You Should Stop Using Windows On Your Computer...

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 28. 11. 2021
  • Get 20% OFF + Free Shipping at Manscaped with code SOG at manscaped.com/someordinary #manscapedpartner
    Hello guys and gals, it's me Mutahar again! Windows 10 was once an Operating System that stood as the only real option for those who did heavy tasks such as gaming and content creation on their systems, but with some real competition in the land of Linux it's probably time you step away and use something that respects you for once. Thanks for watching!
    Like, Comment and Subscribe for more videos!
  • Hry

Komentáře • 8K

  • @SomeOrdinaryGamers
    @SomeOrdinaryGamers  Před 2 lety +687

    Get 20% OFF + Free Shipping at Manscaped with code SOG at manscaped.com/someordinary

  • @D0GG_
    @D0GG_ Před 2 lety +4217

    “People who use Linux are the vegans of computers”. Why would you say something so hurtful and so incredibly accurate.

    • @libremercadoencrisiseconom2118
      @libremercadoencrisiseconom2118 Před 2 lety +50

      yeah, it hurts to progressists and Windows users that can't handle a central outage from USA. don't switch to Ubuntu or Fedora btw

    • @somecajundude4759
      @somecajundude4759 Před 2 lety +36

      I felt attacked with that single sentence

    • @yamomspotatosalad818
      @yamomspotatosalad818 Před 2 lety +70

      Except everyone doesn’t hate Linux users nor are they annoying, really..

    • @Batyssss
      @Batyssss Před 2 lety +52

      @@yamomspotatosalad818 "boohoo one vegan person told me to become vegan so every other normal vegan is a fucking idiot!!"

    • @chrisdawson1776
      @chrisdawson1776 Před 2 lety +116

      @@Batyssss Relax

  • @Vicky-Hugh-Martini
    @Vicky-Hugh-Martini Před 2 lety +3797

    Other than gaming, I know there's a certain selection of people needing Windows for school and/or work purposes. For me it's because my college classes require the Respondus Lockdown browser when taking exams. It only supports Mac and Windows.

    • @LordiGFX
      @LordiGFX Před 2 lety +80

      Have you tried running it with wine?

    • @Vicky-Hugh-Martini
      @Vicky-Hugh-Martini Před 2 lety +429

      @@LordiGFX Yes. No luck.

    • @imelitist2828
      @imelitist2828 Před 2 lety +57

      Does it run in a VM ?

    • @FoxNoitre10
      @FoxNoitre10 Před 2 lety +377

      @@imelitist2828 doing that would allow cheating

    • @iawindowss4061
      @iawindowss4061 Před 2 lety +204

      @@FoxNoitre10 I run my schools lockout software in a vm. Took a little messing with to get it working but yea it works.

  • @declancottle991
    @declancottle991 Před 11 měsíci +81

    Something I appreciate about your take is that you focus on the average user. A lot of people on the internet assume that everyone is a power user or wants to learn every single thing about how their computer works, which really isn't the case. Most people just want to watch CZcams, and have their games run without crashing.

    • @hamzasultan96
      @hamzasultan96 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I used to have that issue. Since I see it as easy to learn, I assume everyone asking for help would be familiar with software and tech. In reality, a lot of people get anxious when looking at their device's settings menu. Using a device and understanding the inner workings, even at the surface level, are two different things.

    • @declancottle991
      @declancottle991 Před 3 měsíci

      @@hamzasultan96 For real, I'm an intermediate linux user. I have no fear using the terminal and I can figure out how to use the config files I need, but somedays I just want my games to run, that's why I mostly install things through steam, because it's easy, and even games that aren't officially steam deck certified still run well under proton, or even ge-proton

    • @talizorahnarrayya5916
      @talizorahnarrayya5916 Před 2 měsíci

      ​The "apperance" can also be daunting, I started dabbling with Linux when I got my Steam Deck and even to this day I get a bit stressed when I need to run terminal. Doesn't matter how much I've read and prepared for what I'm trying to do. Once the terminal opens and there's a wall of text I can feel my confidence and motivation evaporate @@hamzasultan96

    • @JohnCastleSmokeless
      @JohnCastleSmokeless Před 26 dny +1

      One other reason to at least dabble in Linux is that it breaks that mindset. Even if you don't daily-drive a GNU+Linux distribution primarily or long-term, it changes how you think about things like security, privacy, and how to really make even Windows do more of what you want it to do and less of what you don't.

    • @moffichu9150
      @moffichu9150 Před 5 dny

      this video aged like a finely sealed casket of wine when you see the new "features" coming to 11

  • @BxrHavik
    @BxrHavik Před 2 lety +456

    As an Arch Linux user, I loved this video. It's so refreshing to see a completely unbiased video explaining how Linux isnt perfect and giving them reasons why they should and shouldnt use it while also showing them that they can still do most of the things they did on Windows on Linux and that its not as hard as some might think. Being unbiased with this sort of thing is so important imo instead of the typical cherry-picking that most Linux users like to do.
    I also loved that this video is just straight up hilarious lol.

    • @mnemonic6047
      @mnemonic6047 Před 2 lety +8

      archlinux is normie distro

    • @Zorovee
      @Zorovee Před 2 lety +70

      @@mnemonic6047 Silence, computer vegan

    • @mnemonic6047
      @mnemonic6047 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Zorovee silence normie

    • @Zorovee
      @Zorovee Před 2 lety +30

      @@mnemonic6047 I dont obey commands from elitists :^)

    • @mnemonic6047
      @mnemonic6047 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Zorovee yes we saw that normie

  • @Vgamer311
    @Vgamer311 Před 2 lety +2033

    I cannot fathom why someone would bash an os for being “too easy.”
    Making hard things easier is the entire reason I bought a computer. If I want things to be hard I can do basically anything a computer can do with an abacus and a stone chisel, and that stone slab is just as customizable as any Linux os if not more so. Being easy is the point.

    • @Absolute_Zero7
      @Absolute_Zero7 Před 2 lety +136

      Tbf, most of the criticisms of Ubuntu aren't because its too easy, but because of stuff like Canonical's obsession with Snaps and GNOME.

    • @bobbybologna3029
      @bobbybologna3029 Před 2 lety +22

      if you make something idiot-proof only idiots will use it. That's why.

    • @Vgamer311
      @Vgamer311 Před 2 lety +277

      @@bobbybologna3029 that’s just not true, but even if it was, how does that fact that something appeals to “idiots” make it any less appealing for you? The only reason I can fathom someone thinking “Ugh, people less smart than me use this thing, therefore I can’t use it.” Is pure elitism and nothing more.

    • @SIPEROTH
      @SIPEROTH Před 2 lety +47

      @@Vgamer311 Usually those who know more get annoyed by idiot proof things because such things tent to limit their ability to do whatever they want with their software and hardware. A good reason many hate Apple things that just tell you "this is what you can do take it or leave it".

    • @MartinBarker
      @MartinBarker Před 2 lety +152

      @@SIPEROTH i call BS on this, you want to configure anything as an Advanced user on windows use the Powershell, the same as using the Terminal on Linux, what your on about is the people who think they are advanced because they know how to access a control panel.
      This is my biggest problem with the linux lot, oh it's to simple to use you can't customize it, you damn well can if you know what your doing, get around the security policies or disable them it all possible using Powershell but then they don't know how to do it, but at the same time they expect people to use the Shell on Linux it like erm fucking pot kettle... learn how to use the Shell on windows...

  • @KCS-01
    @KCS-01 Před 2 lety +4361

    Wouldn’t it be hilarious if I edited this comment so the only way people can find out what it originally said is by deciphering it via the replies?
    Lol

    • @zeke7515
      @zeke7515 Před 2 lety +291

      Dual boot or Virtualize. Get your toes wet... The water gets warmer the longer you're in it. When you need to get stuff done, use windows... When you have time to learn, switch over to your Linux.
      Linux is getting better every day, and LMG pulling this challenge has actually spurred a lot of discussion regarding new user experience.

    • @DaddyT21
      @DaddyT21 Před 2 lety +158

      "Were it so easy" -Arbiter

    • @0.001mm_tolerancy
      @0.001mm_tolerancy Před 2 lety +245

      @@zeke7515 no.

    • @iiawesomej
      @iiawesomej Před 2 lety +143

      only reason i haven’t stopped using windows is because most of my programs are incompatible

    • @bin4rym4ge
      @bin4rym4ge Před 2 lety +3

      Try a vm of Manjaro XFCE edition. I think you might like it.

  • @adrogan3
    @adrogan3 Před 2 lety +48

    Have tried many times to switch to linux but my necessity to run games and the adobe suite always gets me back to windows. BUT thank you for treating people like me (linux noobs) with respect, and not with contempt, like many other forums or videos i have come across. You have earned my respect and my subscription. Looking forward to more of your content. Thank you.

    • @realseal_6252
      @realseal_6252 Před 6 měsíci +2

      You can install any window’s software of Linux with wine-Linux

    • @dalfvideos
      @dalfvideos Před 5 měsíci

      @@realseal_6252 doesn't really work all the time, though. Some software is pretty stubborn (Clip Studio, AutoCad, Adobe Suite as far as the ones I use). But personally my own laptop uses linux, and my work pc is Windows (but that one is provided by my employer). I even have a mac mini if I want to mess around with OSX. Different hardware for different needs :)

  • @ryrieee
    @ryrieee Před 2 lety +95

    I'm really glad bigger ytbers like Muta are spreading awareness about Linux, it's a really good system and more people should know about it.

    • @user-md3is4dq2d
      @user-md3is4dq2d Před rokem +6

      It’s still very inaccessible unless you’re using something like Ubuntu which is garbage. People do not want to fuck around in a terminal to fix an issue they won’t run into again for the next 3 years.

    • @ryrieee
      @ryrieee Před rokem +11

      @@user-md3is4dq2d what's wrong with using a terminal?

    • @user-md3is4dq2d
      @user-md3is4dq2d Před rokem +7

      @@ryrieee I have no problem with it, I enjoy it. My point was, most people aren’t going to want to invest time into it, or have to learn to use it.

