• akiЯa@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    i’ve never used linux, idk how to place an operating system on my operating system having computer, and i read that linux is very complicated, so i never tried, and i don’t see why i should. change my mind

    • Blackilykat@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Honestly, if you:

      • don’t care about data getting collected on an os you paid for
      • don’t care about getting ads on an os you paid for
      • don’t care about performance and have a fast computer
      • (*) can’t bother re-leaning how to do some things
      • (*) can’t bother facing and debugging some problems that you might encounter
      • (*) don’t care about being able to do things faster, at the cost of knowing exactly where to find things the moment you start using the system
      • don’t care about being able to customize any part of the system however you want

      then you might want to stay on Windows.

      (*) this depends on which distribution you choose. some are very similar to windows and beginner friendly.

    • Autumn@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      So first caveat, I work in the IT industry. I’m admittedly used to slightly more complicated life experience but for home use, I value the “It just works” environment.

      That out of the way. I switched over from full time Windows 11 to Pop!_OS. A Linux distribution built pretty much to be a “It just works” experience. Pop has been amazing so far. I’ve gotten almost all of my main games on windows to run without issue. And for those I can’t I keep a much smaller windows installation. It’s been stable, clean and I have not had to touch anything complicated at all while using the OS.

      Installing is fairly easy. If you’re really unsure or not enthusiastic the Live CD is a great way to actually try out Linux without ever needing to commit. A Live CD itself is just a USB stick that you can boot from instead of your normal hard drive. Meaning you never have to touch Windows to make changes to it to try a Linux distribution out.

      My take on why you would want Linux is fairly simple. You own it. Not just in that it’s something you buy. Because in most cases you don’t. But in that once it is on your system, you legitimately own everything on the file. You can change it, customize it. Remove things, you are free to do with your copy of Linux as you please. And even encouraged to. In a way Linux based operating systems make your computer personal again.