
      @FADHsquared Před rokem +2

      I'm on this opinion. Linux is now very usable for normal users (unless you have a CPU thread always at 100% that doesn't happen on windows, I'm able to troubleshoot that but how are you going to expect a normal user to fix this?), very usable for professional users, BUT for the people inbetween them (no man's land) like me? It's very frustrating.

  • @HeroRareheart
    @HeroRareheart Před rokem +60

    Before I watch this I'm calling it now; printing will be on here. Printing on Linux has always been plug and play for me and completely hassle free compared to Windows.
    Edit: Damn printing wasn't included.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Před rokem +30

      It's not, but it should have been!

    • @dylon4906
      @dylon4906 Před rokem +4

      printing is one thing that I find odd that linux actually does better but I'm not complaining at all lol

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 Před rokem

      @@TheLinuxEXP A part 2 may be?

    • @jonathankolberg2706
      @jonathankolberg2706 Před rokem +4

      @@dylon4906 Most likely because it uses cups, which is also used in MacOs (not sure if it still is used)

    • @svgaming234
      @svgaming234 Před rokem +3

      Unfortunately I had a different experience. My HP printer works really poorly with Arch. Not saying that is the open source community's fault. Never buying a HP printer again.

  • @tonigon5767
    @tonigon5767 Před rokem +112

    It took me four hours yesterday to figure out that Microsoft left a deprecated registry entry in the registry which prevented Microsoft edge from loading. The joys of IT. In the same four hours i could have installed Linux on at least six machines and edge would have run on all of them...

    • @JohnEusebioToronto
      @JohnEusebioToronto Před rokem +9

      Honestly, I like edge. I know it's horrible for privacy, but it runs really well and some of the unique features in it are solid. If I ever decide to fully migrate to Linux again, I might still use edge.
      Maybe. I do love Mozilla and think Firefox is crucial to an open and accessible web.

    • @billmiller4800
      @billmiller4800 Před rokem +8

      Don't you love the "dead fish" problem in windows registry? (Dead fish = if I fill your car with dead fish and then you take it out; it will still smell like dead fish. This is like most windows installers leaving behind crap when uninstalling)

    • @raandomplayer8589
      @raandomplayer8589 Před rokem +3

      Krashes.
      Then grub.
      Then glibc.
      Then dependencies.

    • @kurushimee
      @kurushimee Před rokem +1

      @@JohnEusebioToronto same here, I run Fedora and still use Edge due to it's features, the vertical tabs are just great, you can remove titlebar with them since the tabs are on the left now, and you can make them collapsible into a thin bar!
      My second choice would be Firefox yeah, because it's the second browser which has vertical tabs but they're kinda less convenient as they're a separate tree style tabs extension and can't be collapsed

    • @sheldon6786
      @sheldon6786 Před rokem +1

      @@JohnEusebioToronto What is the unique features as I want to give it a try thanks in advance

  • @bishopofeternity48
    @bishopofeternity48 Před rokem +45

    Best thing about Linux? It's not malware masquerading as an OS.

  • @L7vanmatre
    @L7vanmatre Před rokem +84

    You don't really "pirate" Windows. Microsoft really does let you install for free, at the cost of a watermark and limited visual customization options. Win11 is worse in this respect, since apparently there's some sort of non-allowance regarding sound switching in its free version, so that's why I personally want to move to Linux.

    • @greatcanadianmoose3965
      @greatcanadianmoose3965 Před rokem +5

      Let me know if you have any questions in switching to linux! I'm always down to help!

    • @louistournas120
      @louistournas120 Před rokem +7

      Windows was a superb OS. And then, Win 8 happened and it started to slowly go downhill with Win 10 and 11.
      So, in Jan 2020, I switched to Linux since MS pulled the plug on Win 7 which also means motherboard and chipset makers won't maker drivers for Win 7.
      I moved my gaming to Linux.
      I moved my mini open source projects to Linux (Thank you Qt Creator).
      Soon, I am going to contribute to some open source projects just to give a big finger to MS and their tactics.

    • @karvie
      @karvie Před rokem +3

      I've only been using Linux for the better part of a year, so if you have any questions and want a beginner's perspective I'll be glad to help

    • @DarkGladiator
      @DarkGladiator Před rokem +1

      @@greatcanadianmoose3965 can a beginner install LFS? If so in the handbook it shows that its expected that you don't turn it off until completed, if I shut it down and turn it on the next day what should I do

    • @karasunome6401
      @karasunome6401 Před rokem

      you're a noob if you don't know how to activate original windows for free

  • @8bitbunny_VR
    @8bitbunny_VR Před rokem +23

    there's no single os that suits everyone. theres so much nuance to things, i run several linux distros on different base implementations like arch or debian as example, i run some windows ones too, offline win7 or even xp machines, some are virtualized, some run native, it all depends on my usecase and what solution fits best for it.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Před rokem +11

      Exactly! People need options for every device to make sure they fit their workload as well as they can

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 Před rokem +2

      @@TheLinuxEXP Not sure if you've done this before but are you up for challenge?
      Dare to make a windows experiment and find 7 areas where windows is better than linux?
      Also glad you reassured you're not a libre fanatic who can't see past linux.

    • @therealb888
      @therealb888 Před rokem +2

      In the same boat, deciding between arch or fedora or suse or any ubuntu/ubuntu based distros.
      I know these are vastly different distros but I want to weigh in all options.
      Main criteria are virtualization, security, sw updates.
      Usecase: software engineering, gaming, network/IT work, etc.

    • @krazymeanie
      @krazymeanie Před rokem +2

      @@therealb888 Gaming has to be number one on Windows. linux is getting there but i don't think it will ever compare to windows

    • @jan-lukas
      @jan-lukas Před rokem +1

      @@krazymeanie it's unlikely, but it might happen, because especially the lower end handheld consoles are so much faster with Linux than with windows (steam deck for example)

  • @vladimir_k_bestplayerna1217

    When I bought my Dell Precision laptop last year, I didn't even need for it to come with a disk since I was going to put in my own. But since I had to choose a disk and an operating system, I chose the smallest disk with Ubuntu since the same disk with Windows 10 cost about 100USD more. lol

    • @Luc484
      @Luc484 Před rokem +1

      License was 150 for a Xeon CPU.

  • @kote315
    @kote315 Před rokem +14

    Yes, I really enjoy using package managers. Heck, I love the fact that after installing the OS, I can install almost all the necessary software with one command and just as easily update everything. Managing installed software on Windows is a nightmare. Each piece of software must have its own installer, its own uninstaller, and its own update method. Many programs use their own update services for this. As a result, we have a dozen constantly working services for updating various programs - this is just nonsense!
    However, the uniform package format is a strength of Windows. I don't care what edition of Windows I'm using, I just download the exe and everything works. Most often it works without the Internet, which is also sometimes useful. It is also easier to transfer an installed application from one computer to another in Windows, since all of its files are usually located in the same folder. The closest thing I know that solves similar problems is AppImage.

    • @rfvtgbzhn
      @rfvtgbzhn Před 7 měsíci

      I wouldn't care that any application has it's own installer and uninstaller if it just worked. However some are painfully slow and many uninstallers don't remove everything.
      About the internet stuff: yes, i noticed that, in Windows you can usually just install it from the .exe file even if you are offline (except games), but even Linux software that is ported for Windows often requires to download additional stuff. today they could just pack more stuff into the packages (or all of it), hard disks have Terabytes now and if you have internet, it usually is fast and unlimited, so I think the way Linux handles this is kind of outdated. there is no need anymore to keep packages small.

  • @Blueeeeeee
    @Blueeeeeee Před rokem +6

    About security - Linux is also more secure because you stick to the repos instead of installing apps from random websites, and fewer vulnerabilities are found in the kernel compared to Windows.
    The user-facing stuff (x11, etc) has been less secure compared to recent versions of Windows, but this is also changing with the advent of Flatpak and Wayland.