    • @iamajustababa2000s
      @iamajustababa2000s Před rokem

      @@user-md3is4dq2d yes expect if windows being so much unstable then people may come but otherwise no

    • @raccins3014
      @raccins3014 Před rokem +3

      @@user-md3is4dq2d ive had to use powershell in windows to fix bs too

  • @jeremiebornais400
    @jeremiebornais400 Před 2 lety +1890

    My first experience with Linux was trying it out in a Virtual Machine. I really wish people in the Linux community recommended Windows users to try Linux in a VM before switching. They get to try different distros and get their feet wet without having to commit to switching their whole system.

    • @LiamNajor
      @LiamNajor Před 2 lety +70

      VMs can get complicated to set up. Virtual disks are hard to understand for a lot of people, let alone something like GPU passthrough

    • @jeremiebornais400
      @jeremiebornais400 Před 2 lety +223

      @@LiamNajor there's no reason to worry about something like GPU pass through. I'm talking about people using VMs to dip their toes into Linux. Also, I'd say setting up something simple in VirtualBox or VMWare is arguably easier than installing Linux on bare metal

    • @Sprydog
      @Sprydog Před 2 lety +14

      I bit the bullet and decided to set up dual boot to try it out

    • @LiamNajor
      @LiamNajor Před 2 lety +9

      @@jeremiebornais400 I couldn't get a VM working no matter how hard I tried last time I tried...7 years ago. However, back then I had a thinkpad t61 running ubuntu. If setting up a VM is easier then installing it, then either something has changed since then or there was something obvious my dumb child brain missed.

    • @bayardkyyako7427
      @bayardkyyako7427 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah but then you have people who have computers that can't fucking do it at all.

  • @jordanb.4514
    @jordanb.4514 Před 2 lety +374

    you've nearly convinced me, however there's just so many 'but' statements
    like yeah you CAN do most things, but a good bit of them require workarounds & the other half aren't supported yet

    • @orange_man_from
      @orange_man_from Před 2 lety +47

      Ubuntu was perfectly fine
      And then I tried to do a long, very important file transfer over USB 2.0. They were vidoes from a trip I was undertaking and the camera was running out of space, so easy I'll just do a file transfer Linux can handle that
      Yeah 75% of the footage got lost because of a Linux bug. It transferred every file to 4GB and moved on to the next file. Something about RAM caching and dumping it to the drive and it can get confused by slow file transfer rates
      I switched right back to Windows. As much as we complain about the OS it at least doesn't trip on such mundane tasks.
      "You can implement this fix yourself to make the problem go away", that's a real nice solution if I didn't already lose hundreds of GB, which absolutely would not have happened running Windows. On principle I'm not running my OS to bug fix and find workarounds for every tiny, unpredictable thing

    • @plumcakey
      @plumcakey Před 2 lety +75

      @@orange_man_from sorry but, the 4gb limit is a limitation of the fat file system, so thats your fault, not linux's one.

    • @Zarrx
      @Zarrx Před 2 lety +9

      Linux is more fun when it's on a second laptop or desktop that you can use casually. Otherwise run a virtualmachine on your gaming desktop.

    • @orange_man_from
      @orange_man_from Před 2 lety +87

      @@plumcakey nah m8 I know neither my camera nor Ubuntu use FAT. I've transfered greater than 16 GB files to it before on other projects with high-speed external SSDs. And the camera regularly records 28+ GB single files for me.
      And that attitude. Everything is boiled down to the user's fault. Even if I was somehow running FAT on my Linux drive in your hypothetical, shouldn't the OS say "The file is bigger than 4 GB on your FAT drive so you'll lose some data. Please figure this problem out"
      "Git good" does not apply to problems I cannot forsee. And again is not the principle I want to by daily driving an OS with

    • @orange_man_from
      @orange_man_from Před 2 lety +3

      @@Zarrx yeah that's what I was doing. It was fun, I'll keep a new Linux distro on a bootable USB for funsies going forward.

  • @manuelpopp1687
    @manuelpopp1687 Před 2 lety +81

    I switched to Ubuntu with most of my devices. That helped a lot when I had to start doing some of my computations at work on a server with Red Hat. Having to switch to a no-GUI OS at work would have been terrible without prior experiences using Ubuntu. And then, I got me a Raspberry Pi to play around with, which runs Raspbian Lite. If you invest a bit of time it starts to be real fun to do stuff with that.

    • @UNSCPILOT
      @UNSCPILOT Před 2 lety +3

      I amusingly started this backwards.
      I bought a couple Raspberry Pi's a couple years ago, and just in the last few months switched my PCs to Garuda Linux, now I'm dusting off the RPi's to actually get their projects moving.
      I'm holding the Steamdeck and Windows 11 responsible for finally motivating me to switch, my eagerness to try out the steamdeck and Windows 11 reminding me too much of my terrible Windows 8 experience has shoved me fully over to the FOSS/GNU/Linux community, and I'm actually liking it quite a bit so far.
      Only keeping Windows 10 around for Halo Infinite and my Windows Mixed Reality Headset, had good luck so far running the rest of my Steam library on Linux

    • @cyberfunk3793
      @cyberfunk3793 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Do you think it's fun to waste 4h debugging some driver issue people on osx or windows never have to spend any time with? In my experience people that work for a living and have some other hobbies than tinkering with computers don't wish to waste their time fighting with an operating system.

    • @manuelpopp1687
      @manuelpopp1687 Před 6 měsíci

      @@cyberfunk3793 Do you think it is fun to collect post stamps?

    • @TWEEMASTER2000
      @TWEEMASTER2000 Před 6 měsíci

      Different strokes, different folks coming from a windows power user who guts their install and goes everything manually lmao @@cyberfunk3793

    • @VollkinSea
      @VollkinSea Před 5 měsíci

      @@cyberfunk3793 if their work includes "fighting with an operating system", then it isn't about it being fun, it's about it being their job.

  • @mateusnicolau1710
    @mateusnicolau1710 Před 2 lety +10

    BRO...you're the ONLY ONE on the entirely CZcams that doesn't make me skip merchandising.

  • @JasTheProducer
    @JasTheProducer Před 2 lety +761

    As a music producer, the singular reason I haven’t switched to Linux is because of DAW’s. FL Studio, Ableton, Pro Tools, etc are all basically unusable in Linux even through wine (since they don’t have actual Linux builds outputted by the DAW developers). Same with VST Plug-ins. It’s a real shame. The only DAWs that are practically available on Linux are terrible.

    • @sansung4189
      @sansung4189 Před 2 lety +13

      Didn’t expect to see Jas here

    • @molly-me5ik
      @molly-me5ik Před 2 lety +10

      Bitwig works perfectly on linux and so do all the uhe plugins

    • @2m0ng032
      @2m0ng032 Před 2 lety +30

      What about REAPER?

    • @chikoavena3407
      @chikoavena3407 Před 2 lety +11

      I play without fuzz with ardour, my guitars and my microkorg work just fine.
      Currently running debian.

    • @vektor451
      @vektor451 Před 2 lety

      same

  • @DarkNRGDragon
    @DarkNRGDragon Před 2 lety +708

    Using Windows or Linux boils down to two things for me: Windows software compatibility and anti-cheat. I use Linux on my laptops and Windows on my gaming machine. Hopefully Proton will get some quantum leaps in development once Steam Deck comes out.

    • @sugarskulllyfe5890
      @sugarskulllyfe5890 Před 2 lety +10

      Yup that's what we can hope for... I feel like steam pushed the ball so hopefully it follows through

    • @KookoCraft
      @KookoCraft Před 2 lety +4

      Gamer cope

    • @deadmagnet6318
      @deadmagnet6318 Před 2 lety +6

      The most popular anti cheats work now tho... BUT GODDAMN IT VALORANT DOESNT WORK (im a full linux user)

    • @lambofields1913
      @lambofields1913 Před 2 lety +1

      @The Cat ...Mind giving me some recommendations on good story based games? Something for me to look forward to since I'm gonna start learning this ubuntu thing since I'm getting tired of the issues with windows. It's starting to give me the zuckerborg vibe recently

    • @MrMediator24
      @MrMediator24 Před 2 lety +1

      As long as DXVK/Proton doesn't implement fully DirectX memory management it'll be borked in terms of performance

  • @Bustermachine
    @Bustermachine Před 2 lety +1

    I appreciate the sentiment. As someone who has dabbled a bit in command line and done some (very basic) computer coding, I'm not against getting deeper into Linux. But I would definitely like to start with something that, more or less, works out of the box and then expand my toolkit as needed.

  • @mrcomment6035
    @mrcomment6035 Před 10 měsíci +7

    One thing, that you might've shown to the new users is how to install software via a GUI software centre, since many people might struggle with the terminal being text only, spitting out dependencies, etc. and installing via a web page is not really showing the beauty of secure software installation. That's how you do it on windows, downloading viruses from sketchy websites. Otherwise a great introduction!

  • @chantalwiebe534
    @chantalwiebe534 Před 2 lety +343

    "There's no three secret tips, there's only one:
    - make sure it's popular
    - make sure it's well supported
    - have a good time."

    • @inscrutablemungus4143
      @inscrutablemungus4143 Před rokem +17

      It's like a bash/perl one-liner. It's one sentence, but does as much as three!

    • @linuxization4205
      @linuxization4205 Před rokem +2

      @@inscrutablemungus4143 It's in x86 asm one liner, it's one line, but in ARM it does much as three!

    • @cookieface80
      @cookieface80 Před rokem +1

      Linux Mint is all of those things and it was awful.

    • @beardsntools
      @beardsntools Před 6 měsíci +1

      That's windows and main reason why it's the best os. Windows is the only OS that you can literally throw anything at it and it's like "OK lets do it" Fuck linux xD

    • @sorbpen
      @sorbpen Před 6 měsíci

      @@cookieface80 It was never popular... so what are you talking about? Popular as a linux distro perhaps, but that's like beeing the biggest fish in a barrel of autists.

  • @lion6379
    @lion6379 Před 2 lety +589

    Linux probably will be greater in the future but windows is a lot more comfortable and has been for a decade or so, once Linux goes beyond mainstream then people might start considering it as a permanent option.

    • @thingsiplay
      @thingsiplay Před 2 lety +18

      Linux is more comfortable.

    • @ProtossOP
      @ProtossOP Před 2 lety +135

      “Linux will be greater in the future” was being said for the last 20 years. Linux Desktop is still going to be shit if distro developers won’t start standardising how things should work and look across ALL distros.

