Just like migrating from Reddit to Lemmy it’s the same as migrating from Windows to Linux, there’s shortcomings and learning curve and the more I use Lemmy the more I hate about Windows, because unlike reddit Lemmy is open source and open source softwares communities is more popular than proprietary communities and people like to shit on them (and I loved it). (Sorry for horrible English)

    • Hucklebee@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      What are you currently using instead of Adobe’s suite? I know about inkscape. And although I applaud the efforts, Scribus and Gimp seem to be no match for Indesign and Photoshop.

    • Purplexingg@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      That is impressive, as that was not my experience at all. I installed nobara since I use my computer for 90% games and 10% Photoshop. Dragons dogma 2 would continuously crash on launch, Hades 2 ran at 25 fps and required like half an hour of troubleshooting to figure out it was somehow using my onboard graphics so I manually had to disable that, and kingdom come deliverance played perfectly… Until I tried to fast travel and it instantly crashed every time.

      Unfortunately, it just seems like Linux is not the answer for me. At this point in my life I just want things to work and not spend 45 mins+ trying to figure out why my $2k computer isn’t working. I’m a blue collar guy so have absolutely 0 experience in programming which to me kinda seems like prerequisite if you do anything more than using Firefox.

  • kratoz29@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    How do I convince my friends Lemmy ain’t a cult with titles like this!?

    • neutron@thelemmy.club
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      6 months ago

      Its only a proper cult when we have /c/pyongyang hosted somewhere. But I don’t wanna go down that rabbit hole.

    • MrPoopbutt@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Mint is basically plug and play. I had an issue about a year ago when I first switched to mint that my sound was intermittently goofy. It went away in an update though and now I have fewer issues on my Linux mint install than my my windows install. I have a bunch of settings that windows just reverts back each time it updates and it annoys me because I know it doesn’t have to be like that - it is only like this because Microsoft wants me to use the machine in a way I don’t want to.

      But, all that aside, mint is easy. Ubuntu is easy. Basically everything just works out of the box.

      • Hucklebee@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        My experience with Mint the last 8 weeks has been… mixed.

        My biggesst issues:

        -It handles two monitors with different resolutions poorly. I settled on accepting that one screen has just bigger UI now. There is an experimental setting that allows individual scaling per screen, but some apps don’t seem to use the systemwide scaling. It basically creates more problems than it solves.

        -Dark mode is random. Some apps don’t support dark mode, but Mint still forces light fonts. Which makes those fonts unreadable on the light backgrounds.

        -Window management is… weird with two monitors. If you have your screens setup in a certain way, windows will appear partly off screen,aking them undraggable or closable. Some windows you can just WIN+arrow but some popups don’t allow that.

        Permissions can be a pain in the buttocks. Some flatpaks don’t give the right permissions, so you’ll be googling and sudo’ing your ass off at times. How can a flatpak for Arduino NOT give permissions to use USB? Dafuq?

        Also, any permissions outside your home folders can (out of the box) only be changed through commandline. Which makes it a pain to install, for example, fonts, unless you dig through the 6 font managers that software manager shows. 2 of those font managers don’t have a gui, 1 can only install 1 font at a time, so after trying 3 programs you finally find one that works.

        -Now that we talk about the software manager… It can be a pain to find the right stuff. Sometimes you search a program, and you’ll find 7 versions because thank FOSS and all it’s forks.

        -Most documentation and questions are answered with using commandline. And sometimes, as a noob like me, you’ll damage more with those answers than you’ll solve.

        I have had multiple OS wide hard freezes when unplugging USBs from an external USB hub. Only hard resetting the PC worked.

        What I like so far:

        -You can split the explorer in to two navigations. Super useful.

        -you can fully customize your start menu and launch bar.

        -the backup function is amazing

        -most steam games work great

        -it starts up rather quick

        -it doesn’t track me like Windows does.

        Might try Pop OS soon, although I also accept that switching an OS can just take time to get used to. Took me a few months to get accustomed to OSX years ago when I had a Mac Mini for 6 years.