  • @xtrct7303
    @xtrct7303 Před rokem +9

    Another Linux pros : reducing e-waste and save you on hardware. I still remember my teenager years using Crunchbang (RIP) on a used shitty Intel Atom netbook, because new and shiny laptop are expensive in a third world country. Things are better now for me economically but I still reminisce those day.

  • @Abishek_Muthian
    @Abishek_Muthian Před rokem +8

    I agree with all the 7 points. I think Steam chose Linux because when MS tried to kill them, They had no choice but to invest in alternate OS and by choosing Linux they saved millions in R&D; It's great that they contributed back via Proton.

  • @Mik3l24
    @Mik3l24 Před rokem +8

    Another pro for Linux - its virtual desktops are unmatched, especially on GNOME. It is so fluid there to adapt your workspace to whatever you need to do.

    • @elecbaguette
      @elecbaguette Před rokem

      Love the super key effect, so useful and pretty at the same time

  • @owlenderg
    @owlenderg Před rokem +10

    Linux has the "Edge"
    Insert Microsoft Edge joke
    ....wait, it's on Linux too!

  • @HamishMcIntyreBhatty
    @HamishMcIntyreBhatty Před rokem +39

    Softpedia is actually a decent site in my experience, like CNET, but yeah you're not wrong about the hunting around the internet for EXEs. The best thing for me when I first tried Linux was getting away from all the dodgy freeware and shareware

    • @TorsionTestis
      @TorsionTestis Před rokem +1

      why not use winget or choco for package manager on windows

    • @BenjaminWheeler0510
      @BenjaminWheeler0510 Před rokem +4

      @@TorsionTestis not everything is on those. I had to run chocolatey AND scoop to get all my stuff via package managers. Usually it’s all in one spot on Linux

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před rokem +6

      So may of these sites have dodgy ads that look like a big green download button. Plenty of scope to screw it up. I gave my woman a fresh laptop but I put Mint on it. She complains that the spreadsheet is not Excel and she complains when ever she can. Usually the problem is not related to Linux. I forget which program she needed and was hunting for it using Google. I directed her to look in the Software Manager and a few minutes later she was happily using the program she had selected. When people don't realise how easy it can be on Linux they are apt to screw it up, like Linus Tech Tips did.

    • @richardmeyer418
      @richardmeyer418 Před rokem

      @@wayland7150 Nicely stated - totally true.

    • @HamishMcIntyreBhatty
      @HamishMcIntyreBhatty Před rokem

      @@TorsionTestis I probably would, only I don't use Windows enough to warrant bothering to set it up. I basically only use Windows in test VMs, since the last 2 years, I think.

  • @somethingelse401
    @somethingelse401 Před rokem +12

    In Windows you must use the command line for terminal or powershell to do a lot of power user thanks the same can be said about Linux. I really find the terminal in the null issue at this point because, honestly most desktop distributions (Ubuntu based, fedora) generally has a gui available for most day-to-day tasks and settings

    • @RenderingUser
      @RenderingUser Před rokem +2

      First, you talk about power users and then claim that terminal is a non issue cause general day to day tasks have ui
      sure day to day tasks have ui but not for power users
      oh and one more thing about the terminal, on Linux, the terminals are more refined

    • @n_kliesow
      @n_kliesow Před rokem +1

      At some point you will need to use the shell in linux - but most times you can google and find a solution thats valid and copy it into your shell...

  • @sifatullah7568
    @sifatullah7568 Před rokem +22

    I use both Windows and Linux and I love both in particular aspects. But I can't disagree with a single word of this video, it covers both the upside and downsides of Linux, that too in a practical and unique way. Very easy and fun to watch & understand. Love your video quality as always.

  • @lgsg4
    @lgsg4 Před rokem +5

    I'm really curious of Linux, but i'm an absolute Windows user, since i was a child.
    But i really enjoy watching your channel and DioLinux's... And I LOVE the customization part in Linux, and the freedom you have to work the way you want.
    I've distro hopped quite a bit hahah, but i'm a graphic designer as well and i need the Adobe Software. (And i'm prone to use Gimp and Inkscape, but i need some of Adobe specific features)
    So i really WANT to use it (Linux, as my main OS), but i kind of can't without rebooting every time, is there a solution for this?

    • @gerrykola
      @gerrykola Před rokem +4

      You could use any Linux desktop & run virtualized Adobe apps that open transparently (they are running inside the Windows VM but graphically mapped to your Linux desktop compositor ) project is called Winapps. Nick even made a video about it:
      czcams.com/video/fzzf2QnyPgY/video.html
      If you give the VM control over PCI to a GPU & enough CPU cores on the host you could even run Winblow$ exclusive AAA titles & edit video from that VM. Like it was just another Application / Workspace inside your Linux OS. Tried & tested under KDE & GNOME X11

  • @kurushimee
    @kurushimee Před rokem +7

    The actually biggest thing about linux vs windows: it just WORKS! It won't rot, you can have a single linux installation going on for like 10 years without reinstalling and it will still perform just as good as it did back then, unlike how in windows you need to reinstall every several months because things start to actually destroy themselves. Windows 11 is better at it than 10 though, but still after just 3 months some parts of windows just stopped working whatsoever.
    This is a very crucial thing for an OS, I really really don't want my machine to stop working randomly or perform very poorly with time.
    Even though I'm a game developer, I choose linux because unity is available for it and is working good enough.

    • @conorturton
      @conorturton Před rokem

      It just works.....unless you've a Nvidia graphics card. Or have a HP Multifunction Printer Scanner and would like to get the scanner working at which point even though HPLIP installs it you have to go hunting for an obscure plugin mentioned in one single post in a HP support forum. As for a single Linux installation going on for 10 years without re-installing the Mars Express probe would like a word. It's functioned for 19 years on a Windows 98 install.

    • @kurushimee
      @kurushimee Před rokem +1

      @@conorturton I have nvidia and hp printer scanner lol

  • @Finkelfunk
    @Finkelfunk Před rokem +8

    As far as backwards compatibility and old systems go: I recently found a Notebook buried in my closet back from around 2010. It was running Windows XP, has 1GB of DDR2 and has an i386 architecture with an Atom N280, made in 2009.
    I was able to install FreeBSD and it works like a charm for watching movies on it.
    Now try installing Win 10 on it, let alone 7.

    • @jonnywishbone4805
      @jonnywishbone4805 Před rokem +1

      I’d rather run XP

    • @Finkelfunk
      @Finkelfunk Před rokem +3

      @@jonnywishbone4805 So for web browsing you want to install a 20 year old operating system that has lost all support 8 years ago?
      I mean, you do you, but you sure as hell don't make it difficult for attackers to gain access to your computer.

    • @jonnywishbone4805
      @jonnywishbone4805 Před rokem +1

      @@Finkelfunk overhyped threat- I run several XP machines with no issue

    • @Finkelfunk
      @Finkelfunk Před rokem

      @@jonnywishbone4805 Yeah, the entire fucking point is that you don't realize there is an issue with them LMFAO
      Needless to say "running an XP machine" and "using an XP machine to surf the web" are two entirely different things.
      But what the fuck do I know about Cybersecurity, I literally only set up the governments IT structure for a living so who cares haha

    • @jonnywishbone4805
      @jonnywishbone4805 Před rokem +1

      @@Finkelfunk X to doubt

  • @logicalfundy
    @logicalfundy Před rokem +5

    Fixing bugs quickly in open source projects is a bit of a mixed bag - the flatpack variant of Syncthing GTK has an ongoing icon issue, which means I have an invisible icon on my Steam Deck that will probably be around for a while. Honestly - how quickly bugs get fixed seems to depend more on the passion of the developer(s), rather than the philosophy behind whatever EULA they choose.

    • @Arutemu64
      @Arutemu64 Před rokem +1

      Yes, there are bugs in open source project that exist for years literally. There might be a lot of devs ready to fix bugs, but not many gonna take a responsibility over something critical.