    • @LetrixAR
      @LetrixAR Před 2 lety +70

      @@ProtossOP this, this is my biggest problem with Linux: lack of standardization

    • @thekrampuselbananoquevivee9947
      @thekrampuselbananoquevivee9947 Před 2 lety +19

      @@thingsiplay Not at all

    • @tenaar
      @tenaar Před 2 lety +93

      @@thingsiplay Yes it's more comfortable... For us, who know how to use it. In reality, Linux is prohibitively complicated for beginners. Even distros like Ubuntu.
      The day you can do everything in the system without needing to open the terminal once, is the day you can say that the system is comfortable.
      Even in Ubuntu, you will run into needing to open the terminal within the first couple of days of use at the latest & that is unacceptable. That's not comfortable at all, that's burying the end user in sudos and ls' and apt-gets which should all be completely unnecessary.
      And all the tutorials operate in the console, when they should instead show people how to use the UI.
      For an operating system to be considered good for the general population, most users shouldn't even know that the terminal is a thing.

  • @624static
    @624static Před 2 lety +6

    For people looking to get into Linux, try using it on a cheap old laptop and just get a feel for it on there

    • @blackhawk65589
      @blackhawk65589 Před 2 lety

      They dont even have to that. They could liveCD or Live USB

    • @b-doi1211
      @b-doi1211 Před rokem +1

      @@blackhawk65589 or a VM idk

  • @educosta21
    @educosta21 Před rokem +2

    Great video! The problem for me is that Dell sometimes releases bios updates with windows installers only.

    • @gost
      @gost Před 5 měsíci

      Dual boot is a must-have-option if you want to use your PC at full scale.

  • @R34S0N3R
    @R34S0N3R Před 2 lety +1118

    Yeah, unfortunately for gaming, windows has the most support, and is the most well known OS. Despite the fact that for coding, Linux is the goat for me, I still prefer Windows for more gaming/casual things. It is easier to use than Linux imo

  • @eld1rt
    @eld1rt Před 2 lety +873

    I agree with Muta in principle, but let's be honest... Linux is largely for computer enthusiasts. Those who know what they're doing. Most people who use le 'poot are casual users i.e. not coders, not technological whiz kids, and who go to their IT department at work to solve even the most minor of inconveniences. If something goes wrong on Linux, people have to do the trouble-shooting themselves. Sure there are fabulous communities that post regularly to forums and are more than willing to help out fledgling Linux users, but let's be real... For most people? That's just too much effort and kind of annoying. People want things that work out of the box and, if something DOES go wrong, they have a fall guy who will pick up the pieces and fix everything for them. Most Linux distributions are fantastic and often times more stable than Windows, don't get me wrong! But, without that fall guy, without that clear line of financial responsibility, for most? It's a no-go. You are asking a lot from people if you expect them to go from paid services, which comes with all the legal requisites you'd expect, to freeware OS (Yes some distributions are sold, but most aren't. And yes some distributors do have support available, but again most won't have the infrastructure in place to help people in all the ways that Windows can). Also, as others have mentioned, Linux is in NO WAY as user-friendly as windows... If you think it is? You're the non-casual user I was just talking about and, although I'm happy you're having a great experience, those experiences are not going to translate over to nearly as many people as you think they will.
    Sidenote: Muta your point about terminal is null because, although Windows has clickable directives to do things instead of just having Linux terminal and that's it, you said it... They have PowerShell i.e. command prompts too? Those clickable buttons, pages, software etc etc are for those who require a user-friendly straightforward OS. If you don't need that and you're a power user? Well, use PowerShell then. No one is stopping you.
    (From both a casual Windows and Linux user, lmao)

    • @digitalcyclone7218
      @digitalcyclone7218 Před 2 lety +90

      to be fair I think the total freedom about linux distros is both a good and bad thing.
      on one hand, if you know what you're doing: *it's fucking awesome*! because you can essentially do whatever you want without having to negotiate with the operating system. you are quite literally the god of it and thus the only limit is your imagination. not to mention how it's also more secure than windows with the permission system for instance, where instead of it being "are you admin or not", you can instead modify the read, write, and execute flags directly for even better customization.
      but on the other hand, like you said...the "if you know what you're doing" bit.

    • @AtracBreezy
      @AtracBreezy Před 2 lety +55

      Yeah are people forgetting you can literally use PowerShell to make Windows your bitch?

    • @eld1rt
      @eld1rt Před 2 lety +70

      @@digitalcyclone7218 Exactly! I think in time Linux will be comparable to Windows. We are just not at that point yet. And, although I respect Muta, he is literally a power user... I think he forgets that most people are unwilling to do all the legwork that Linux requires. I personally think it's fun! But, I'd be lying if I said it was my main desktop. I still want/need a computer that can play all my games, run mainstream software, and that I know is user-friendly and that I can rely on when I need a simple experience. I'd love to go Linux full time but, right now - with the lack of support for various programs and, of course, its infamous gaming issues - it's just not viable for me.

    • @psygreg
      @psygreg Před 2 lety +41

      @@eld1rt ​ honestly I think that will never happen. As Digital Cyclone above said, the distros are both the blessing and the curse of Linux - a blessing for enthusiasts, and a curse for pretty much everyone else. I work as a video/photo editor and I simply can't switch over because there are no warranties that the software I need can reliably run there, and most of the professional-grade softwares for these jobs don't have Linux versions because the inconsistencies between distros don't allow them to build a version for Linux that could be profitable, because they wouldn't be able to guarantee it would work for every distro around. Unless Linux goes through a very unlikely consolidation proccess into a single or a handful of distros, it will never be truly challenging Windows (or Mac) for position.

    • @axea4554
      @axea4554 Před 2 lety +43

      I agree, linux is difficult to use for many people, and no, linux enthusiasts and elitists, you can't justify it, it's just hard to use for many people, it doesn't get easier to use if it's more private, it just not easy and you can't do anything about it. you can't just say windows is trash and linux is way better and expect people to move to linux like it's the only way. linux is hard to use. (for me it's easy but I know the frustration)

  • @farolito74
    @farolito74 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice straightforward content sir. Subscribed

  • @AOKONE
    @AOKONE Před 2 lety +5

    The Koala is taunting me.

  • @mason6300
    @mason6300 Před 2 lety +719

    The biggest problem with Linux support currently comes from multiplayer game developers. Given how Linux operates it's hard for them to monitor other system resources for cheat software so they have a hard time supporting it for anything beyond single-player games. Maybe valve can solve the issue with their upcoming anti-cheat stuff but it will take some time for the big guys to want to test it on their AAA titles.

    • @CAEC64
      @CAEC64 Před 2 lety +104

      mfw some pvp minecraft servers does a better job at detecting cheats than clientside anticheats + clientside ac sucks because people eventually find a way to fully bypass it

    • @multivitamin7
      @multivitamin7 Před 2 lety +8

      @@CAEC64 badlion anticheat is pretty great isn’t it?

    • @chrisl8527
      @chrisl8527 Před 2 lety +5

      enter vm

    • @TheDagger55
      @TheDagger55 Před 2 lety +11

      @@multivitamin7 I remember being banned for using an autoclicker xD

    • @Riskable3DPrinting
      @Riskable3DPrinting Před 2 lety +55

      A fundamental aspect of information security is, "never trust the client." Yet that's exactly how client-side anti-cheat mechanisms work. They're security theater, not real security. If you think they actually stop cheating you're living in a fantasy world.
      I don't think there's a conspiracy between Microsoft/Epic/game publishers to keep people on Windows with these basically useless client-side anti-cheat tools but I wouldn't put it past them based on their history of monopolistic and--in the case of Epic--severe and illogical anti-Linux bias.

  • @ihatethesensors
    @ihatethesensors Před 2 lety +1517

    I switched to Linux a few years ago and honestly, Windows feels like living in somebody else's house but Linux feels like home to me.

    • @fergusof
      @fergusof Před 2 lety +151

      I've been using Windows for a few years and Linux feels like living in someone else's house.

    • @MdRagibHasan
      @MdRagibHasan Před 2 lety +76

      Ha ha ha..... I dont have a house... Bcz now i am using Android and hacker is using my phon to watch me and to control me

    • @gurucharanvemuru1098
      @gurucharanvemuru1098 Před 2 lety +2

      @@MdRagibHasan lol

    • @MdRagibHasan
      @MdRagibHasan Před 2 lety

      @@gurucharanvemuru1098 lu lu

    • @libremercadoencrisiseconom2118
      @libremercadoencrisiseconom2118 Před 2 lety +1

      @@fergusof did you use Debian based right?

  • @DaeXeaD
    @DaeXeaD Před 6 měsíci +2

    I've used Linux for over 10 years. I install Linux, then select what I want to have installed. With windows, I uninstall what I don't want, then install what I want.

  • @none941
    @none941 Před 2 lety +8

    I'm not a gamer, but I have run linux since it was sold at my local CompUSA store, circa 1997. Been using linux ever since, and prefer Debian/Ubuntu/Mint. I'm running Ubuntu 21.10 on an RPi4B-4GB as my everyday desktop. Thank you for showing folks how easy Linux can really be. Your approach is excellent. Keep teaching!

    • @ForOdinAndAsgard
      @ForOdinAndAsgard Před 6 měsíci +2

      There is no need to tell us you are not a PC gamer as you do not even own a PC. You own a rather slow ARM SBC which has no dedicated GPU. You could pull some retro gaming off using emulators but AAA games are never going to run on your system.

    • @kwando472
      @kwando472 Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@ForOdinAndAsgard A PC or a COMPUTER is a COMPUTING device which can COMPUTE or CALCULATE tasks for us. So yes he owns a PC he is not a gamer as he said and there is no need for you to be a dick.

    • @ForOdinAndAsgard
      @ForOdinAndAsgard Před 5 měsíci

      @@kwando472 The Raspberry PI 4 is not powerful enough to replace a PC. However much you want it to be the RPI is not a PC. It is a telephone chip. Let's not forget that ARM Linux does not have licenses of certain codex including RPM so most streaming services (Like Netflix and Disney +) will not work.

  • @LunaStar666
    @LunaStar666 Před 2 lety +475

    I'm so tempting to try out Linux one day and thank you Muta for making the introduction of Linux look so inviting and easy to use no matter what level of understanding that the person has.
    *Wow! I wasn't expecting my comment to make this much traction! Thank you for all the responses to this message!

