Except … if you're trying to be "The universal operating system" (Debian) or "Linux for everyone" (Mint-IDK if they actually call it that, but I certainly have), then … the complaints are at least valid complaints from their perspective, even if they have solutions or if they just don't apply to your type of user (because you use Arch BTW?) More than 25 years ago, the problem with Linux was that non-Linux users needed to BAFB in order to figure out how to install it. We fixed that and it got easier to install than Windows 2000/XP. Yes, even Debian, which still uses the same damned installer we came up with way back then. yeek. Okay but it works. Then a local loudmouth who loves the sound of his voice (and trying to embed his weird brand of politics into Linux in more recent years) made videos every year saying that Linux sucks because audio was a freakin' mess. He was right about Linux audio with ALSA and Pulse, YMMV on his politics. A decade later finally everyone's using Pipewire now and it fixes that sh…tuff, mostly. Cool. Hopefully it won't take a decade to fix the next complaint because Windows has become f&&king predatory to its users.
@benverdel30732 ай бұрын
It's more like a typical Mac user. He would've run into the same problems switching to Windows.
@cjuk812 ай бұрын
He uses products that you cant get on Linux like lightroom that dont have a good linux alternative, i wouldnt have even bothered trying linux in this case
@jamessauve24192 ай бұрын
For you, perhaps. But there may be others newer to the subject matter for whom this discussion may be beneficial.
@Onyx-it8gk2 ай бұрын
@@jamessauve2419 Certainly. I'm not saying the discussion isn't beneficial. In fact, I think it is. But I don't agree that no one talks about these issues. These are the same exact issues every Windows/Mac user faces when trying to switch to Linux. They're so commonplace there's literally hundreds, probably thousands, of forum posts and YT videos about them. It's not a problem with Linux, but rather a failure to do research and properly prepare to switch to Linux.
@RaidOwl2 ай бұрын
Thanks Jay! This was a great conversation not only to have but for everyone else to see. The fact that a novice like myself can sit down with an expert and have a mutual understanding of issues that need to be addressed is a great start. I've met a ton of people from the Linux community who break the stereotype of "RTFM edgelords" so it's unfortunate that the loud minority of those kill the reputation and scare off new users. I'm hoping in the not-so-distant future I'll be able to ACTUALLY make the switch from Windows, but until then I'll just keep trying.
@gruntaxeman37402 ай бұрын
In my opinion, people should be more aware of vendor lock-in, planned obsolescence practices and what are the hardware and software standards. Industry standards are not stuff that happens to work in macOS or Windows. They are those network standard protocols, open specifications, specifications made by working groups where all industry members are crafting what is the standard. But switching to Linux is however... different. It is obvious for developers, data analytics, scientists etc. but many others the value is decrappification, taking advantage of cumulative learning from open source software and avoiding to get scammed. In reality it doesn't matter what OS someone is using. Everyone has own preferences.
@ewenchan12392 ай бұрын
@@gruntaxeman3740 "In reality it doesn't matter what OS someone is using. Everyone has own preferences." This is spot on. I pick the tool that best serve the needs, whatever that might be. For my HPC applications, Linux works better for this stuff. For gaming (e.g. Cities Skylines 2/Halo Infinite), Windows is better for that. For video (non-DTS:X audio), Mac works better for me. For DTS:X audio passthrough to HDMI eARC, Windows works better for that. And before ZFS on Linux was a thing, ZFS on Solaris was the way to go. Each tool, in the toolbox, serve its purpose.
@shafeeqethayancheri82692 ай бұрын
9vvvvvvvvvv😊
@digirydeАй бұрын
For people responding to informational requests, a template I like is: - Restate Question in your own words. This ensures that the answer you are giving if for the issue/knowledge requested. - Provide a tl;dr answer. There are many people who are not going to understand a detailed answer. Giving a quick if this, do that answer is actually easier to understand for most people. - Provide a more detailed, but still brief answer. Once a person has done the tl;dr part, for many people, it becomes easier to understand some technical detail as to why the answer is what it is. - Provide the location of the pertinent documentation . As people learn more about the answer, eventually some will want to RTFM. I am one of those. I love reading the docs. I hate being told RTFM as The Answer though. Hope someone finds this useful.
@JordosTechShack2 ай бұрын
During the windows 8 and 8.1 days I converted a lot of people (especially the elderly generation) to Ubuntu. They hated the 8 interface. Most of what they did web browser based, except for office and in just about every case Libre office was good enough. Since windows 10 it's been harder to flip people. Windows has gotten better, and Chromebooks filled the space with the clients I was already converting.
@MrvelvetviruS2 ай бұрын
Copilot and the recap thing brings some fresh air for more people to try Linux.