  • @ceremus
    @ceremus Před rokem +9

    Could just be because I've worked with it more for my job, but IMO one of things MS really does deserve credit for on the CLI front is Powershell. The guy who built it was brought onto the project because MS *finally* realized what few tools they had for scripting and automation were poorly implemented at best and usually a PITA to work with. Originally his intent was to leverage a bash shell like cygwin, but for whatever reason it wasn't best suited for the project with its POSIX roots.
    So starting from scratch he and his team made a shell intending to take the best aspects of bash and evolve it to the next level by making its inputs/outputs object oriented instead of text-based (as is still the case with bash today). The power of having any command automatically accept the output from another command over the pipeline so long as its inputs match the property type really can't be understated. Generally you really don't want to run "Get-Process | Stop-Process" on anyone's live system (if you're lucky the command will kill the Powershell instance before hitting a critical process which bluescreens the system) , but the fact that it works makes it an incredibly powerful tool.
    To say nothing of the fact that Powershell isn't just an updated CLI on the Windows desktop, but has been leveraged as the official and professional way to administrate practically EVERY enterprise product Microsoft supports. If you learn the Verb-Noun syntax for how to manipulate your local files, or manage processes, or any number of mundane tasks on your local machine, you can translate that knowledge directly toward Active Directory, Azure, Exchange, and numerous other system administrations. They've gone all-in on this command line to the point where the install for Windows Server does not default to the GUI. You can choose to install the Desktop Experience, but the Core Server install is command-line only as Powershell.

  • @weeblewonder
    @weeblewonder Před rokem +1

    Very entertaining, great editing and thanks for chaptering 👍

  • @johansvid
    @johansvid Před rokem +1

    If you want to try out several linux distros, how do you go about it? Virtual machines on your Mac or Windows desktop or laptop? What are the minimum system requirements for cpu and RAM?
    Or do use DAAS, Desktop As A Service? Spin up a virtual machine at a cloud provider like Amazon, Linode, Hetzner, ... and connect to it with VNC? What are the system requirements here?
    Or can you use a Raspberry Pi (version 4 with 8 GB RAM)? I know Ubuntu has a version for it, but do other popular distros have one?

    • @lesliesavage9229
      @lesliesavage9229 Před rokem +1

      Download the ISO of a Linux distro and put it on a USB drive or a DVD, and boot to it. You can try each one out without making any changes to your system, as long as you don't install it.

  • @jacobschweiger5897
    @jacobschweiger5897 Před rokem +3

    I dual boot windows and Linux mint. I’ve recently got trackpad gestures working on Linux mint. The main thing stopping me from using it as my main os is that the sound sounds worse than on windows. At least it does on my speakers, haven’t tried it with headphones or AirPods yet.

  • @theinquisitor18
    @theinquisitor18 Před rokem +3

    While I'm in my Master's program in Data Analytics, I've been using Windows to ensure the best compatibility. I use WSL2 to run my Python scripts. Once I'm finished with my schooling, I plan to make a complete transition to Linux.

  • @NortherlyUser85
    @NortherlyUser85 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I got Linux Mint cinnamon recently on an old PC. How far will the GUI take me? When will I absolutely have to use the terminal for the first time? I have been looking at the terminal a bit but haven't needed to use it much.

  • @JF743
    @JF743 Před rokem +3

    Windows can be a bigger time sink than Linux at times. Recently on my loaned work laptop, I've had an issue where Active Directory's search feature crashed the UI app, I must've lost a work day's worth of time these past 2 weeks trying to fix it. What seems to have fixed it after everything else failed was to grab an exe from Intel's website to update the iGPU driver. Oh did I mention the Display section of the Settings app started doing the same, magically fixed itself and broke again at the exact same time and that's how I managed to fix it? Yeah, Windows is definitely easier to troubleshoot. Now I gotta make sure it doesn't "update" back to the old version.

  • @duckrinium
    @duckrinium Před rokem +4

    Nick is secretly Cr1tikal, wearing white shirt all the time too

  • @dantahoua
    @dantahoua Před rokem +7

    I just discovered LXLE for my old laptop and I really love it! My old laptop is now very usable. 😊

    • @ioneocla6577
      @ioneocla6577 Před rokem

      You mean lxde ?

    • @darkspongebob11
      @darkspongebob11 Před rokem

      @@ioneocla6577 lxle is a bit different to lxde even tho it sounds very simalir
      personally i didnt like it and prefer lxde since the way it functions dosent make to much sense and kinda makes things harder for me

  • @butaconstantin6661
    @butaconstantin6661 Před rokem +1

    Brilliant video but I will like to request a video about control center apps in Linux. Something that controls the fan speeds, the rgb lighting on keyboard and rgb logos . Cheers

  • @stephenwilson0386
    @stephenwilson0386 Před rokem +1

    Off-topic question, but I'm struggling to decide between Mailspring and the new Thunderbird (102). I like how clean Mailspring is as well as some of the features, but it tends to hang when deleting or trying to fetch new mail from the server if it's been running for a little while. I've used Thunderbird a lot in the past and it was passable, but haven't tried the newest update for more than a couple of days.

    • @AM-yk5yd
      @AM-yk5yd Před rokem +1

      IME thunderbird also hangs when it tries to fetch new mail from IMAP server to mailbox which has not been cleaned since 2019.

  • @theoriginalbingchilling
    @theoriginalbingchilling Před rokem +8

    You are the one that made me switch to linux and it's just better.
    I love the customizability of linux and also the ease of software install.
    And of course if I don't like a distro or desktop environment I can just try out another one.
    And I think everyone loves the command line:)

  • @gene081976
    @gene081976 Před rokem +4

    My biggest criticism for Linux distros as a mainstream or productivity desktop is consistency. Different distro goes their own way in UI/UX, and UI/UX can change drastically from one release to another (once the distro manages decides it’s no longer interested in a desktop manager and wants to adopt a brand new one).
    Package Managers in Linux is a big exaggerated. Not every app you can find are available on package managers and plenty you may need to download the source code and build from scratch. Also package manager files can also be risky. In my opinion it can only be alleviated if the distro has an native App Store and vets every single packages uploaded to its App Store.
    But if you’re downloading a package file from a 3rd party site, you’re still ending up with the same risk as you do on Windows. In comparison, Windows has their marketplace and Mac has their App Store.
    I personally would give up all these need to be bleeding edge, for consistency. Especially consistency with desktop. That is what I don’t mind iOS looking relatively the same release to release, changing just a few things which let me to adjust. A huge change in UI/UX could throw you off and impact productivity and making it difficult to develop “muscle memory” for using the UX.
    A commercial release of Linux design to tackle mainstream would need to really consider sticking to a UX/UI design language from release to release and making only small changes -- the compromise is though the UI/UX language may not change from release to release, give power users options to customize their desktop, but hide these or put them away for mainstream users.

    • @tylerdean980
      @tylerdean980 Před rokem +2

      There are plenty of desktop environments that never change UI for sake of consistency, XFCE, Cinnamnon, MATE. Basically any standalone window manager.

    • @gene081976
      @gene081976 Před rokem +2

      @@tylerdean980 Not windows desktop manager, default out of the box desktop for Linux Distros. In the earlier days of RedHat, then Fedora, they can’t seem to decide which desktop environment to “IT” from distro to distro, swing between Gnome and KDE. Some installs allow the user to pick one. This is all fine and all, but it’s not going to work for the mainstream.
      Recently, some distro has tried to put some consistency, ElementaryOS is one nicer ones I tried. But it’s too young and doesn’t provide everything I would want for a mainstream desktop.
      As much as some power-users hate Windows and MacOS, they each use 10+ years of consistency where some of us can blind-folded walk some else through Windows navigation over the phone. It’s a chore to walk a mainstream person through Linux over the phone without screen share. There’s too many Linux distro out there, each differing from each other a little to a lot. It’s hard to settle on any one to become a mainstream O/S.
      I think a commercial company (maybe Valve/Steam OS could be it), would need to adopt Linux and create a commercial Linux and put a team behind UX/UI engineering and Experience engineering to make it work while working to get wide adoption from commercial developers, like what Apple did with FreeBSD and making Darwin and macOS.

