• TTimo@lemm.ee
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      22 days ago

      Honestly there too. I dual boot between windows and linux for some work stuff, and on windows I find myself thinking “how do people tolerate this shit?”. That’s often when deleting a large folder or uncompressing an archive :)

      • zarkanian@sh.itjust.works
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        20 days ago

        What’s so hilarious to me are the animations that go along with deleting (or moving) a large folder. The old animation was just a file flapping its way from one destination to another. When Windows 7 came out, there were zooming icons with lens flares! I was like “What’s next? A dancing frog?”

  • Onno (VK6FLAB)@lemmy.radio
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    22 days ago

    I moved to Linux over 25 years ago and I miss absolutely nothing.

    The joy of not having to update your OS when Microsoft forces it, even whilst you’re working, or the way Apple still cannot do window tiling despite decades of examples on how to achieve this, or installing applications and finding files splattered all over the file system with no way to remove them except manually, or the endless user agreements, licence fees, expiring licensees, or the notion that you cannot run a new OS on an old machine that’s in perfect working order.

    So, no, it was the best decision I’ve made.

    I wish that I’d made the same good decision when it comes to my accounting software.

      • Onno (VK6FLAB)@lemmy.radio
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        22 days ago

        It has. I use it everyday. It’s shit. Apple keeps moving windows to different desktops without user interaction, I can’t snap windows to each other, full screen takes over a whole desktop and ESC inside such a window puts it back to some random state.

        Better Touch Tool did a better job a decade or so ago.

        • Atemu@lemmy.ml
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          21 days ago

          full screen takes over a whole desktop

          and creates it. It’s a whole new workspace just for putting an app in fullscreen and none of the shortcuts to jump to workspace x work with it of course.

          The rest of the WM can be made bearable but there’s no way around that stupid design choice.

            • Atemu@lemmy.ml
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              21 days ago

              I’m not sure what you mean? It’s a basic feature of the macOS window manager. Pressing the fullscreen button on a window does all of this.

    • damnthefilibuster@lemmy.world
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      22 days ago

      Can you please “installing applications and finding files splattered all over the file system”, please kind person?

      How does Linux do it better?

      • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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        22 days ago

        Central package management.

        When you install a package, it keeps track of all the files so when you uninstall it, it removes them all. There’s various ways to scan and remove untracked files, but on a Linux system you can basically be ask it “where does this file comes from?” and it’ll just tell you “oh, that’s from mpg123, and you have it installed because VLC and Firefox need it to decode some AVIs”. And if you really don’t want it for some reason, it can also go uninstall everything that needs it too.

        It makes it pretty hard to corrupt a system or uninstall important stuff. In the reverse, it also knows what is needed, so if you install VLC, it will also install all the codecs with it, and those are also automatically available to other apps too usually.

        • Atemu@lemmy.ml
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          21 days ago

          While that is true for the files that make up the programs themselves and their dependencies, it’s not true for any state files or caches that programs creates at runtime. You need to clean those up manually.

        • superkret@feddit.org
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          20 days ago

          When you install a package, it keeps track of all the files so when you uninstall it, it removes them all.

          lmao, do a ls -aR ~

  • TheUnicornOfPerfidy@feddit.uk
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    22 days ago
    • Better battery life.
    • Cmd based hot keys for cut, copy, paste and close. They don’t collide with others as much, particularly vim based keys.
      • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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        21 days ago

        Hibernation doesn’t work at all on my windows HP work laptop. Sleep has gotten way way better on Linux in the past 2 years even. My desktop that would be buggy going in and out of sleep has now been flawless such that I auto sleep it after 30 minutes.

        Battery life on Linux still sucks though.

    • unlogic@lemmy.zip
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      21 days ago

      My thinkpad’s battery is much happier on Linux than windows. It’s hibernate and sleep work as expected. My windows work laptop can’t even wake from sleep properly unless I I open the lid and re plug the dock each time it’s gone to sleep.

        • far_university190@feddit.org
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          16 days ago

          Work very well, almost no bug/failure (maybe 2 year use, popos), has useful tray icon (restart, input debug tool, help, layout change, …).

          I think replicate macos almost perfect from start (not remember, too long ago). Except for alt, alt not work like macos for shortcut and key modify, only shortcut or key modify. But can switch shortcut layout and individual shortcut in config file very easy (even has comment what each shortcut).

          Only customisation i do make some modify alt instead of shortcut alt and make some shortcut for global shortcut (lock screen, switch to tty) in some app because kinto grab and change input before reach DE. And some shortcut i feel better with.