    • @maxqi3729
      @maxqi3729 Před 2 lety +9

      If you only want to try it out, then it's pretty easy. You can boot into a live usb and see if everything you need works and you can experiment with different desktop environments/distros. It's not that big of a commitment.

    • @LunaStar666
      @LunaStar666 Před 2 lety +3

      @@maxqi3729 I was thinking about doing this myself.

    • @Its_Insidious
      @Its_Insidious Před 2 lety +8

      @@LunaStar666 Live usb won't format any disks unless you tell it too so i recommend trying it out.

    • @LunaStar666
      @LunaStar666 Před 2 lety

      @@yoriichitsugikuni4539 I have the original USB with W10 when I bought my PC

    • @userfibonnachi
      @userfibonnachi Před 2 lety +6

      @@yoriichitsugikuni4539
      Instructions unclear
      Deleted windows
      Yes this just happened to me while I was downloading Ubuntu, I don't regret it since it was windows 8 and not even an activated one

  • @ole2107
    @ole2107 Před 2 lety +157

    Imagine being married for 5 years and getting a ball razor for Christmas

  • @jnickence
    @jnickence Před 2 lety

    nice tutorial. I like your banter. no nonsense!

  • @df0rce
    @df0rce Před 2 lety

    Its a joy to watch your vidz and very informative too. High five!

  • @alexklein455
    @alexklein455 Před 2 lety +1026

    Problem with Linux isn't that it's complicated. It's that 90% of the time it won't support the software and hardware you want/need.

    • @EllySensei
      @EllySensei Před 2 lety +56

      Yes and no, well, for pc parts, theres already a driver for that and it's technically widely supported, and the ones that dont have a built-in driver from the kernel, can just be installed independently
      For peripherals on the other hand, you most likely need to find a community alternative, and follow the instructions of course. That's how it becomes complicated.

    • @bmn
      @bmn Před 2 lety +21

      I haven’t heard of much not working, besides they’re are Linux softwares that run windows files.

    • @ShivamJha00
      @ShivamJha00 Před 2 lety +12

      Not even close to 90% but yes it's a real problem

    • @mao5170
      @mao5170 Před 2 lety +56

      It's the other way around. It's not that Linux doesn't want to support it: it's the companies of that unsupported software chose to not support it. Linux is free and open source. They can give support to it without paying Linux royalties or licensing fees.

    • @mammose8760
      @mammose8760 Před 2 lety +18

      >90%
      If it were 2011 then this would be true, but now a days a lot of software is comptable(expect for the adobe suit but their is alternatives to that)

  • @KyogresHideout_Vegito2121
    @KyogresHideout_Vegito2121 Před 2 lety +372

    As a lifelong Windows user dating as far back as Windows 98 I'm very tempted to make the switch now. Windows 11 just might be the final straw for me.

    • @Artimidorus
      @Artimidorus Před 2 lety +44

      Yeah.. I went back to 98 after going to ME, I skipped Vista, but otherwise? I have been on the cutting edge and beta testing for every Windows since 3.11. Windows 11 offends me with it's existence after all the promises MS made. This should have been 10 Plus+ or something. I'm going to stick to 10 for a while and might go to Linux after if needed, but I really don't like 11. Not even just for the stupidity of changes to go graphics, but removal of various system settings and removal of ability to customize the OS to what I need. They even 'patched' a regedit to put the start menu back... what even was the sense of that?
      :(

    • @opensourceis9996
      @opensourceis9996 Před 2 lety +13

      Please please do. You won’t regret it. Sure there might be elitists, but most of the people you’ll find will be helpful

    • @V1CT1MIZED
      @V1CT1MIZED Před 2 lety +13

      @@Artimidorus what windows 11 has done to 10 is the same as what 7 did to vista. Linux constantly tries to reinvent the wheel instead of getting the fundamentals right. If you switch you will quickly realise that the grass isn’t greener. So go for it and you’ll see.

    • @SomeRandomPiggo
      @SomeRandomPiggo Před 2 lety +11

      @@V1CT1MIZED have you used anything except windows lmaoo, its retarded to say "linux" (im guessing you're thinking about something like ubuntu) tries to reinvent the wheel when literally the only thing that defines an os for most people the de which you can pick anyway. want a windows like experience? use cinnamon. want cinnamon with tons of eyecandy? use kde. customization is the bread and butter of linux in general

    • @murphy1138
      @murphy1138 Před 2 lety +5

      Why though? If you have used it for 20 years it’s doing well. Unless it’s doing something that you don’t like your just going to piss yourself off if you use Ubuntu or another distro for anything other than the base install.

  • @marcasswellbmd6922
    @marcasswellbmd6922 Před 2 lety +3

    One of many reasons why a lot of people don't even try to get their feet wet with Linux is because they do get attacked when asking questions from the know it all Linux community, so I do appreciate you saying that..

  • @wilh3lmmusic
    @wilh3lmmusic Před 4 měsíci +2

    You missed the opportunity of mentioning two distros whose names are both common ice cream flavors: Vanilla (a newer immutable distro) and Mint (Ubuntu-based, with a UI very similar to Windows)

  • @Faust_YT
    @Faust_YT Před 2 lety +234

    I'm still using Windows because of the overwhelming game support.
    If Linux (someday) finally catch up I will migrate asap.

    • @sylv256
      @sylv256 Před 2 lety +6

      You’re missing out, but I understand if you don’t want to do a windows VM and everything.

    • @V1CT1MIZED
      @V1CT1MIZED Před 2 lety +52

      @@sylv256 you’re missing out on games and peak performance. Plus it’s just a matter of time till anti cheat block VMs

    • @kasperdomagala4544
      @kasperdomagala4544 Před 2 lety +9

      @@V1CT1MIZED games run faster via Linux, at least in my school experience. DXVK makes some shitty PC ports run faster fo some reason.

    • @kynanverwimp847
      @kynanverwimp847 Před 2 lety +12

      Most games run on Linux very well using Steam Proton, problem is that Proton doesn't go well along with anti cheat engines

    • @aeyde
      @aeyde Před 2 lety +5

      yeah windows solitaire is sadly not supported on linux

  • @PoptartParasol
    @PoptartParasol Před 2 lety +392

    The problem that always stops my switch over is simply the lack of products supporting linux versions.
    I am a writer and use Scrivener almost exclusively. Programs like Wine do a good job at trying to port over more popular programs for artists (mostly games tho lol), but it seems scrivner is pretty unfocused on. Really sucks, but its the only program I cant compromise on

    • @ashtiboy
      @ashtiboy Před 2 lety +3

      welp its almost the same on mac os x too like me but at lest linux and mac os x do get along very well sense they both are forks of some kind of unix linux system thats interchangeable! wine is a good example of how mac os x and linux code cross interacting with windows kernel

    • @tvvoty
      @tvvoty Před 2 lety +6

      Manuskript, bibisco, and Emacs have similar functionality. Don't know how they compare, though, never used them or scrivner itself. Apparently scrivner version for Linux was abandoned, but it seems it does run in wine.

    • @tvvoty
      @tvvoty Před 2 lety +2

      I remember there was a dude who switched to Linux specifically for writing and made videos about it, I'll link the videos if I find them.

    • @tvvoty
      @tvvoty Před 2 lety +4

      Why does youtube delete my comments but not spammers' tf is that

    • @mparagames
      @mparagames Před 2 lety +5

      @@ashtiboy macOs and linux are completely diffferennt software, their source code is notyt really correlated, they aren't forks of a same previous software or anything like that.
      What happens is that both linux and macOs are *unix-like* systems; in other words, they both follow the unix philosophy, and most of the unix-like specifications, including stuff like basic shell commands and file hierachy, etc.; which is something windows doesn't do

  • @johnsmith2335
    @johnsmith2335 Před 2 lety +5

    The limits to games is the only reason i haven’t switched over fully to linux. I run dual-boot and i suggest doing this to anyone who plays games, but would like to start using linux as well!

    • @humansvd3269
      @humansvd3269 Před 6 měsíci

      Wine

    • @kurasibe8405
      @kurasibe8405 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@humansvd3269you can't run anticheat games over wine

    • @quieselwusul3717
      @quieselwusul3717 Před 5 měsíci

      90% of games can be plqyed on linux with proton, the rest is because of Anticheat not working

  • @zensoredparagonbytes3985
    @zensoredparagonbytes3985 Před 2 lety +2

    Fiddling in a Virtual Machine with any Linux distro is the best way to come acquainted with it. Increasing your windows virtual ram could help to make it run on a acceptable level.

  • @tdbuniverse
    @tdbuniverse Před 2 lety +190

    Muta: "You should stop using windows."
    Me, an MMO player: "Yeahhhh about them anticheats though...

    • @revelmonger
      @revelmonger Před 2 lety

      I don't get it. Does windows enable multiboxing

    • @zac1497
      @zac1497 Před 2 lety +16

      @UCjuI5PYwggtSNNxOn8ByAcw That's not quite right. It's closer to anti-cheat thinking virtualization is cheating. Which unfortunately is what happen when you use Proton or Wine. Some anti-cheats even recognize virtualized Windows as cheating. I think Muta had that issue with R6 some time ago

    • @traxcanonch.2421
      @traxcanonch.2421 Před 2 lety +1

      Zaphael. Have you watch the whole video yet? He explained it at the end.

    • @altus3278
      @altus3278 Před 2 lety +4

      Anticheats are basically viruses. Why would you install a virus to play an online game

    • @1ProAssassin
      @1ProAssassin Před 2 lety

      @@zac1497 I thought they've fixed that for Proton fairly recently. Or maybe it's in the Proton beta version only. I remember reading that it was in a patch note for it.

  • @FloatingSunfish
    @FloatingSunfish Před 2 lety +800

    I'd like to thank the Linux community for giving people a great OS option that rivals Windows and MacOS for *_free!_*

    • @jeffreypaiyd8295
      @jeffreypaiyd8295 Před 2 lety +61

      @CreativeUnoriginals no shit

    • @MC-BOT
      @MC-BOT Před 2 lety +20

      It doesn't rival anything lol linux is ass

    • @FloatingSunfish
      @FloatingSunfish Před 2 lety +80

      @@MC-BOT Come now, no need to start an OS war in the comment section.
      Every OS has its pros and cons and we should respect everyone's choices to stick with one and not the other.
      I do wish Windows would stop having more bugs and get more stable though.