    • @tylerdean980
      @tylerdean980 Před rokem +1

      @@gene081976 The UI only changes if you choose a distro that changes things for you. Like Ubuntu going back and forth between GNOME and Unity. But Linux Mint XFCE has looked basically the same since its conception. Some distros prioritize stability and marginal improvements, and other's don't. As for Windows, the UI changes heavily from one version to the next. You have to re learn everything, because they move settings around. But MATE and basically every standalone window manager look the same since forever. Many like IceWM and Openbox have been in development for decades and look basically the same as they did back then. You can pick your poison on Linux and BSD. And, there are already companies that make desktop Linux distros, like opensuse and Ubuntu, or Pop_OS!.

    • @gene081976
      @gene081976 Před rokem +1

      @@tylerdean980 This is the double-edge sword for Linux, too many distro’s too many options and choices. It confuses mainstream users and in my opinion potentially causes too-many-options-paralysis. It becomes an O/S for non-maintreamers who enjoys having all these options to pick from. I understand your statement about standalone Desktops, I’ve used Linux since Slackware and RedHat 1.0, but I guess my point wasn’t clear that I am focusing on why Linux and these distros can’t become a MAINSTREAM OS/Desktop. An advanced Linux user CAN install, setup, tune, and configure their desktop manager and CAN make it look consistent from upgrade to upgrade. A Mainstream user probably CANNOT.
      And I agree, Windows did change from MAJOR release to MAJOR release. But they typically stick with that release for almost a decade. The changes are visual for most part but when you actually dig in and use it, it’s not that drastic. Many elements are the same. Regedit looks the same, Computer manager looks the same, group editor looks the same. The taskbar visual have change, but functionality is basically the same from Windows 95 through Windows 10. Windows 11 was the first that changed a bit by moving things around. It’s actually quite minor after using it.
      IMHO again, I think for any one distro to become a mainstream player, they need a dedicated UI/UX team to establish a competitive design language and stick with it core philosophy while polishing it and updating it without drastically changing it. It has to be an evolution in each update, not a revolution. And give the option to power-users to change their desktop manager and do whatever they want, while also giving an easy way to restore factory-desktop.
      Linux will always be my go to OS for servers, appliances, backend things… just not my client-endpoint desktop of choice. For that, I [currently] choose MacOS.

    • @DavidStruveDesigns
      @DavidStruveDesigns Před rokem

      @@tylerdean980 That's one thing I do appreciate about Linux. If you had say a distro of Fedora installed that, at the time of installation used Cinnamon as it's main DE, and suddenly on the newest update they switched it to GNOME, Linux allows you to simply switch right back over to Cinnamon again. And even better, you get to change the DE _without_ losing all of the new kernel and distro updates that came with that DE change, _and_ you can now continue to update _your_ version of Cinnamon completely separated from the distro manager you chose - you can even use _someone else's version from a totally different distro_ if you so choose. If you loved how Windows 8 looked (some actually liked the fullscreen Start menu) and after updating to Windows 10 found it was now gone, the _only_ way to switch it back is to literally uninstall Windows 10 _manually_ and go through a _manual install_ of a fresh copy of Windows 8. And you lose _all_ of the updates to the base kernel, the DE, the security updates, software updates and potentially lose compatibility between your software and the downgraded OS, nevermind the loss of future security and DE/OS updates when Microsoft decides _for you_ that they're no longer supporting that version.
      It's actually one of my biggest pet peeves of Windows. The fact you used to be able to make _your_ desktop environment look the way _you wanted it_ (yay for XP!) - now we're stuck with whatever Microsoft _thinks_ "looks good" whether we like it or not. With no way to get a lot of those customization options back again. At least, not without risking 3rd party software and having to trust that they don't include anything dodgy hidden away or something that will break the OS. If I wanted to be _told_ how my desktop environment should look - and have it always identical to everyone else's, I would have gone with a Mac (I still don't understand why Mac users seem so happy to have absolutely no control over what their DE looks like with the exception of just the wallpaper). Both Microsoft and Apple have taken the "personal" out of "personal computer". They're not PCs any more unless they're using Linux. And this comes from a Windows user since Win '95 who isn't using Linux.

  • @IrOnCuRtAiN61
    @IrOnCuRtAiN61 Před rokem +1

    I have just upgraded my Ubuntu 20.04.5 (Focal Fossa) to 22.04.1 (Jammy Jellyfish) and everything went smoothly, except most of my image files does not displayed the thumbnails properly and instead a blank thumbnail on affected files.
    I already cleared the cache, but the problem still occurs on numerous file managers I have (Caja, Nautilus, Nemo, PCManFM) on their respective desktop environments.
    Has anybody experienced this issue recently?

  • @bobcollard11
    @bobcollard11 Před rokem +1

    I have both on my desktop. Two computers, same model and both running on the same monitor (one at a time). I share my keyboard through a three-way USB which is switchable, with their own mouse on either side. I'm running Windows 11 22H2 Beta on one BMAX M-3 Plus with 1TB SSD and a 1TB HD backup with 32GB RAM. The Linux is Manjaro Testing on the other BMAX has 512GB SSB and 500GB SSD backup with 16GB RAM. The point is both have things that work for different experiences and different Apps.

  • @dfs-comedy
    @dfs-comedy Před rokem +4

    Also: Ability to be managed remotely. Because everything can be done on the command-line, you don't need a whole remote desktop and it's feasible to manage a remote Linux machine over a pretty low-bandwidth link.

    • @MegaManNeo
      @MegaManNeo Před rokem +1

      openssh-server can actually installed under PSH by now and allows you doing whatever works over the term with Windows when sshing into the machine.
      Including 'chocolate' or 'winget'

    • @dfs-comedy
      @dfs-comedy Před rokem

      @@MegaManNeo Sure, fixing Windows' deficiencies by porting UNIX tools to it is a long-established tradition.

    • @MiningForPies
      @MiningForPies Před rokem +3

      @@dfs-comedy you don’t need UNIX tools. Been provisioning, installing software and updating dozens of servers with power shell for the last 10 years.

    • @MegaManNeo
      @MegaManNeo Před rokem

      @@MiningForPies You don't but if you dunno the PSH syntax yet it is a nice bridge.

    • @MiningForPies
      @MiningForPies Před rokem

      @@MegaManNeo indeed. My point was more about native support for terminal emulation and command line control has been in windows for decades.
      Indeed there are now tonnes of open source modules that make managing things like SQL server a dream over a remote terminal.

  • @jesperjensen293
    @jesperjensen293 Před rokem +3

    This is by far one of the best videos made, explaining the strong sides of Linux - I appreciate the effort Nick made in order to make this fantastic video, without a doubt this took a long time to make. I love how deeply honest the review is. All of this is 100% the reason I'm running Linux as my primary OS.

  • @TM-my2dj
    @TM-my2dj Před rokem

    Hey man it seems i have missed a video of yours but what is the browser you show in this video? Is this gnome web or a modified firefox, if it is the latter can you please give me a lead about how i would go about doing it.
    Nice video as always! Started using Linux because I couldn't afford a new laptop, now I can't imagine using windows. Linux is fantastic.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Před rokem

      It's Firefox with a custom userchrome.css theme :)

  • @jeffsadowski
    @jeffsadowski Před rokem +1

    Watching Gary Explain's latest powershell episode: It would be cool if linux apps could pass usable objects in piping. like his example of "ps notepad | kill" oh and if you properly alias ps and kill inside a linux run powershell it works in linux as well. Although powershell kept crashing for me.

  • @AyaWetts
    @AyaWetts Před rokem +5

    You miss the point of WSL... it wasn't to benefit Windows at all, it was getting people used to the idea Linux is just some app you run in Windows, so when future hardware is locked down to only allow Windows to run, they can point and say "see you can still run Linux as an app"

    • @dave7244
      @dave7244 Před rokem

      He doesn't know what he is talking about. Nor do you.
      IT Departments need a way of running Linux native apps while being able to administer Linux boxes cheaply because developers need things like Redis and other enterprise server software that is Unix/Linux only and the easiest way to do that is WSL or Docker.
      Even people that know how to admin Linux server have admitted to me they hate using Linux on the desktop because a lot of stuff just doesn't work or they can't figure out to get it working. Many of them move to Macs as at least it is a Unix OS.