          Kinto use xkeysnail, is full key grabber for x, probably no work on wayland.

  • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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    21 days ago

    I just miss my social life. Back when I was on Windows I had a lot of friends and was banging people constantly in my free time. As a Linux user, I’ve pretty much been ostracized by my local community and my mojo no longer works on the daily trimmings. I might give Mac a try, but I’m just not sure how many tide pods I could possibly eat.

    • pHr34kY@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      Linux is great when you have the opportunity to choose the right hardware upfront.

      There’s a few things that are outright neglected.

    • Metz@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      What device exactly? e.g. i could update my Samsung NVMe firmware with nvme-cli without any problems.

  • Daniel Quinn@lemmy.ca
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    22 days ago

    Knowing how to fix my wife’s computer, or my parents’ computers, or my brother’s.

    Actually, while it’s rather frustrating for them, it’s not so bad for me ;-)

  • Mandy@sh.itjust.works
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    22 days ago

    Windows/Games working out of the box with zero tinkering.
    No amoint of proton or other software works as well for me as it seemingly does for others

    • innermeerkat@jlai.lu
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      22 days ago

      Except for online games, pretty much all the other games work without any tinkering for me since at least a year

      • Mandy@sh.itjust.works
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        21 days ago

        Glad it works for you, I have the exact opposite exepeirenxe with most games (I rarely play online).

        To the point I sometimes feel like I’m taking crazypulls

        • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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          21 days ago

          Are you using Steam, or games from another service? I’ve only found 1 or 2 things that didn’t work immediately on Steam, but I have an absolute hell of a time getting anything off Steam to run, it’s like pulling teeth. Especially older Windows games; they’re just a non-starter most of the time.

          • Bruhh@lemmy.world
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            21 days ago

            I just use a single Bottle’s bottle to install a bunch of off-Steam games. Contains many older windows dependencies; you have to install them yourself but they are found within the bottle’s settings.

            I remember trying to get Sims 3 working for my partner, it had all sorts of missing textures, kept crashing and had poor performance. Turns out you need a 4gb patch?? made from the community? Decided to toss it in my bottle and it works flawlessly. Have not tried dos games but may be worth a shot.

          • Mandy@sh.itjust.works
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            21 days ago

            From steam, to lutris to base wine to he to trying a couple back cause nothing else worked.
            Saw it all, did it all and I hazard a guess I soon will see it all again

            • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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              21 days ago

              Is it possibly your distro? Maybe share what you’re using, and see if others are having different luck with it?

          • Mandy@sh.itjust.works
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            21 days ago

            The one who probably provided me the most trouble and headache over the years is my favourite anno, 1404 history edition

            • Retro_unlimited@lemmy.world
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              21 days ago

              I usually check the proton DB website, to read the comments and see what people do to fix games and software.

              Just recently I used it to get old CAD software to run, had to lower the proton version to 6 or something and it worked.

              • Mandy@sh.itjust.works
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                21 days ago

                from all the times i tried to use protondb for help, for me, i can count the times it actually did on one hand

            • anon5621@lemmy.ml
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              21 days ago

              I tried it running with portproton with pirated version works smooth no tinkering.Running on arch linux with hybrid graphics on nvidia mx940.

  • Steamymoomilk@sh.itjust.works
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    22 days ago

    Fusion 360 :(

    Yes i know theres wine versions But they just dont work the same. And randomly crash.

    Yes i know free cad exists, but it feels so clunky and is so much diffrent than fusion/inventor

    • the16bitgamer@programming.dev
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      21 days ago

      I 100% agree, and have Fusion360 in my VM. But there is a method to FreeCAD’s madness and once you get it, FreeCAD begins to make sense.

      I found it hard to go back to fusion especially with the amount of control I had with my designs.

      Also FreeCAD V1 is out, and it’s a marked improvement over their previous releases. Might be worth a try.

  • Libb@jlai.lu
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    22 days ago
    • Prepare for a shock, I miss… Apple Notes.
      Like, really. Imho it’s a great note-taking app that is also performing really well even on large number of notes, that also natively syncs between the Mac and iOS, with full-encryption. It’s also an app that, well, does not expect its user to become an engineer and/or a dev unlike some certain others text editors out there ;)
    • The other one basic app I do miss is Apple Photos.
      Like with Notes, I miss its simplicity while still including those very few more advanced features an amateur and very occasional photographer like myself seldom needed access to. Sure, there are excellent Libre alternatives, much more powerful and more complete, but they are all also much more clunky and complex to use which make it so that I use them a lot less than I used to use Apple Photos.
    • Pixelmator Pro, for the even fewer more advanced photo edits I need. Here too, we have Libre alternatives but I have yet to find a one that is as intuitive to use as Pixelmator is.
    • Affinity Designer. Inkscape is on its way to replace Designer for me, that’s one thing.
    • My spell checker/dictionaries/grammatical guides, for French and English: Antidote.
      It used to run offline (no Internet required) on Linux, on Mac and Windows, and I happily paid for its license to be able to do so. But the latest version has dropped its support for Linux, unless one is willing to use the coud version, which I’m not.