    • @narwhal4304
      @narwhal4304 Před 2 lety +38

      @@MC-BOT You haven't used Linux have you?

    • @Gigachad-mc5qz
      @Gigachad-mc5qz Před 2 lety +53

      @@MC-BOT lmao 1: no bloat
      2: no spyware
      3: no backdoors
      4: free
      5: open source
      6: efficient to use
      7: you own your computer, not microsoft or apple

  • @dogearooski
    @dogearooski Před 7 měsíci +4

    Crazy that you don't have to install almost any drivers. Coming from a Windows user it just seemed like it was needed if you wanted stuff to work. I didn't believe it. lmao

    • @secinject814
      @secinject814 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Yeah but sommeetiimes you might need to find a missing dependency or fix a library, but honestly thats rare.
      I run ParrotOS which is a pen testing OS based off Debian. I can't get Steam running because of missing dependencies and other problems. Maybe itd be easier on Ubuntu, or i have some security binary fucking things up, but yeah, i'd much rather just dual-boot and game from Windows at the moment. Idc how much progress has been made, gaming from Windows is still 10x easier

    • @dogearooski
      @dogearooski Před 2 měsíci +1

      @secinject814 I just use windows for now. If Linux gets good gaming support let alone vr support

  • @AngelCopout
    @AngelCopout Před 2 lety +75

    Sadly I think I'll always be the weirdo in my group who uses TempleOS

  • @endlessdrive8421
    @endlessdrive8421 Před 2 lety +187

    I used to use Ubuntu on all my refurbished PCs I built from parts laying around my house. It worked great for all the basics and kept an otherwise outdated PC running reasonably well. Although I'm not likely to use Linux on a main desktop (unless it gets more native support) anything old I throw together, Ubuntu is my go to Linux distro.

    • @_-iictdii-_4961
      @_-iictdii-_4961 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kreuner11 or arch with LXDE or LXQt if you want that KDE feeling. I use arch, btw.

    • @zRussh
      @zRussh Před 2 lety +1

      @@_-iictdii-_4961 i just started my own pc build but i got a long way to go because i didnt understand shit u said bro .. one day .

    • @lilernecgs7946
      @lilernecgs7946 Před 2 lety

      @@zRussh arch - linux distribution
      KDE - display manager. you just have to think about linux as a console; everything goes through it, just like the old days with MSDOS. but there are some gangster applications like KDE that can be used as display managers and give your computer all of the visuals and stuff. if you don't like how "linux" looks, just change the display manager, it's simple as that.

    • @sebastianwendl603
      @sebastianwendl603 Před 2 lety +1

      @@zRussh No worries, Muta got your back. The way he explains it is pretty noob-friendly, which is exactly what you need when switching to linux. Don't bother with technical details until you need them, so you can learn in small steps and not get overwhelmed.
      And to make life more convenient, look at the desktop environment before installing. There are usually a few per distro (see their websites, you can download differnt versions and see images of how it will look). I personally run Linux Mint with cinnamon desktop, because beautiful.
      So: decide on a distro (ubuntu is fine, but there are many that may work), then decide on the desktop you like most. Tadaaaaaaa: You got yourself an OS. Really no magic here

    • @askeladden450
      @askeladden450 Před 2 lety

      I mean, you did use one the most bloated Linux distro, somewhat defeating the purpose. I would have used lubuntu or a puppy variant.

  • @southpark159753
    @southpark159753 Před 10 měsíci +2

    The problem with using balina etcher is that when you format the drive you have to disk part, list disk, select disk, clean, mark active to get the full drive size back. Whats better is a program called "ventoy" can boot 20 different distros from the same grub

    • @RedSaint83
      @RedSaint83 Před 10 měsíci

      Ventoy is very nice, and I can only recommend you leave some extra space for loose files you might want to keep on the side.

  • @Lord_OGRE
    @Lord_OGRE Před 2 lety +3

    Linus: pirates windows and admits it
    Also Linus: don’t use ad blocker it’s pirating

    • @theislandlife247
      @theislandlife247 Před 2 lety

      How does he pirate windows?

    • @zatozatoichi7920
      @zatozatoichi7920 Před 2 lety

      You don't have to pirate it. You can use Windows 10 LEGALLY without an activation key, if you can tolerate a water mark and some restrictions in (mostly visual) settings.

  • @meshmesh5413
    @meshmesh5413 Před 2 lety +743

    If valve can pull off steam play, I’m literally going to switch in a heartbeat

    • @remasteredretropcgames3312
      @remasteredretropcgames3312 Před 2 lety +8

      Bro just wait until I deck out the Deck on windows.

    • @chimimiiiii
      @chimimiiiii Před 2 lety +27

      well it works

    • @killertruth186
      @killertruth186 Před 2 lety +7

      @@remasteredretropcgames3312 It already on Steam itself.

    • @gam3kid
      @gam3kid Před 2 lety +15

      @@absolutelyproprietary6896 dual boot makes the system slower in my experience of doing it in 3 computers

    • @absolutelyproprietary6896
      @absolutelyproprietary6896 Před 2 lety +58

      @@gam3kid No it doesn't because only one os is running at a time. It could even make your pc faster because since OS partition shrinks, filesystem runs faster. Stop believing everything you read on the internet "Gam3kid"

  • @nichooooo2748
    @nichooooo2748 Před 2 lety +197

    Muta: "People use windows for one main reason"
    Muta: *lists two reasons*

    • @megami215
      @megami215 Před 2 lety +3

      even tho 90 percent of computers need windows to even turn on. but yea hes so smart.

    • @hulkmt
      @hulkmt Před 2 lety +51

      @@megami215 what?

    • @tellmywifiloveher6474
      @tellmywifiloveher6474 Před 2 lety +67

      @@megami215 ... friend, i think you may have a fundamental misunderstanding of computers

    • @ninaosuspam7805
      @ninaosuspam7805 Před 2 lety +34

      @@megami215 ... do you.. understand computers?

    • @FallingPicturesProductions
      @FallingPicturesProductions Před 2 lety +5

      @@megami215 I love how your joke, as misworded as it was, went over the head of everyone else.

  • @belvederebaileycambodia
    @belvederebaileycambodia Před 5 měsíci +1

    F*ck...no wonder you have 3.63 mil subscribers. Good value, laughs, informative and very helpful. Got it in one, man !!
    Cheers from Aussie in Cambodia :)

  • @fob9115
    @fob9115 Před 6 měsíci +7

    This is a great video, however, I do think Mint is the better option than Ubuntu for first-time users. They're incredibly similar distros, as both are debian-based. Mint has a bit of a cleaner and more simplistic interface with the default Cinnamon desktop imo. But mostly the resource usage on Mint is better than Ubuntu, which is why I tend to lean towards it as my recommendation for new users, especially if your computer doesn't have too much processing power or RAM.

    • @brandonnotsowise2640
      @brandonnotsowise2640 Před 5 měsíci

      Cinammon is alright, but I prefer the mint chip.

    • @TimeTravelingFetus
      @TimeTravelingFetus Před 5 měsíci

      Agreed. Mint is comfy. I eventually switched out of it as I got more used to the system, but it's the first distro that didn't make me utterly confused.

  • @MrHitmancheg
    @MrHitmancheg Před 2 lety +214

    The thing about Linux is that for most users this journey starts and ends the moment they realise their software and/or hardware doesn't work on Linux out of the box because barely anyone supports Linux, so they'll bail. That's the sad reality.
    On a side note, I would argue that Linux Mint is a better beginning distro. It has more Windows-like interface, and is based on Ubuntu.

    • @ShakyaMukhopadhyay
      @ShakyaMukhopadhyay Před 2 lety +4

      Kubuntu is one as well... Its just Ubuntu with KDE... Looks & operates like windows & you can still refer to the general Ubuntu community for troubleshooting.

    • @Rafa-fc9rh
      @Rafa-fc9rh Před 2 lety +4

      I'm a fan of Mint however I can see his point. Ubuntu has some great features and looks and feel polished. Corporations if they use linux it is Ubuntu, so for the best begining experience Ubuntu is the right choice especially for mac users. But I installed my mom linux Mint and she loved it.

    • @Phreakazoid_
      @Phreakazoid_ Před 2 lety +1

      Mint was my first Linux OS, totally agree with you, it’s a very easy switch.

    • @R-502
      @R-502 Před 2 lety +1

      I set up mint the night before this dropped and I haven't run into too many issues for just browsing and I'm liking it

    • @TheKeksadler
      @TheKeksadler Před 2 lety +2

      most of their *specialized* software/hardware. linux typically has alternative software (albeit there may be noticeable QoL differences) and most basic hardware works right out of the box.

  • @JesseNeckred
    @JesseNeckred Před 2 lety +352

    About gaming, one thing many don't consider is they're expecting Windows games to work on Linux. It's honestly amazing the amount of support that's available considering. It's only going to get better.

    • @rahulmenon4357
      @rahulmenon4357 Před 2 lety +66

      Most devs nowadays feel that it is too much to expect Windows games to run on Windows.

    • @defme
      @defme Před 2 lety +9

      The cool thing is, proton is very well built by Valve, so most windows STEAM games should work on linux

    • @madlad9822
      @madlad9822 Před 2 lety +7

      I honestly hope to see a linex based OS that runs games as well as Windows with equal support.

    • @defme
      @defme Před 2 lety +7

      @@madlad9822 that is technically not possible, unless they find out something myraculaud in the system

    • @bobbybologna3029
      @bobbybologna3029 Před 2 lety +8

      DXVK runs most games better on linux, it even runs games better on windows, anyone who says the gaming isn't up to par at this point just has no idea what they're doing. The ONLY hiccup we have nowadays is anti-cheat and DX12, the former because those companies don't currently support linux, and the latter is because well DX12 doesn't run well on Windows either, thankfully because of that very few developers even bother using it.