    • @AyaWetts
      @AyaWetts Před rokem

      @@dave7244 Doesn't sound like anyone I'd want working for me... can't figure it out lol. You are talking about why people use it though, not why MS made it. If you think MS had no ulterior motives... you don't know MS.

    • @dave7244
      @dave7244 Před rokem

      @@AyaWetts MS has large business partners that run Linux stacks on their server and in Azure. Linux is more difficult to administer compared to Windows internally, businesses can do a lot of this through Azure and related services. Outsourcing infrastructure to cloud services and simplifying admin is a major cost saver for corps.
      No ulterior secret motives needed.

  • @JoeEnderman
    @JoeEnderman Před rokem +9

    Windows also has hidden updates they don't alert the user about. I know this because it auto-restarts, but GRUB doesn't let it auto boot, so if I use Windows sometimes qhen I go to wake my computer it is in GRUB. Linux never auto-restarts.

  • @MaryamMaqdisi
    @MaryamMaqdisi Před rokem +1

    I love your shirts, it fits your style lol. I love software management on Linux, it's so simple and efficient. And I love having mostly very tiny updates using a Debian base, I can update it reliably no matter the connection I'm using, even in hotels and whatnot.

  • @BenjaminWheeler0510
    @BenjaminWheeler0510 Před rokem +2

    You forgot the part where I have to Google the name of a package because it’s different depending on what distro you’re on… Or you have to add the company’s third party repository to be able to download it via a package manager… lol but the one command updates are great

    • @puspamadak
      @puspamadak Před rokem +2

      Googling is not of an issue, provided that distro provides a wiki page for the packages (Arch have it). Also, most distros have embedded it's package lists into a GUI application, so no need to know the package name.

  • @DaveSomething
    @DaveSomething Před rokem +4

    I can't see myself ever going back to Win... just not gonna happen.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Před rokem +1

      Yeah' me neither. Even if I stopped running this channel, I wouldn't change OS

  • @Alexander-ix2jp
    @Alexander-ix2jp Před rokem +3

    You hit the nail on the head with this one, Nick. Keep these coming, using these to show newbs some of the benefits of switching to Linux. This is exactly what we need + that other vid you did recently explaining Proton and overall Gaming on Linux. You rock. Also, Tuxedo ftw!

    • @Diviance
      @Diviance Před rokem +1

      Maybe, to be fair to these people, he should also show the massive detriments to switching, eh?

    • @Alexander-ix2jp
      @Alexander-ix2jp Před rokem +1

      @@Diviance Massive?

  • @in-craig-ible6160
    @in-craig-ible6160 Před rokem

    I love reading the random notes you put in when showing apps. XD

  • @BANANA-gy9lx
    @BANANA-gy9lx Před rokem

    Sorry but I’m new to this, witch distro are you using? I saw your video on pop os, but this one looks cleaner or am I blind? Anyway, thanx to you I might switch to Linux entirely for my new laptop, I just have to check if I can do everything I want with it.

    • @computer_freedom
      @computer_freedom Před rokem

      I would start with the type of desktop I want. POP and Linux Mint have two very different styles of desktop. POP is more like, but not exactly like Windows 11, and Mint is something like Windows 10. Ubuntu is also like POP on the desktop, but POP looks nicer, my opinion. Other than that the sky is the limit as to which one is better.

    • @FurryCuddler
      @FurryCuddler Před 6 měsíci

      I would recommend you endeavorOS, it's really awesome.

  • @jerbid_
    @jerbid_ Před rokem +4

    "Linux is only free if you don't value your time" my brother in christ my AMD GPU is literally plug and play on linux (even arch!)

  • @MINI_91
    @MINI_91 Před rokem +27

    I am new to Linux. I use it on my spare laptop.
    I am running Kubuntu, and so far I am really happy with it.
    It reminds me of the Windows interface that I know, but with the benefits from Linux.
    It's a nice place to start IMO.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Před rokem +8

      Absolutely!

    • @alexatkin
      @alexatkin Před rokem +1

      It amazes how how KDE isn't more popular as I also found it the cleanest transition from Windows and the easiest to use when switching between the two. Except Dolphin is night/day better than explorer IMO as a file manager.

    • @MINI_91
      @MINI_91 Před rokem +1

      @@alexatkin I tried Ubuntu first, but GNOME was just not to me liking at all. Then I learned about Kubuntu. Mint is also a distro on my radar, as well as Pop OS. I tried Fedora too and it was okay, but not a favorite for me.

    • @kendarr
      @kendarr Před rokem +1

      @@alexatkin my favorite from windows people is cinnamon, kde is good but I think it has so many options it gets tiring

    • @alexatkin
      @alexatkin Před rokem

      @@kendarr Problems I had was no other DE mimicking Windows in all behaviours, there would always be something I tried to do that didn't work how I was used to. Then over time KDE overtook Windows in having functionality Windows did not, 10/11 then started copying some of those features (granted, some may have come to MacOS first, not sure). ;)
      But overall I find KDE has the richest feature set and just works how I expect it to.

  • @bradm1507
    @bradm1507 Před rokem +2

    I'm going to challenge the point about Linux package management. While it is ostensibly a better user experience, it puts distro maintainers in between app developers and users. As a result, distro maintainers--not app developers--control when you get app updates. In some cases, like for servers, this can be a good thing, but for user-land software, it leads to undesirable fragmentation (think Android update rollouts vs. iOS update rollouts).
    Rolling-release distros mitigate this (albeit at the expense of stability), but universal packaging formats like Flatpaks, Snaps and AppImages are likely the long-term solution. However, not all apps are available in these formats, and those that are may have been packaged by an unknown third-party instead of the developer. With Windows and Mac, when a new version of an app is released, users typically can get it immediately. And generally speaking, they can get this new app version independently of any OS updates that they may not want.
    Again, I know Flatpak et. al. are solutions, and some distros are defaulting to these as their official or preferred app packaging solutions. But the need for these solutions shows that traditional Linux package management isn't always an advantage.

  • @bristolview56
    @bristolview56 Před rokem +1

    I have a fairly old Acer laptop that was shipped with Windows 8. It's had many faults, first the DVD drive stopped working then the touch tablet failed and after that the batteries stopped charging. Once Win8 support ended I thought I'd try putting Linux Mint on it, it's now completeley rejuvinated and useable again. The DVD drive works, the tablet works and the batteries charge properly so all those faults I assumed were hardware failures were in fact issues with Windows. It also runs much quicker, so if you have an old Windows PC you're thinkng of binning don't, try this first!

  • @unpatitoRU
    @unpatitoRU Před rokem +3

    I feel you bruh, i have like 10 of the same black shirt too and 3 of the same shoes(i couldn't get more of it :x )
    I don't need to think 'this fits with my other clothes' because it fits with everything. Confortable and less time losing

  • @vi6ddarkking
    @vi6ddarkking Před rokem +4

    In My Opinion The Steam Deck And SteamOS Is The Thing Tha Will Get Linux In To The Mainstream.
    The Biggest Problem So Far Is That The Normies Will Always Prefer A Simple "Plug And Play" Experience And SteamOS Is Going In A Direction That Soon The Normies Won't Be Able To Tell The Difference Were It Not For The Different Icons.

  • @inigoarejula2147
    @inigoarejula2147 Před rokem +1

    Totally agree, however i cant understand how being more efficient the battery runs out faster :c

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Před rokem +1

      Less power management for the CPU generally. It doesn't ramp the CPU down as much as windows

  • @kylofps
    @kylofps Před rokem +2

    100% agree with "Software Management", it's the biggest reason I continued using linux, because going back to long, forced, windows updates would suck

  • @lorduggae
    @lorduggae Před rokem +3

    I agree totally with the speed of linux on older machines. I have Pop! Os on an old pc (AMD A4-3420 APU with 8gbs ram) and it runs as smoothly as my gaming rig with a Ryzen 3700x w/32gbs of ram.

