• jollyroberts@jolly-piefed.jomandoa.net
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    1 day ago

    I’ve been running 99% Linux for ten ish years or so. I finally got rid of the last windows vm a few months ago. The one hold out piece of software now runs in wine properly and I got to delete that vm.

  • Jerkface (any/all)@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    As a FreeBSD desktop user from the mid 90s, I held out for a LONG time before installing my first linux OS in my home. I still don’t really feel comfortable on any of my linux boxes, but I guess it’s been well more than ten years now.

  • Hanrahan@slrpnk.net
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    1 day ago

    Dual booting with Ubutu a couple tiimes over the last decade, then tried dual booting with Mint 3 years ago on W10, thenW11 is annouced, seems the enshitifaction would be worse but, didn’t use Mint, same reasn I’d not used Ubuntu, fell back on the familiar.

    Purchased a new NVME 2 years ago, instilled Mint on it and took the dual boot NVME physically out, 3 months later formated it and use it for Timeshift :) Then.went to LMDE.

    Eventually got sick of the nagging on my infrequently used Surface Pro 7 about going to W11 and did the same thing there, wiped it and installed LMDE, a few hiccups but used the Surface Pro drivers from Github and got it sorted eventually, touch works etc

    The main reason i stayed was Adobe Lighroom but that was enshitifying as well. I still haven’t wrapped my head around Darktable properly but less time spent on photography these days as well

  • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Last year sometime. Frustrated by Microsoft’s latest tomfoolery, I decided, “eh, might as well give Linux another shot, it’s been a decade or so since the last time.”

    So I booted up my fifteen-year-old desktop computer as a testbed before I put it on my daily driver laptop. First I booted it into Windows (7, because that’s how old it is and it couldn’t hack Windows 10) to see if there was any data I needed to pull off of it, and predictably it was an awful experience. Slow? Try glacial. Constantly paging out of memory. I had to put it in safe mode without networking just to get it to boot all the way up. I grabbed everything I thought I needed and breathed a sigh of relief that I was done with that.

    Then I put Linux Mint on it. And…wow.

    Like, I knew Linux did a good job on older systems, but this was unbelievable to me. It was snappy and responsive in a way that it has literally never been. The thing ran like butter. I was flying around that OS, installing games, setting up backups, even trying my hand at a bit of light self-hosting.

    But the real kicker came when I installed VirtualBox. See, I have one program that I still need Windows for; an Adobe program that some people I work with still use. So I installed VirtualBox and put Windows 10 on there, fully expecting to clown on Windows for a few minutes but just hoping I’d see enough to know whether it would be usable on my laptop.

    But no. Windows 10—which, when I tried a decade ago, couldn’t run on that machine at all—ran almost flawlessly in VirtualBox on Linux. I mean, it wasn’t the quickest thing ever, but for a modern build of a more-or-less modern OS on a computer older than my marriage, it was honestly amazing.

    So, when did I go full Linux nerd? When I discovered that it can run Windows better than Windows can.

    There are a few other things, too. The software manager, the customizability, the lack of ads, the unobtrusive updates… And at some point along the way, I realized that it actually felt like my computer, which is a feeling I haven’t felt in ages.

    It’s a great feeling.

  • Waffle@infosec.pub
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    1 day ago

    Earlier this year when I made the switch as I was getting blue screens at least once a day while gaming. Initially to endeavoros with cinnamon, then switched to Hyprland.

    There have been some fixes that make me wonder at what point am I tinkering vs implementing a fix that should be included in the base version of the Linux flavor… Many rabbit holes over the last 6 months, many more to come.

  • Zink@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    It was far too recent for somebody with my background. I learned how the UNIX command line was different from DOS in the late 90s, but it was only last year that I switched from a VM to a native Linux install at work. Then I swapped over the home PCs during winter.

    After defaulting to Windows for so long because of games and employers favoring it, it was almost frustrating how fast, smooth, and “clean” feeling it was to install Linux natively on a system compared with the recent versions of Windows. And that’s without any special lightweight distro. I am a proud Linux Mint Cinnamon user, lol.

  • Kaamkiya@infosec.pub
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    2 days ago

    Since I started daily driving it last summer. Before that, I used Debian in a VM on my Chromebook.

  • NostraDavid@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    Uh, just yesterday. Installed NixOS (with KDE) because I learned Debian at work, but am really missing the ability to track what I’ve installed via configuration. I like the idea of dotfiles in a repo, but want a bit more control like that for my OS.

    Context: I’m a data engineer that writes Python. Python has pyproject.toml files (toml ~= ini files) where you can specify which libraries you want to use, defining which version you minimally, maximally, or just specifically want. And I wished that setup existed for Debian as well, but it doesn’t. So after searching I found that NixOS is pretty much the closest thing. Windows 10 is EOL soon enough, so might as well switch beforehand and not wait until the last second.

  • Gemini24601@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    During Covid, 2020-2021. I was under the weather and bored out of my mind. I spontaneously decided to install Arch Linux, and the rest is history. Installing Arch was invaluable to my learning experience, and taught me a lot about Linux

  • tetris11@feddit.uk
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    2 days ago

    It’s 1995!
    Now that I’m older stress weighs on my shoulders
    Heavy as boulders but I told ya

  • kiri@ani.social
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    2 days ago

    When I “solved” teering on nvidia by installing i3 and started using only terminal, because any gui program was still freezing.

    offtop

    By the way, (unofficial) manjaro i3/sway were really good, inspite of populistic opinion about manjaro, especially in comparison with fedora i3 or endeavouros i3 (but still just arch/void is better, when you get used to terminal, than arch-based distros).

  • Dataprolet@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    After I switched to Linux Mint because Windows 7 got EOL a friend showed me Manjaro. I used it for a while and it was a pain in the ass. This was the moment I took a look at Arch Linux and after my first successful install I went full Linux nerd. This is roughly 5 years ago and now I even work in IT despite having studied social science.

  • Epzillon@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Uni, around 2019! Had a professor on the web team who encouraged all students to do the entire uni education on Linux.

    All tools and course material was tailored to work on Linux. Hand-ins, exams and anything related either functioned or had custom solutions built by the teachers, student and professors on the web programme.

    Everything was open source and if we found any bugs we could just open issues on GitHub. Weekly hand-ins were done on the student server on your own instance of the web server.

    In almost every aspect i think that programme was so well tailored for learning real web dev work.