56
devpit
6y

I did it guys, I made the switch! I’m free! 💕

Comments
  • 5
    Nice! Welcome to the good side.
  • 4
    @Alice What do you need?
  • 4
    @Alice For example?
  • 5
    @Alice I see you point! I got a 250GB SSD from a friend because he bricked his PC and just bought a new one (yeah..) so I figured I’d finally get a dual boot instead of using slow ass VMs!

    Now I’ll be slowly migrating everything and eventually only keep the Microsoft Dependent software on a separate small partition in case I need it :)
  • 2
    @Alice Heh. Sadly, it's either Windows or Mac if you need to do graphics. I doubt this will change anytime soon... Unless MS buys out Canonical and forces ports.
  • 1
    NO REGRETS!!! WELCOME TO DA CLUB!!
  • 0
    arch, funtoo, gentoo, slackware with humble sincerity and without memes.

    But just enjoy your first step into OSS world, after a while try some systems described here for your freedom packages update.
  • 0
    Yay, it's a good feeling.
    I switched to arch linux the start of the year and haven't looked back.

    All the PC games I'm interested in are compatible or run well enough under wine.

    Only place I use windows is at work, but I RDP to it from my Arch laptop just to manage servers and run visual studio 😊
  • 0
    I made the switch and love how unbloated everything feels
  • 2
    Switched over 6 years ago. Haven't looked back. Never had to.

    I settled on elementary OS after a lot of distrohopping. You'll find your ideal workstation too. Just keep experimenting.
  • 0
    *mandatory Ubuntu isn't free comment*
  • 2
    I have found that no single Linux distro could meet my needs in terms of stability, package availability, and driver support. What I recently discovered was that macOS comes the closest for me. Expensive but powerful.
  • -1
    Wow. What an accomplishment.
  • 1
    @BeardedFists Same for me on the desktop. All my embedded devices are running on Linux though.
  • 0
    @lastNick Same. I generally use Linux for docker and CLI use cases.
  • 0
    Actually there's more than software, for example I can't increase text zoom in any Linux desktop environment. Vs code isn't as stable as on windows, chrome flickers and there are no good alternatives, sometimes there are alternatives for what I need but they don't work, and you find yourself spending 10 hours debugging a simple software when, in windows, you'd be productive in few seconds.

    I love Linux, but just for development
  • 2
    Little did devpit know he stepped into a pit as he uses a distro which isn't entirely free software
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