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před rokem +1

      Worth noting that machine would run Windows 10 also but if you only had 2GB then Linux would still be good and Windows unusable.

    • @lorduggae
      @lorduggae Před rokem +1

      @@wayland7150 That machine had both windows 7 and 10 on it. It ran 10 like it was running through thick mud. Took 5 minutes to boot and be ready for use. With Pop! it's up and ready in 30 seconds. My only Windows pc has a 2500K with 16gb of ram and takes forever to boot Win10.

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před rokem +1

      @@lorduggae Your 16GB PC should boot Windows 10 fast enough as long as it's an SSD. Windows 7 boots fast off a hard drive.

    • @lorduggae
      @lorduggae Před rokem +1

      @@wayland7150 The 16gb PC has windows on a SSD, it still takes at least 5 minutes to boot and be usable.

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před rokem +1

      @@lorduggae Oh dear!

  • @Pridetoons
    @Pridetoons Před rokem +3

    Linux is Lighter
    Linux is Free
    Linux is Open-Source
    Linux gives me different distros
    Linux is Community-Based
    Linux is King 👑!

  • @aaronaustrie
    @aaronaustrie Před rokem +1

    I had Ubuntu once for one of my cs courses. It was a great UI to work around

  • @studiokadaver
    @studiokadaver Před rokem +1

    I mean every operating system has it’s own learning curve. Plus if you make a point of using OS independent applications swapping between operating systems isn’t so difficult when you can use some of the same applications across the board. Like Firefox, VLC, FileZilla.. for example.

  • @BjornsTIR
    @BjornsTIR Před rokem +3

    Yeah, Linux is infinitely better in letting you know what went wrong and helping you trouble shoot. That's why I switched to Linux in the first place, Windows was acting up for no reason one time too many

  • @paulj505
    @paulj505 Před rokem +10

    I switched to Linux, Mint to be exact, and I like it very much. Especially because of performance.
    I have it with XFCE desktop environment and even though, I have it for only 6 or 7 days, I already changed it's look to my liking, there's so many options and you can implement them pretty easly, which I like. In Windows, I needed to tinker more, to change it's look, to what I would like and often it was making my system slow. Linux Mint XFCE looks beautiful for me now and there's no performance drop, at all.
    I love how small it is. With Windows, without any, installed by me programs, out of 1TB of HDD, I got like 800GB or less, for me. With Linux, I had almost all of my 1TB.
    I got no problem with games, except with two of them, but in one of them - Progressbar95, I fixed it's audio problem really easily. And with the second one - Devil May Cry HD Collection, the cutscenes, in form of WMV videos, are rotated by 180 degrees, but it's not affecting gameplay. So yeah, no big problems, especially with performance. My laptop is not so strong anyway, so I am not even playing the kind off new or newest games.
    Kind off sucks, that I wasn't able to install Clip Studio Paint, that I bought, before I got to know about it's change in perpetual license. But fortunately Krita works much better on my laptop with Linux, than with Windows.
    I love that I can install system updates, whenever I want and the process of update itself is not slowing down my system, unlike Windows. Actually, I switched because latest Windows update, did something that caused Microsoft's OS to work very slow on my laptop and neither disk defragmentation or dick clean up, couldn't fix it. Maybe re-installation of Windows could, but I thought that I much prefer to just switch to Linux, as it would be fourth time, when I needed to re-install Windows on my laptop. And yeah, one time was because of me, as I interrupted the Windows's update, but the rest two, were because updates broke something.
    I also like, how easy was to do one small thing. A keyboard in my laptop, don't work properly, so I am using the external one and when I'm using laptop on my bed, I like to place that externat keyboard on a laptop, in place of laptop's keyboard. And because I didn't want to press anything by mistake, I wanted to disable the built in laptop. I had problems with it on Windows, as after one update in the past, the disabled and even uninstalled laptop's keyboard, after restart, was installed and enabled again. I needed to do kind off too much tinkering to disable it permanently. But on Linux, I just set a command: xinput disable "AT Translated Set 2 keyboard", to automatically run on log in and that was it, the built in keyboard wasn't enabling itself since. I mean, it was working only on log in screen, but only there.
    So yeah, I don't think, I will be coming back to Windows. I didn't even do a backup of my previous Windows installation, I just took a folder with my artworks and saves for some games and left Windows. And if one day, I would buy a new device, after Microsoft's another tries to force people to use Windows, I will do everything I can on that new device, to throw Windows out and install Linux back.

    • @elecbaguette
      @elecbaguette Před rokem

      Good luck, I recommend the slimbooks Pro X

    • @STONE69_
      @STONE69_ Před rokem +1

      Bro, are you writing an essay or what Lmao!!!

  • @ezekoren
    @ezekoren Před rokem +1

    I want to agree with you, I really do. The thing is, after using exclusively Linux for work for a year, I finally did the switch on my personal laptop. Everything is plain better, or so it seems because I can't use it. My laptop has a screen on the smaller side, but it's 1080p, and there's no fractional scaling option available, at least on the distro I ended up choosing (Fedora). Such a small missing feature but it makes it unusable for visual impaired folks or people with small screens

  • @rajkishorebehera7489
    @rajkishorebehera7489 Před rokem

    What distro or Linux are you using, would you suggest that to me as a beginner to Linux.

  • @AnimeFan4Life2022x
    @AnimeFan4Life2022x Před rokem +4

    There is a lot of difference with windows and Linux OS's to be out there not just that a lot of options not all Linux is require internet to be exact and can run smoothly and as time and development continues we will be getting better Verizo's of those systems and what not at most for gaming and personal use I believe in a couple more years or so Linux will be more main stream and the market will shift completely I no now that system76 is making PC's with popOS completely And no of the Linux phones that are being made/in development and what not and hope for more of a future with more alternatives to computers and more technology then just Android IOS or windows / Mac the future is bright

    • @theroboman727
      @theroboman727 Před rokem +1

      Wow zero punctuation or new lines. Not very easy to read at all.

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před rokem +1

      The gamers are getting into Linux and tat will help a lot. It's already the operating system of Internet servers and of little boards like the Raspberry PI of which there are millions produced every year.

  • @peterandersen9879
    @peterandersen9879 Před rokem +5

    Windows has one huge attraction to me.
    It's a great destination for Windows users. I spend my time helping people who want to use Linux. I gave up trying to help Windows users years ago. They are just two completely different animals. Someone else who thinks Windows is better is a better candidate to help those folks.

  • @ManishSahay
    @ManishSahay Před rokem +1

    4:35 - "Time spent learning something new is never wasted."

  • @o-manthehuman7867
    @o-manthehuman7867 Před rokem +1

    My favorite part of linux is that I can type "sudo pacman -Syu" and within a couple minutes my entire system will be fully updated, and will usually not need a reboot

  • @miroslawturski
    @miroslawturski Před rokem +4

    As software developer I consider Windows hugely inferior to Linux. The difference is productivity and performance. I always bing an example of Linux VM running on Windows host that still managed to build Java project faster than the host system itself... Not mentioning the set of dev tools on Linux that are just available in seconds.

    • @miroslawturski
      @miroslawturski Před rokem

      @deadbeef "Sounds like a lie..." - if you like to think so, suit yourself.
      As for Visual Studio I agree that it is great IDE for what it does, but how does it support the idea that whole OS platform is better for development?
      It seems to me that you are argueing that Windows is the best platform for developing for Windows. I am not gonna argue with that...

    • @Diviance
      @Diviance Před rokem

      And as a desktop user, I consider Linux hugely inferior to Windows.

    • @miroslawturski
      @miroslawturski Před rokem

      @@Diviance I guess it really depends on what you are using you desktop for ;-)

    • @Diviance
      @Diviance Před rokem

      @@miroslawturski
      Normal desktop stuff. And gaming.
      And I really don't think it does.