  • @clarencemanuel7902
    @clarencemanuel7902 Před 2 lety +2

    Switching to linux was one of the most fun I've ever had, yes it's not flawless, it broke on me it a few times because of what I did but that's expected because it's so open. However, since most the crucial applications I use don't support Linux (Ms Office, Adobe, etc) I can't fully commit to it. I tried dual booting for 3 months but it's just not worth the trouble of maintaining 2 operating systems, so I switched back to windows. However, as a CS student, I do miss the terminal on linux. Fortunately there's this WSL2 which virtualizes a linux distro on Windows.

  • @rebelcrusader9973
    @rebelcrusader9973 Před 6 měsíci +4

    I've used Linux before (many years ago) and went back to Windows. I didn't find the advantages of Linux strong enough to justify its trade offs. As a developer, designer, and sound producer, I've tried the 3 main plainforms and I found Windows unmatched in terms of comfort and software availability. I'm just glad there are other options people can choose from; to each his own.

    • @Ncloud
      @Ncloud Před 5 měsíci +1

      Linux is easier to setup for programming environments although better in virtual machines

  • @user-vp8qq3ev7m
    @user-vp8qq3ev7m Před 2 lety +191

    Muta has slowly gotten more extreame when it comes to windows lol

  • @MrNyagasu
    @MrNyagasu Před 2 lety +35

    Gaming is the only reason I still use Windows.
    Yes, I know about wine and proton, but anti-cheat software doesnt cooperate with it.

    • @yamibow7176
      @yamibow7176 Před 2 lety +13

      @@apteryx1239 Well once it does I'll think about changing then. However Im not losing my main use for me pc lol

    • @wertiaaudit5746
      @wertiaaudit5746 Před 2 lety +1

      Minecraft is supported on Linux, just recreate fortnight in minecraft

    • @zettaxy8547
      @zettaxy8547 Před 2 lety +2

      Well, not only that, but certain games just aren't the same. FFXIV wasn't a smooth experience for me due to random framerate issues, and I had input lag in Melty Blood. I reinstalled windows even though I would prefer to keep using linux, the last thing I want after a long day at work is to have a less than optimal experience.

  • @ecjb1969
    @ecjb1969 Před 10 měsíci

    For making a bootable USB drive, I use Ventoy. All I have to do is to copy as many ISO (or other disk type) images onto the flash drive. Ventoy then provides a menu to select which disc image to boot. It supports both UEFI and CSM (BIOS) booting.

    • @ForOdinAndAsgard
      @ForOdinAndAsgard Před 6 měsíci

      Ventoy often has problems with creating correct loopbacks which in turn fumble your installer.

  • @denizkendirci
    @denizkendirci Před rokem +1

    i'm trying out the single gpu passthrough setup for gaming and adobe suite apps. honestly, there isn't much difference in performance so far. alternatively, you can install your secondary operating system on a sata ssd and use it with sata to usb converter as an external device to boot into whenever you need. good thing about creating a gpu passthrough windows virtual machine is that it allows me to install windows 11 even though my laptop does not support it, but in a vm, you can emulate tpm 2.0 etc.

  • @RTHWLDN
    @RTHWLDN Před 2 lety +797

    If there was a way to install drivers for Elgato 4K60 Pro and Wave XLR, I would switch right away..

    • @blyaticon8190
      @blyaticon8190 Před 2 lety +38

      most sound devices work out of the box (like my Focusrite Scarlett 2i2), the Elgato (is it a capture card) could also work out of the box, Linux has almost all drivers that are available already in the system itself

    • @soledfamily
      @soledfamily Před 2 lety +8

      I see no point of even using Elgato products if it forces your frame rate on your side to go to 60 fps horrible… unless ur on a shitty console

    • @Silverhazey_
      @Silverhazey_ Před 2 lety +20

      @@soledfamily ...forces your frame rate to 60? what the fuck are you talking about with this one? I use a mostly all Elgato setup with my 240hz monitor and am not "locked" in any way.

    • @soledfamily
      @soledfamily Před 2 lety +2

      @@Silverhazey_I forgot the new Elgatos are a capture card you plug-in so it does not do that. The old ones do.

    • @lulzsec669
      @lulzsec669 Před 2 lety +2

      Ya I get that some distros have little things that are annoying for some users like a distro where it gives u a dummy audio output so you have no audio or if the distro dosnt support your graphics driver so if you have a 4k system everything is tiny and you can't change the display unless you screw around with xrandr for a bit or there's the distros that don't detect your wifi card but all these problems mainly occur if you have decently new hard ware to where developers havnt released support for the distro but shouldn't run into this if you have a older system but that's why I'm getting rid of my 4k laptop for an older laptop so I dont have to fix these problems all the time cuz distro hoppin is a terrible addiction

  • @_The_God_King_
    @_The_God_King_ Před 2 lety +46

    As someone completely new to linux myself. The best solution to get me to trying it out was running it in a virtual machine, that way I keep my windows 10 for normal use since im fairly versed at it but can open an app and boot a fake computer running whatever flavor of distro id like. I use VirtualBox for my vm's.

    • @SuperFx89
      @SuperFx89 Před 2 lety +9

      Once you've chosen a distro, you could try dual boot, using a 2nd drive for your Linux installation. This way, you could still run apps and play games you can't get going on Linux and you will not curse so much when it crashes on you. If you decide to go back to Windows, you can use that 2nd drive for additional storage.

    • @lulzsec669
      @lulzsec669 Před 2 lety

      Just duel boot more and more distros support it now and give u options to duel boot instead of having to partition the duel boot manually I use qubes os so I'm good with what I got don't need no virtual box 🤣

    • @alkaupadhyay7650
      @alkaupadhyay7650 Před 2 lety

      @@lulzsec669 qubes os, bruh.

  • @relaxingtime4757
    @relaxingtime4757 Před 2 měsíci

    After using Rufus and Booting into the installation for it to crash, I saw your video and used etcher instead.. everything works now. Thank you

    • @BoniMayne
      @BoniMayne Před 2 měsíci

      You could’ve also used the boot menu and turn on legacy booting without secure boot but glad it works for you

  • @sagivalia5041
    @sagivalia5041 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Every time I tried installing windows, there was an issue, one time it didn't recognize the SSD after it had ubuntu on it(Ubuntu gives the option to wipe everything and start clean with the OS, I assume windows too so it probably bugged out) so I had to manually pull the driver from the intel website.
    One time I installed windows on my other PC's SSD and it just looped the installation.
    Everything is fine and dandy with windows until you manually have to install it.

  • @vixmit6943
    @vixmit6943 Před 2 lety +204

    It's funny that people make fun of others that want something "easy". Simplicity and ease of use has always been the key to success regardless of what product you are making. Yet these elitists are out there complaining if you don't make your life a headache.

    • @cybershellrev7083
      @cybershellrev7083 Před 2 lety +18

      That's a double-edged sword. Avoiding something because it's not simple isn't good practice UNLESS there is already a better alternative to take it's place. In this case, if Linux does everything users want, more power to Linux users.

    • @chafacorpTV
      @chafacorpTV Před 2 lety +2

      no wonder why nobody had taken seriously this whole thing till now.

    • @redaethel4619
      @redaethel4619 Před 2 lety +16

      Enthusiasts will be enthusiasts, normies will be normies.

    • @kazum9746
      @kazum9746 Před 2 lety +44

      @@redaethel4619 Imagine unironically saying "normies" in 2021

    • @bennetth.929
      @bennetth.929 Před 2 lety +15

      @@kazum9746 Cringe, right

  • @j-swag7438
    @j-swag7438 Před 2 lety +16

    I installed linux on my dad's laptop and he loved it! He only uses it for a few simple things and he was glad that all the "bullshit" that comes along with windows was gone

  • @andrewcasey7023
    @andrewcasey7023 Před 2 lety

    Last time I rocked with Linux was in 2010. It's made leaps and bounds in changes. Thank you so much for this video! I'll have to give it a try again.

  • @ezioauditore681
    @ezioauditore681 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Homestly, I like how Muta just said "Windows Bad" and procceeds how to tell even iPhone 17 users how to download, flash, and install Ubuntu. I haven't used Ubuntu except for setting up some Company Workstations. But A Good Distro I know of because of working on only 2 distros. Linux Mint seems to work really well, especially if you need to throw it at someone who only knows Windows
    Edit: Ubuntu Is good to start i dont disagree with Muta but just my person preference that I think For End users/ Home Users Mint Cinnamon is good for people staring out too with basically the same installation proccess

  • @TheLoveday100
    @TheLoveday100 Před 2 lety +29

    "Fisher-Price computes" is by far the best description for a Mac I've ever heard

    • @RealEpikCartfrenYT
      @RealEpikCartfrenYT Před 2 lety

      Fisher Price computers may be Fisher Price computers but they are miles ahead of both Linux and Windows.

    • @eukalyptusbonbon2983
      @eukalyptusbonbon2983 Před 2 lety

      Lidl PC moment

    • @nuclearbomb9483
      @nuclearbomb9483 Před 2 lety +2

      @@RealEpikCartfrenYT I'd rather kill myself than use a mac

    • @RealEpikCartfrenYT
      @RealEpikCartfrenYT Před 2 lety

      @@nuclearbomb9483 ok do it then. I'm just telling you that it's reliable and it never crashes. Plus, once you understand how to use a Mac, everything is a breeze.

    • @nutsackvlogz8892
      @nutsackvlogz8892 Před 2 lety

      @@RealEpikCartfrenYT average apple consoomer

  • @danielcharles4431
    @danielcharles4431 Před 2 lety +60

    Muta 'bout to preach to everyone about the glory of Arch Linux and Virtual Machine.

    • @timsievers2067
      @timsievers2067 Před 2 lety +12

      "How can you tell if someone uses Arch linux"
      They'll let you know

    • @killertruth186
      @killertruth186 Před 2 lety +1

      I had tried to install arch again, but I have decided to sell my gaming laptop for parts only.

  • @epsil0gue246
    @epsil0gue246 Před 2 lety +4

    I'm gonna be building my first PC in a few months, and this video (after doing a lot of research on the topic) has convinced me to make the switch to Linux

  • @vicefamgaming
    @vicefamgaming Před rokem +1

    Damn, I've always been bothered by my "gaming" laptop. it sucks when playing games, it would stutter like heck. This video is really tempting me to try this out.