    All those apps are very different but they share one thing: they are not complex and unintuitive apps (I reckon it’s at this point I should get flamed to death, so be it).

    I mean, even the most ‘complex’ apps I mentioned (like Antidote or, say, Affinity Designer) most users should be able to start using them quick (not master them, but start using them) because they’re not that complex and not that different. Mmm, I’m not an expert UI designer, it’s difficult to explain my feelings around that notion: many things are familiar if not similar between those apps, heck some are even so simple that there is no such thing as a ‘save’ button. I know it’s also very much a question of education and of acquired habits, but still this matters a lot to me and probably to other people like me. I’m getting old (and I’m not in good health) and I want to spend as little as possible of the time I have left learning new apps, to tweak them, or search for workarounds just so I could do what I’ve known how to do for many decades already. If I was to summarize what I failed to say: I switched to Linux not because I’m interested in learning new apps or in changing my desktop look (it’s really cool, I just don’t care much). I switched because I worry about the lightning fast erosion of our privacy in this digital world. It’s the ideology that attracted me to GNU/Linux. I have no major issues using apps under macOS/iOS, I only have major issues with Apple (and MS, and Google, and Facebook, Twitter, and so many other corporations) acting like assholes willing to destroy our societies and even the world itself so they can make a few dollars more during the next quarter. F. that, that’s my motivation to use G/L ;)

    Also, thx for reading to that point without burning me (you will find a box of matches in the second drawer over there, you know where to find me) ;)

    • Daniel Quinn@lemmy.ca
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      22 days ago

      The problem of unintuitiveness is sadly very common in Free software, but it’s getting better… in a few spaces anyway.

      For an Apple Notes replacement, I would suggest looking at Joplin, which I use daily for everything from database diagrams to recipes. It has a built-in sync feature, supporting a variety of options, all encrypted. I used it with Syncthing, which admittedly isn’t very easy, but there are other simpler options.

      • Libb@jlai.lu
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        21 days ago

        The problem of unintuitiveness is sadly very common in Free software, but it’s getting better… in a few spaces anyway.

        It is getting better and even if it was not, I would still be ok with it: I may have been slow but I learned to favor my privacy/freedom over comfort ;)

        That said, I know from talking with people around me (and from myself) that it can be a huge obstacle, no matter if they’re older like I am or much younger people. If it doesn’t just works, it plain sucks.

        Thx for the suggestion ;)

    • Matt@lemmy.mlOP
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      22 days ago

      You can compare Apple to the same drug Factorio is usually compared to.

    • Delusion6903@discuss.online
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      21 days ago

      I was going to say I miss nothing but you reminded me of what I really miss. Mac Preview. It was so versatile and did a lot for a little built in program.

      I used to use Sushi for gnome but it never did all file types and it stopped working for me a while back. I have never gotten it to work right again since.

      • Libb@jlai.lu
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        21 days ago

        Yes, I could have mentioned it too. It’s such a neat feature to have.

        There are probably other things worth mentioning. And then a few others that have become a real pain under macOS, imho. For example, the new settings app has morphed into a Windows-like mess ;)

    • Mwa@lemm.ee
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      22 days ago

      You can run affinity after compiling a custom version of wine,idk about the other apps I mentioned.

  • Jiří Král@discuss.tchncs.de
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    22 days ago

    Are you sure Linux doesn’t support shared GPU memory? I mean if you had an integrated GPU with no strictly reserved memory which is fairly common on cheaper notebooks the GPU has to share the memory with rest of the system. There’s no other way for it to even function.

  • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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    21 days ago

    Coming from Windows I miss the excitement and suspense of never knowing whether my click on an icon actually got noticed by the OS. And the thrill of never knowing exactly which icon you clicked on because the UI is so slow to draw and redraw itself that the icons move unexpectedly while you’re aiming.

  • Zoe@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    21 days ago

    Not having to worry about games straight up blocking linux users from playing because we are supposedly all cheaters…