    • @miroslawturski
      @miroslawturski Před rokem

      @@Diviance I get your point. I use Windows myself for some gaming and desktip work. Many applications are just not supported on platforms other than Windows by manufacturer's choice.
      Still, when it comes to Java development, Linux always wins. Productivity and performance are just so much better.
      Moreover, I have run home server for media streaming and surveillance for many years already. I have never even considered Windows for such purposes.
      Not mentioning some home automation projects where Windows is simply non existent.
      So, you will definitely find cases for which Windows is practicaly the only choice, but also many others where it is not a choice at all.

  • @georgebetrian676
    @georgebetrian676 Před rokem +3

    Possible Linux is better, but these are my thoughts
    1 - Software manager. You can update directly the software through the application, or using winget if you want to do it by powershell (> winget upgrade all) or having another windows package manager (there are few options there). It's not a critical thing if you don't need to deal with dozens or hundreds of different programs. And the programs in windows, doesn't matter how old it is, or the windows updates, it always works, thanks to the windows API.
    2- Monetary cost: You can install windows for free and legally. Period. The only thing that it will not allow you is to change the personalization (that means, you can not set up a wallpaper.)
    3- Time in troubleshooting windows. Not comparable to the time doing int Linux. And, with Windows Restoration Points, it's not need to troubleshoot anything. Just go to the restore point where the things were working before you mess up. Personally, I have a windows system Image in an SSD that I can recover bare metal windows in less than 10 minutes with all the programs already installed.
    4- Fixing the OS: I'm not interested at all to fix the code of any OS, and I can say with confidence any users that want the OS for work, are willing to do it. I had 0 problems with Windows 10 until now.
    5- SSD espace. Yes, Linux works better with prehistoric machines or with very low performance ones. Most laptos nowadays have at least 500 GB if not more. This argument could be valid 15 years ago.
    6- Customization: There are a tons of programs open source that can add the functionality that you are looking for in Windows. I have a second task bar installed where I can put all my shortcuts to programs, files and folders. Do you want a better tile manager? You have a lot of options. etc.
    7- Security. Windows programs have algorithmic keys that alerts you that a program is not trustworthy. If you want to installed, its at your own risk. Windows have also the Microsoft defender, that works very well.
    8- Command line. I'm not an IT manager that needs to modify servers and a lot of laptops at the same time, but this is why powershell was created.

    • @elecbaguette
      @elecbaguette Před rokem

      There's a lot of things I want to say, but I don't have time. Try doing some more research on things like security. And whatever customization windows has linux has it 10x. You can make your own desktop with openbox if you feel like it even.

    • @AM-yk5yd
      @AM-yk5yd Před rokem

      @@elecbaguette " And whatever customization windows has linux has it 10x. " too bad each UI pulls blanket on itself and refuses to cooperate. I've seen more than once how you choose dark theme for the app and only half of the windows go dark as others use their white styling from system settings (KDevelop had trouble with this for ages, but I think they only recently fixed it)
      Oh, and the defaults are insane. For example, you need gnome tweak to change right click emulation on trackpad. Why do I need to download additional package for such basic personalization?

  • @maherazzzouzi279
    @maherazzzouzi279 Před rokem +1

    I love your channel, please continue the good work, thank you!

  • @shitpostingsandwhich
    @shitpostingsandwhich Před rokem +2

    I've been developing a python program for school on Linux. Trying to make the same code run on windows was a pain in my butt, I've never experienced bugs in the interpreter until now.

    • @dave7244
      @dave7244 Před rokem +1

      The bugs weren't in the interpreter. Python works fine on Windows.

    • @shitpostingsandwhich
      @shitpostingsandwhich Před rokem

      @@dave7244you're probably right but there was a bug somewhere, all I had to do was restart.

  • @Finkelfunk
    @Finkelfunk Před rokem +7

    "Windows has a store now and it's getting better"
    Yeah, now you don't even need to try and dodge the spyware because there is no point to it anymore. Spyware is now a "feature".
    Also I just think Microsoft is ingenious for not letting you start apps on that store if your OS is not updated. Obviously this is done for security concerns, wouldn't want all that spyware to stop working.

    • @Komatik_
      @Komatik_ Před rokem

      That's a bit cynical. Of course they want their telemetry etc. to run, and they do run a garbage ad business with a ton of dark patterns to herd you to Bing. But Windows is used by an absurdly large number of people, a good chunk of who barely understand anything about computers, and that's probably charitable. Some of the biggest malware disasters in recent memory have occurred because people didn't update their Windows machines and their computers got hijacked into a botnet. Linux is mostly deployed on servers, or used by enthusiasts who know what they're doing and like being up to date. The difference is just night and day.

    • @Finkelfunk
      @Finkelfunk Před rokem

      @@Komatik_ "It is used by a lot of people" is objectively a bad standard to measureb anything by. Yeah it is used by a lot of people, because that spyware comes preinstalled on 99.7% of computers which makes Windows billions in licensing deals. Start putting Linux natively on every new computer and watch how quickly that changes. As MentalOutlaw once fittingly said: For normies, Windows is just a bootloader for Google Chrome.

    • @Komatik_
      @Komatik_ Před rokem

      @@Finkelfunk I didn't claim that Windows was necessary for people. I said that it is used by a huge number of people who won't update unless forced to, and the end result of not being forced to has been a multitude of huge security issues. One of those large botnet scandals? It happened long after Microsoft had patched the security flaw used by the malware. But because people didn't patch, there was a crapton of vulnerable machines around. That's the point.

    • @Finkelfunk
      @Finkelfunk Před rokem

      @@Komatik_ Maybe people and especially companies (who are the main target of botnets) would update their systems regularly if it weren't for the fact that every other update borks Windows in a major way, causing data loss, boot failures and otherwise exceedingly long down times. You think a logistics hub can afford to wait for all PCs to "just update to the newest version" every other day if the PCs need to restart several times, get boot looped or stuck on the installation script and need to relaunch at all?

  • @AskMoonBurst
    @AskMoonBurst Před rokem +6

    To be fair, the .exe hunting and 'search github' aren't THAT different.

  • @Dukenukem
    @Dukenukem Před rokem

    taskbar on the bottom? I just tryed to move it to all 4 edges of my 2 screens and it sticks everywhere....
    Also a trick question. Which Linux is the best? (there is none, only tradeoffs)

  • @matijacizmar9372
    @matijacizmar9372 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Yes i agree with every word in this video..I was a windows user but switched on fedora 38, 2 months ago..i am super satisfied with it..the main reason i ditched win is hardware support..i have relatively new hardware but not enough new for windows 11(ok there is workaraound,and i use it for a very short time)..and i noticed on sight how faster fedora is, and uses much less resources from my hardware...like i just bought super new computer lol..

  • @tek_lynx4225
    @tek_lynx4225 Před rokem +3

    Linux isn't better then windows until you people get your heads out of the sand and start actual collaborating to make a functional UI, that does not ever have to hit the command line or hidden config files, for what should be very simple tasks. Doing some basic things in linux can be an actual chore, and a waist of time. The only thing I use linux for is a system that is 1 and done like a router, that never needs to be updated, because changing anything inside linux, install is an all day task.

    • @MiningForPies
      @MiningForPies Před rokem +3

      @@terrydaktyllus1320 your presumption has just summed up the entire FOSS community.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  Před rokem +4

      Welcome to 2022, where the GUIs on Linux are far better than Windows, more coherent, easier to use, and don't require the command line at all!

    • @bigbay1159
      @bigbay1159 Před rokem

      This comments isn't even close to true, I am the first one to say that Linux is far from perfect and I also don't hate windows. People can use anecdotal evidence all they want and I can as well. Windows has for the majority been just fine, does what I need, plays the games I want, doesn't chug on my system however...Your comment boils down to being stupid? All you did was cry about basic things....like super basic....You couldn't even properly make an example of the specific complaint you have. But have the nerve to tell people they have their head in the sand. No...that's you...being too stupid to perform the most basic of things on a Operating system..
      Windows also has hidden files that need to be allowed to view... Windows also does some actions on command line like network tools....You bitched about user training issues and act as if its the community and the system at fault..