        • MrPoopbutt@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Interesting. I only have one monitor, so I haven’t run into a lot of those.

          Have you used any other distro which you prefer?

          • Hucklebee@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            After typing this message, I realized how much crap I have to deal with in Mint (with my specific setup, not saying everyone has the same experience or that Mint is bad for everyone). I just installed PopOS. It absolutely handles different screen resolutions better out of the box. The tiling feature is interesting, but I’ll have to learn how to use it properly the coming weeks.

            Overall, feels more sleek than Mint with the two hours I spent with it. Pop!_shop feels less cluttered with random repos than Mints Software manager. Where Mint out of the box feels like Windows 7 with a theme that sort of works but sort of feels unfinished and dated, PopOS feels more like OSX. This comes with less customizability on the looks, but atleast stuff that has a place on your screen looks right and has the right amount of padding.

            Time will tell if this is the distro for me, or if I’ll be a distrohopper for life until I eventually land on Arch for the bragging rights.

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      6 months ago

      I’ve put very little effort into setting up my Linux Mint installation, but I could see if I had specific problematic hardware or if played specific DRM-laden games that it could be a big pain.

      For the most part, the games I want to play work automatically because Steam handles it so nicely. For everything else, I mainly use proton.

  • M500@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    Yeah! Good on you. All these big tech companies are getting worse and worse.

    At the risk of starting a fight in the comments, what distro did you choose?

    • ColdWater@lemmy.caOP
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      6 months ago

      I started with Fedora and ended up switched to Arch btw and that’s what I’m using

    • Onii-Chan@kbin.social
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      6 months ago

      Not OP, but I went with PopOS. I’d used it in a VM for a few years, so I decided to install it when I finally decided to make the switch after Microsoft decided to reveal that dystopian “record everything on your screen, coming to a PC near you soon” bullshit.

      • M500@lemmy.ml
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        6 months ago

        Yeah, that is either going to get me to Linux or at least Mac depending on one of my work apps.

        (I can’t use alternatives or wine to run it.)

  • Onii-Chan@kbin.social
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    6 months ago

    I did the same the other day, although I’m dual booting as I still need Windows for a few things (namely Photoshop.) Slowly getting used to Linux though, and it does feel… free. It’s extremely nice. Games run better (I mean fuck, the entire computer runs better.) I already use GrapheneOS on my Pixel 8, so it’s nice to have my PC finally move towards privacy too.

    • ColdWater@lemmy.caOP
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      6 months ago

      There are good closed source softwares out there but most of the popular closed source software are bad not because of their functionality but because of evil and controlling monetization tactics

    • Empricorn@feddit.nl
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      6 months ago

      Personally, I can’t stand trying to troubleshoot obfuscated error messages in current mass-market software. I don’t even think it appeals to the lowest common-denominator. “Oopsie-doodle! Your puter has an owie. 😢 Running a Health Check to see if we need to download more FUN! Sending results to Daddy Microsoft! …”

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    6 months ago

    Welcome to the Linux world! Don’t get discouraged by the learning curve. It’ll vary by distro and what tasks you wish to accomplish. Remember: you’re re-learning or first learning a new system. Many conventions are the same. Some are different. Ask for help when you need it. You’ll find many people who are willing to guide you as you go. As time goes on, you’ll pick up steam and your growth will expand exponentially.

    • Valmond@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Coolest thing is that when you got yourself up to speed, very little will change in the future, and if there are changes, you can choose to upgrade your system to them, or not.

      I feel windows was the stable, simple platform where stuff just worked. Today it’s not always working(like sound and music) and on top of that everything needs different workarounds, workarounds that won’t work anymore 1 day when some forced change will happen to your system.

      Welcome!

  • Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    I love that you are trying Linux

    I will fuckin hate you with a passion if you start invading threads specifically about Windows with comments about how Linux is superior and we should just use that.

    It isn’t, that’s why we’re not using it 😂