  • @killmcdonalds1753
    @killmcdonalds1753 Před 2 lety +17

    im going to keep using windows on my computer and you cant stop me

  • @HowdyFolksGaming
    @HowdyFolksGaming Před 2 lety +294

    So after watching a ton of Muta’s videos about Linux, and keeping up with Luke and Linus’s updates on the WAN show, I decided to give it a whirl myself. Installed POP!_os on my VR PC as a test bed. Hey, Beat Saber ran on my Index flawlessly. So I’ve now got a drive with POP! installed in my main gaming PC, and I’ve been “dual booting” ever since… Except it’s been in there for a few days and I haven’t actually booted back into Windows for anything… And I’m hoping I won’t have to.
    Honestly loving it so far. It’s my first real experience with Linux aside from playing around with Mint about five or so years ago. I’ll be sticking with it, I think.

    • @HowdyFolksGaming
      @HowdyFolksGaming Před 2 lety +22

      And yes, by “Linux” I do mean GNU/Linux, or as I’ve recently taken to calling it, GNU+Linux…

    • @bucketlynx
      @bucketlynx Před 2 lety +3

      Oh! A fellow PopOS user! I've been on the distro for a month and I'm not thinking of switching back, as gaming is really well supported! If you need any help on tweaking Wine or so to get games running, don't hesitate to ask me!

    • @wesss9353
      @wesss9353 Před 2 lety +6

      TempleOS

    • @LiveType
      @LiveType Před 2 lety +1

      Glad you're having a blast! Enjoy!

    • @wesss9353
      @wesss9353 Před 2 lety

      @@LiveType would you recommend a Raspberry pi 4 for windows people to start the migration process? Or a vm

  • @Dokattak
    @Dokattak Před 5 měsíci +1

    This might've convinced me to switch to a Linux distro on the next PC I get.
    I'm not rich, it's gonna be a while until I get that silicon, but I'll look into Linux stuff.

  • @niconotoneshot
    @niconotoneshot Před rokem +2

    "I will switch to the penguin"
    best line

  • @thelongslowgoodbye
    @thelongslowgoodbye Před 2 lety +54

    One of the big things for newbies is look and feel. They don't want a big shock to the system. So desktop environment choice is a big deal for them.
    The other things is software and hardware compatibility. People don't want to buy new hardware or shift away from all of their daily software.

    • @WinVisten
      @WinVisten Před 2 lety +15

      >Software compatibility
      THANK YOU. that's probably the BIGGEST reason people stick with Windows, or at the very least the SECOND biggest.

    • @user-is7xs1mr9y
      @user-is7xs1mr9y Před 2 lety +1

      @@WinVisten Yup, and maybe the second biggest is having to jump through many hoops before getting something to work. I would be lying if I said I didn't miss the 'download, click, install' of Windows.

    • @Robolodon
      @Robolodon Před 2 lety +2

      Linux mint

    • @Rafa-fc9rh
      @Rafa-fc9rh Před 2 lety +1

      try Linux Mint it has even more classic look thatn Win10

  • @mroldgreg
    @mroldgreg Před 2 lety +229

    Gonna watch this in chunks cause of time but, love what I saw so far.
    I really think Valve is going to push a much needed change for PC gaming with the Steamdeck. The new SteamOS looks absolutely amazing so far and they've made insane progress for 'it just works' compatibility in such a short time. Even the big anti cheats.
    I want Linux to become big for gaming, and I see Valve making it being adopted VERY fast.
    I hope. Cause Windows is getting very shitty lately.

    • @V1CT1MIZED
      @V1CT1MIZED Před 2 lety +4

      Won’t take long for valve to erode away the Linux aspect exactly like google did with Android. People will see steam OS as it’s own thing separate to Linux and they’ll even label it like that on the steam stats page separate from Linux. Steam are putting profits first and they are being smart about it. Linux is but a means to an end. You’ll see and I look forward to it.

    • @mroldgreg
      @mroldgreg Před 2 lety +34

      @@V1CT1MIZED ... Ok? You know valve has been dumping a lot into making Linux good right? And yes and no to money. Valve isn't a publically traded company. They have no shareholders. They don't care about profits in the way say Google or apple do.
      If profits were a concern, they wouldn't of went into VR hard, they wouldn't dump time and money in Linux, they wouldn't dump money into a handheld for a niche market (but will help PC gaming grow easily - it's already doing above expectations order wise).
      Of course steamos is its own thing. Everyone knows that. But it is a form of Linux at it's core and THATS the point.
      It MAKES it compatible. It makes it plug and play and easy.
      It's an open source option to get away from the cancer that windows is becoming. That's my interest in it.

    • @randgrithr7387
      @randgrithr7387 Před 2 lety +18

      @@V1CT1MIZED The things Valve does to Steam OS to make it just work for the average idiot, other devs will look at that and go "Huh, why did I never think to add that to my distro?"

    • @EmperorDxD
      @EmperorDxD Před 2 lety +2

      @@mroldgreg valve has been shit for years now u can't wait for that shoe to drop and the everyone to realise

    • @tomikun8057
      @tomikun8057 Před 2 lety +6

      They hated@@mroldgregfor he spoke the truth

  • @kevinlyon7303
    @kevinlyon7303 Před rokem +4

    I just installed Ubuntu on a SSD and been running and I totally love it, was a little confusing with finding out the terminal commands but it's working for me and Linux feels so much better than windows!

    • @blackninja716
      @blackninja716 Před rokem +1

      LES FUCKING GO!

    • @kevinlyon7303
      @kevinlyon7303 Před rokem

      @@blackninja716 oh yeah! I've been running the Spine PS4 emulator on Linux, works good and stays fast

  • @3cups920
    @3cups920 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I don't use windows (10) because its simple, I use it because I can play video games without worrying about compatibility. I would love to switch to Linux if it wasn't for game compatibility. I know I could duel boot or emulate, but id rather not restart my pc anytime I want to play a game. ❤

    • @Brodymaines
      @Brodymaines Před měsícem +1

      what games can't you play on Linux?

  • @magicpants3214
    @magicpants3214 Před 2 lety +54

    I'd love to switch to linux. The issue is I have no guarantee my tablet software and my art software will work with it. As far as I understand CSP doesn't support linux in any fashion.

    • @PixelTrik
      @PixelTrik Před 2 lety +6

      You can try using it in the Live environment before installing it. There you can see if it works or not before wiping any data.

    • @magicpants3214
      @magicpants3214 Před 2 lety +7

      @@PixelTrik That's good to know. I'll give it a shot.

    • @lynk7078
      @lynk7078 Před 2 lety +5

      You can also have both Linux and Windows on the same PC. If you have sufficient space anywho

    • @PixelTrik
      @PixelTrik Před 2 lety +5

      @@lynk7078 Considering how Windows 10 has been a pain in the ass when it comes to multi-booting, I don't think it''s worth it. It's better to run on a VM because windows bootloader goes funky all the time.

    • @D00000T
      @D00000T Před 2 lety

      If you have a Huion tablet then you’re just fucked if you go to linux. Best you can do is set up a gaming windows VM, spoof it to look like it’s running on bare metal, and pass the tablet through and hope it will work. The KDE team has tried getting some tablet manufacturers to create linux comparability softwares iirc but it doesn’t seem to have been entirely successful.

  • @TazzeOptical
    @TazzeOptical Před 2 lety +84

    All I always say is
    "if the Linux community really wants people to use Linux, they need to stop using the terminal for a month (don't even open it), write down all the annoyances they encounter, create tickets for each and every one of them, and actually fix them instead of de-prioritizing them and pushing them to the bottom of the backlog because there's some bleeding edge features that simply must be implemented immediately and the critical issues they introduce have priority, otherwise stop complaining that people don't use Linux"
    And that's not even talking about gaming because no matter what people say, there are many games that are not on Steam so Proton is not gonna save you, Lutris isn't gonna save you either and even with Winetricks, wine sucks, I don't want to spend half of my weekend creating a prefix and messing with it just to play one game, I just want to PLAY it.
    Create an Open Source alternative to Proton that works with any game in which the community can make custom prefixes so that games and software can run out of the box, and you'll have your gaming silver bullet.
    Until the Linux community gets it through their thick skulls that the average user is extremely intolerant to inconvenience and doesn't want to tinker, Linux is gonna remain a niche OS for nerds and Windows is gonna stay on top.

    • @V1CT1MIZED
      @V1CT1MIZED Před 2 lety +29

      Nailed it, couldn't have said it better myself. This is why Linux will never be mainstream and why I have to dual boot.

    • @r.d.4465
      @r.d.4465 Před 2 lety +21

      Agree a million percent! I played a lot of buggy games in the past with obscure errors nobody would report to the devs, and it's like some Linux users just... Ignore very grave issues just because they can work around it.
      I don't want to worm around ir, I want a smooth, detour free experience.

    • @benedani9580
      @benedani9580 Před 2 lety +9

      I still don't get why Proton isn't available outside of Steam. It's literally just a fork of Wine.

    • @benedani9580
      @benedani9580 Před 2 lety +8

      @Hadrim Losthor The thing is, most things on Linux can already be done in the GUI. Linux desktop has popups and animations galore as well. Performance does not suffer.
      The reason for bad performance on Windows is that Microsoft really does not care. Microsoft CAN optimize, see Windows 8.1. They just do not, because people really are that stupid enough to blame their hardware instead of the software.

    • @dolbyprologicii
      @dolbyprologicii Před 2 lety +1

      @Hadrim Losthor i mean you can use cmd in windows with cygwin for all i care, you can still get the same snappy speed like linux terminal.

  • @robinhellier7436
    @robinhellier7436 Před 2 lety +3

    Ubuntu can be a bit bloated for some PCs, especially older ones. MX linux is a good choice for most computers, with the added advantage of many built-in 'how tos' to guide new users. Puppy linux is also really easy to use and master, with the advantage of bult in persistance to mod the distro to your needs.

    • @manitoba-op4jx
      @manitoba-op4jx Před 6 měsíci

      mint xfce is my go-to if mate or cinammon don't work

  • @KoolHandLuke589
    @KoolHandLuke589 Před 2 lety

    I absolutely love the video personation!! Also and around 20:20 I realized you (he) was drinking while making this video...lol 😂 Love it!!