    • @AM-yk5yd
      @AM-yk5yd Před rokem

      @@terrydaktyllus1320 Or maybe because developers(majority non paid) want to work on "interesting" parts that solve their problems at expense of UI that solves users' problems? Even SerenityOS supports search across menu which is more functional than windows, something which is not possible on linux due to it lacking one single mechanism of menu.

    • @AM-yk5yd
      @AM-yk5yd Před rokem

      ​@@terrydaktyllus1320 SerenityOS is hobby OS. Like templeOS, but more serious. Searching across menus is like "Search everywhere"(shift-shift) of CLion. Only it works in literally every application. You don't need to remember in submenu of which menu the functionality is hidden. You just type it. Is it file->preferences? Options->preferences? tools->preferences? Who cares, just type "pref" and you'll get to the preference. Super useful, and So this is closer to querying app with dbus rather than searing with find.
      Speaking of, linux really needs more dbus support. That would solve lots of integration headaches.

  • @ygurin8946
    @ygurin8946 Před rokem +1

    I dont think you should say that all distros only collect telemetry anonymized and opt-in because most distros do, for eample chrome os and zorin os collect data in a way you dont want

  • @Ruptured_AU
    @Ruptured_AU Před rokem +1

    One thing about the apps store. Even on Linux I still often have to go to a website and download it for my core applications.

    • @AM-yk5yd
      @AM-yk5yd Před rokem

      I find that apps and repos are often out of date if you need development. E.g. I use rustup both on windows and linux.

  • @riseabove3082
    @riseabove3082 Před rokem +1

    The beginning of this video is hilarious! Had to thumbs up just because of that alone. Don't care. You are very likable.
    1. Love EXE files. Way better in my opinion than missing repository files because it's not ARCH or dependency issues. OEM versions > Retail versions of Windows.
    2. I spend a lot of time fixing Linux problems than Windows - however, at work, I spend all of my time fixing Microsoft problems such as Office 365 and Azure over anything else.
    3. I still have about four bugs reported in Linux apps that still have not been fixed today. Only a few people reported it but it still exists as a problem just not that many people run into it so they never get fixed. With Linux bugs it is a popularity contest meaning the bug has to be popular enough to get attention. I don't blame them but can be frustrating sometimes.

  • @prymus1005
    @prymus1005 Před 6 dny

    Linux has great potential, but when I try Ubuntu 24.04LTS I have out of the box update error in app center saying snapd and snap store has error. Manjaro actual newest same laptop (Asus Tuf A17 2022, Amd6800H, Rtx3060) with plasma gui can not sleep, can not shutdown, PopOS kills itself after some time and can not boot, Mint works fine but games are not so fluid and it says at boot always that it has an error with bios. Mint was on the other hand the most stable. This boot error is just a message. Nobara had terrible lagging app center, killed itself. So I am getting skeptical. What could be the problem. Manjaro for example has maybe the best support for this laptop, games are very fluid, but no sleep, no hibernation and randomly no correct shutdown is confusing. I don't have a clue if this problem is only with this laptop, but I put lot of time in it and I see every tried distro a problem. I see I can put my favorite gui on the most stable Linux, but with one is that?

  • @hoterychannel
    @hoterychannel Před rokem +2

    Always thought that performance depends of applications that runs on an os, mostly...

  • @bufordmaddogtannen
    @bufordmaddogtannen Před rokem +2

    You forgot to mention 12+ years old bugs affecting various pieces of software that nobody will fix because they are just cosmetic.

  • @vaibhavg01
    @vaibhavg01 Před rokem

    where you get your desktop wallpaper

  • @user-xh5pi2nf9q
    @user-xh5pi2nf9q Před rokem +1

    When I have toyed with Linux desktop I have really enjoyed it. But my work requires programs that only run on windows and my my wife got frustrated by it on the HTPC. So I eventually gave up.
    But I have wanted to try and create a Linux box running KODI that serves up everything from games to streaming as a true console replacement and maybe more with features like MadVR-I’m hoping Steam OS 3.0 might get me there. Time will tell.

  • @IchBinsMoritz
    @IchBinsMoritz Před rokem

    How you get this ressource display on linux? at 6:01

  • @samwisegalenorn
    @samwisegalenorn Před rokem +1

    I'd like to add Memory Management. On any big (or small) download, Windows will not release Standby Memory. With a big download, I have to constantly use RAMMAP to force Windows to release Standby Memory. With any Linux OS (or Mac OS), memory is managed a lot better. Thus, Linux OSes and Mac OS need less RAM to run.

  • @jarekzawadzki
    @jarekzawadzki Před rokem +1

    Not all Linux software is in a repo or store. Some commercial software must be still downloaded from the producers website, e.g. Wordfast.

  • @TheStrategyWargamer
    @TheStrategyWargamer Před rokem

    👍👍 Great Video. Love your videos.

  • @BUDA20
    @BUDA20 Před rokem +1

    I recommend SCOOP (is like winget or chocolate) but it has versioning, is not using installers, is more like a linux packet manager overall, better for sysadmin, and I use winget for the rest

  • @cameronmoore136
    @cameronmoore136 Před rokem +2

    10:33 I'm very new to Linux, so I may not know what I'm talking about, but I thought the general consensus was that Linux WAS more secure (to at least some extent). Not in regards to less frequent attacks (due to the smaller user base), but due to how it was actually coded/developed.
    Is that not the case?

    • @JanVerny
      @JanVerny Před rokem

      There's no special coding. technically speaking since anybody could make a security audit, the software should be more secure, but realistically no one actually makes such audits.

    • @wayland7150
      @wayland7150 Před rokem +1

      Linux is considered more secure because of how it's put together.

    • @cameronmoore136
      @cameronmoore136 Před rokem

      @@JanVerny I read something about how you have to actively execute a virus on your computer on Linux or something, as to where on Windows you can just open a folder or file or photo or something.
      Not that I'm in any position to suggest you're wrong, but are you saying viruses have an equally easy time regardless of which environment they're in?

    • @JanVerny
      @JanVerny Před rokem +1

      @@cameronmoore136 what you are talking about is basic permission/access rights management. Both systems have had these features since their conception. But you are right that in Linux the user by default cannot execute arbitrary code from a file.
      At least in theory this makes for more secure environment, that is until the user inputs a copy pasted text into their commandline.
      I know of many reasons Linux could be considered more secure, none if it is particulary down to the linux architecture.

    • @cameronmoore136
      @cameronmoore136 Před rokem

      @@JanVerny Okay, I gotcha. I appreciate the input.

  • @lesliesavage9229
    @lesliesavage9229 Před rokem

    A few more things:
    Linux links and short cut keys work from anywhere on the system, but Windows links with short cuts have to be on the desktop.
    Short cut keys the user creates in Linux are not tied to links.
    I can also change my keyboard keys on the fly with bash scripts and short cut keys.
    Power Shell is a pain to use compared to Bash. You mentioned that, but it is a real pain by not being intuitive in it's commands. They should have built on CMD.
    It's easier to access your encrypted drive with Linux. With Windows you might end up without being able to access the drive.
    File sharing is easier with Linux, and can be secured better. You can even make hidden shares, and restrict the types of files sent.
    Linux can stay running 24/7. Windows often messes up an application meant to run 24/7, like security cameras, with as little as checking for updates.
    Programing my G604 mouse is more reliable and easier in Linux than Windows.
    More wear and tear on the OS drive in Windows than Linux.
    Auto downloading of Windows updates can drag everything to a crawl in Windows. Not so with Linux, which is why my spouse switched to Linux.

  • @q3r9
    @q3r9 Před rokem

    Which Linux distro do you use?

  • @davemckewan4450
    @davemckewan4450 Před rokem

    Not all sw, on Linux, is available through the gui sw manager. Some have to be got from separate websites. HDHomeRun comes to mind.

  • @player277-ml3ts
    @player277-ml3ts Před 17 dny

    1: customization options, opensource, more distros
    2: tux
    3: gentoo logo

  • @sonny557
    @sonny557 Před rokem

    1:47 what's the name of the software store