  • @ihavetowait90daystochangem67

    Imagine Using Windows or Linux or MAC for your computer. I use Native American smoke Signals

  • @ThatBugBehindYou
    @ThatBugBehindYou Před 2 lety +211

    Creators of any kind still can't justify the move, Linux is good for sure but we'll need A LOT more support or A LOT more open tutorials on how to use everything we normally use.

    • @Riskable3DPrinting
      @Riskable3DPrinting Před 2 lety +8

      If you want better support and open tutorials for FREE stuff... Write it your damned self. Linux doesn't exist to meet your use case. It exists so you can *make it* meet your use case. If you're not willing to bother with learning how to best use a new OS then *anything* other than Windows isn't for you. You've already lost. Your computing soul will be owned by Microsoft forever.

    • @Raleighthrbub123
      @Raleighthrbub123 Před 2 lety +4

      Not if you want to have an identical workflow, but that will likely never be the case. If you don't want to switch, certainly no one will make you, but if you decide that you do want to, you can't expect to bring all the program's you're used to with you. You might need to use KDenLive for video editing, Kritta for digital painting, something else for audio if that's what you create etc. You might have to learn new programs and workarounds and techniques, but you'll be free of microsoft. If you don't wish to be free of microsoft, then obviously you don't need to bother with switching.

    • @1MoreTurn
      @1MoreTurn Před 2 lety +126

      @@Riskable3DPrinting This attitude is why Linux will continue to be obscure to the general public. Most people are just users. They use the software to work. Any decrease in productivity due to figuring out how to use software is wasted time (or finding out after hours of troubleshooting that their software of device is not compatible with linux).

    • @a.v896
      @a.v896 Před 2 lety

      A yes the ''hours'' story, that´s remember me the problems i have in past with windows...today i use Manjaro i´m Free mtfk (¬‿¬)

    • @thisislame2207
      @thisislame2207 Před 2 lety +52

      @@Riskable3DPrinting Ah yes telling the people who have no time at all because of job(s), families, and lives outside of computers to learn programming so they can get a OS that will more than likely be shitter than something made by actual programmers like ubuntu. Also FYI at the end of the day no matter how you program Linux it's still Linux.

  • @babarvaqas6283
    @babarvaqas6283 Před rokem

    So brutal Muta. So brutal. We need more!

  • @volkswagenginetta
    @volkswagenginetta Před 2 lety

    i used to run ubuntu as my daily driver when my vista distro took a crap on me back in the day (was a celeron laptop with 1 core and 2gb of ram) and i ran it on my netbook too. I didnt go back because of the experience with gaming, i think im willing to go back to it now

  • @mawi2815
    @mawi2815 Před 2 lety +177

    At 15:38 you're recommended to restart after an update. Not everything in the system is up-to-date whenever you update the system while it's running. You have to restart your computer for certain changes to take effect. In fact, Steam OS will require that you reboot after every update before it applies changes. Of course, your computer won't restart like 17 different times like on windows. It's one restart and you're completely good to go.

    • @MasterMatter
      @MasterMatter Před 2 lety +6

      That's some good information. I'm compiling information on computer topics before I buy one for the first time in my life and I'm almost 30 hahahaha, anyway thanks for this tid bit of information mawi.

    • @internetsfinest8839
      @internetsfinest8839 Před 2 lety +4

      In my experience the “just works” distros recommend to restart. When I used Manjaro it would recommend that regardless of the update, but now that I use pure arch it doesn’t. So I guess it might be up to the distro maintainers.

    • @loopyloops5652
      @loopyloops5652 Před 2 lety +1

      @Watcher or you can just restart the services that require these new stuff without even logging out. as far as i know, the kernel can also be updated without needing to restart by using some specific programs/methods

    • @wsippel
      @wsippel Před 2 lety +2

      You usually don't have to reboot unless the kernel itself gets an update (I know, you can even switch kernels without a reboot, but I don't think any desktop distro is set up that way), but you might have to relog or resort to the terminal to unload and reload modules or restart services. Then again, Linux usually starts so fast that you might as well reboot.

    • @Dexx1s
      @Dexx1s Před 2 lety +2

      Uhhh, no. It depends completely on what you're updating. Applications will restart themselves, just like in Windows. Kernel changes, as well as GPU updates AFAIK, tell you to restart. For the most part, things that are being updated aren't running anyway. That's just not how the OS is.

  • @bleach___
    @bleach___ Před 2 lety +17

    Don’t think I’ll use Linux when nearly 90% of things I use are windows native

  • @simpleman8644
    @simpleman8644 Před 2 lety

    I might try this out. Ive been on mac the last few years but I have a spare PC in the shop

  • @RyuuOujiXS
    @RyuuOujiXS Před 2 lety

    Also worth mentioning that Windows users can sample Linux using WSL2, actively developed by Microsoft, which runs Linux on Windows that defaults to Ubuntu.

  • @zweilee8514
    @zweilee8514 Před 2 lety +20

    Word of warning. Use Rufus, not BalenaEtcher. Balena Etcher fucks with the partitions while writing to the USB which can soft brick your USBs. Please upvote so Muta sees this!

    • @SomeRandomPiggo
      @SomeRandomPiggo Před 2 lety +1

      rufus is only available on windows, unetbootin is pretty good and its multiplatform iirc

    • @zweilee8514
      @zweilee8514 Před 2 lety

      @@SomeRandomPiggo anything but balena bleacher lmao, I lost two usbs to bleacher until I repartitioned them with rufus, and even then there are still some issues

    • @V1CT1MIZED
      @V1CT1MIZED Před 2 lety +1

      I’ve seen this. But using rufus to create a blank partition fixes it.

    • @zweilee8514
      @zweilee8514 Před 2 lety

      @@V1CT1MIZED yep, it's a widespread issue since most devs aside from Canonical endorse it because "muh sleek UI" and "muh ease of use", and the Balenaetcher devs claim it's not their software's fault, just every single ISO out there not doing it right, or the USBs were too cheap/fake or something.

    • @elyieninvaizn
      @elyieninvaizn Před 2 lety +1

      Balena fried my 32gb sandisk name brand usb to the point where Windows wouldnt detect it even as its directly plugged in, so i literally had to get a new one and its a fucking cheap Onn. But i used Rufus on the new one and its perfectly healthy this time

  • @SnackPack913
    @SnackPack913 Před 2 lety +115

    I fell in love with the “sudo” commands on Linux. I don’t use terminals at all on windows but I have been using it all the time on Linux although I’m still learning

    • @jacobhinchliffe6659
      @jacobhinchliffe6659 Před 2 lety +1

      As a tip get the fish shell so you get nice tab autocompletion

    • @Subuzgreatest
      @Subuzgreatest Před 2 lety +2

      @@jacobhinchliffe6659 Is it better than the bash shell ?
      I'm just getting my feet wet with shell & Linux in general.

    • @jacobhinchliffe6659
      @jacobhinchliffe6659 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Subuzgreatest in my opinion yes one issue is that to run scripts you should prefix them with bash because fish doesn't have the standard syntax of most shells. People refer to bash style syntax as 'POSIX Compliant', so if you see that anywhere it is just talking about the syntax.

    • @Subuzgreatest
      @Subuzgreatest Před 2 lety +1

      @@jacobhinchliffe6659 Thank you.

    • @jacobhinchliffe6659
      @jacobhinchliffe6659 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Subuzgreatest I love they way it autocompletes commands for me and I don't have to run --help or man to see what to do with a command because it auto completes flags

  • @_--__--___.3
    @_--__--___.3 Před 2 lety

    i ran into the sound source thing on win11 too and i did find one way to change the sound source. in the taskbar if you click the sound icon and theres a simple volume slider with a " > " on the right you can click the carrot and select from there. i do agree tho that its bullshit that microsoft locks out "customizing" options until you pay

  • @obgy6scooterdr
    @obgy6scooterdr Před 2 lety +4

    Switched to Linux Mint, never going back to Spyndows.

  • @veegem
    @veegem Před 2 lety +8

    This whole comment section is just "I would love to but I can't"
    I am also in the same position.

    • @lulzsec669
      @lulzsec669 Před 2 lety

      Well you can always duel boot

    • @lulzsec669
      @lulzsec669 Před 2 lety

      Just pick up a linux mint iso or others like pop os those are ubuntu based distros that give you an option to duel boot so u can have windows and a Linux distro

  • @Kit_XIV
    @Kit_XIV Před 2 lety +111

    If it was as simple as Windows I’d 100% make the switch but for now I just follow guides on how to get rid of Windows privacy issues. It sucks you have to do that in the first place but beats spending hours fiddling with Linux systems.

    • @opensourceis9996
      @opensourceis9996 Před 2 lety +13

      Wut do you mean, hours? It only takes a few minutes to install Linux. The command line can take hours, but you don’t need to ever look at it if you don’t want to. Figuring out how to install stuff takes a few minutes too

    • @benedani9580
      @benedani9580 Před 2 lety +27

      See, the thing is, Windows isn't free of issues that take hours to fix either.
      And if you're gonna say, "but Benedani that doesn't happen to everyone", well Linux issues don't happen to everyone either. The majority are having the best of their times messing around on an OS that just works for them.

    • @brwntwn123
      @brwntwn123 Před 2 lety +11

      @@opensourceis9996 Hours as in dealing with software and hardware that isn't compatible with Linux and finding workarounds

    • @mammose8760
      @mammose8760 Před 2 lety +3

      Then just stay on windows lmao.

    • @imelitist2828
      @imelitist2828 Před 2 lety +1

      I mean, you are right but, sure you could go the windows route, even though it wouldn't really matter at all, making a privacy oriented windows install is way harder than using linux or even installing Arch, so yea I guess, if you want to go that route and have to put in a lot of effort without having a lot of affect sure, you could.

  • @davidturcotte831
    @davidturcotte831 Před 7 měsíci

    You live in Toronto? Subscribed!

  • @aiden_3c
    @aiden_3c Před rokem +2

    I'm personally pretty happy with the state of VR on Linux
    All my games work, if not natively then it's perfect through Proton.
    Some of the Steam UI stuff is a little lacking like desktop mirroring but it's still more than good

    • @UNSCPILOT
      @UNSCPILOT Před 5 měsíci +1

      Made the mistake of getting a WMR headset before eventually switching to Linux.
      Now I'm hesitant to buy a Index because I'm not sure when Valve might release the "Deckard" headset XD