@JordosTechShack2 ай бұрын
@@MrvelvetviruS My kids have windows because they game, but because of school they are way more comfortable in ChromeOS. Before their gaming PCs they had Pi400s with a ChromiumOS build. So the up coming generation I could see the normal being carrying a higher end chromebook for a daily laptop and some sort of steam deck/ Steam OS gaming PC. I know college professors for IT /Computer science already having issues with new students only knowing their phones OS and ChromeOS, and not familiar with windows or Mac at all.
@RoastBeefSandwich2 ай бұрын
Most people would be perfectly happy with a Chromebook. Is that wrong?
@ewenchan12392 ай бұрын
@@MrvelvetviruS I turn all of that stuff off, the first chance I get. But that is no different than, post fresh install of Linux, that I will then start going into all of the various places, within said Linux system, and start customising it to my liking as well. It has been my experience tha some Linux users will spend an inordinate amount of time, customsing Linux to EXACTLY how they want it, and then bitch about how shitty Windows is, because they aren't willing to do the same, in Windows. They just like to bitch about it.
@toby99992 ай бұрын
I just stayed with Windows 7 until 10 was released. Tried Linux on an old PC some time around when Windows 8 was released but it sucked in my opinion.
@freelookmode98372 ай бұрын
Dear RTFM crowd: I did and i DON'T UNDERSTAND IT. If your next respnse is to say that linix isnt fir me then, stop going all over the Internet telling windows users to "just ise Linux"
@SandcastleDreams12 күн бұрын
Maybe getting the right manual would help? There's a ton of them. They are expensive. Most of them are. I found one titled, Linux in Easy Steps. Pub. Date 2021. They are running about $15. Has Linux Mint in it. I accidently got one of the older ones first. It looks just like a Windows manual if you ever took a course for any of the apps. I can't wait for the newer one to get here because listening to these videos sounds like a foreign language to me. And I've been listening for a long time.
@BrunodeSouzaLino2 ай бұрын
The problems with Linux could be summarized in two things: - People use operating systems as a application platform. - People want a product, not a project.
@clivewiddus39532 ай бұрын
Don't install MS Windows 11, its definitely a project and ever time MS fix something they break something else. I use my phone to talk to other people I don't use it as a application Platform.
@BrunodeSouzaLino2 ай бұрын
@@clivewiddus3953 Windows 11 is not the only other alternative out there. And you use your phone to talk to people. And by saying that, you've proven my point that you use a device running either iOS or Android to perform a function regardless of what's happening underneath. Your application use of your phone is talking to people.
@toby99992 ай бұрын
@clivewiddus3953 I installed Windows 11 (upgraded from 10). I like it. It's not a project. Its been working perfectly. That's not something I can say about Linux. I used Linux at work for a year and I didn't like it. I've attempted Linux installations, and they've always failed. I did get a version of Ubuntu installed on an old PC by our IT dept. Used it for a few months. Didn't like it. Put Windows back on. I can only fault two versions of Windows out of 27 years as a user... W98 was unstable and W8 was a joke but MS fixed it.
@gruntaxeman37402 ай бұрын
Using operating system as application platform requires stable OS to install 3rd party app. Then the OS do matter and need to stay away from rolling releases and those where platform is changing twice a year. No need to use project. Things that are made for production use are products.
@dantechgamegeek2 ай бұрын
Well, that said: What is more "projectlike" than Windows? Nearly every month there are Updatetroubles, datasecurityproblems, broken functions etc. Not seen this at Linuxservers till today.... Windows - an operating system? Or a big fat data vacuumcleaner that sucks you in and never spits you out again while telling you what you have to do next... pushing you in the Mscloud and onlineaccounts and all that other .....This is NOT an operating system. In the best case, you do not notice the OS and it is "backgrounding". Windows is doing the exact thing, just the other way around...
@lifefromscratch28182 ай бұрын
Ya know what I like about Linux as a desktop/laptop? That I can load it, fire it up and I don't have to "hack into" it like I'm trying to access my freaking bank website. Windows forcing people to have accounts with them just to get into their own local PC was the last straw for me. When I first loaded a Linux desktop and was able to use it without having to put in any personal information, it was like a breath of fresh air. It was also very nostalgic. Like when I was a kid on Windows XP. Or an old Xbox. Turn it on and do what you want. No proving who you are, authenticating, entering product keys, making accounts, figuring out how to get past the ads, the news, the garbage. Just it, and the thing I wanted it to do for me.
@psk1772 ай бұрын
Agreed. Anonymity needs to comeback. Too much telemetry on Windows and data collection.
@ytbone94302 ай бұрын
@@psk177 I think it is easier to trim Windows down a bit, than to pimp up Linux. There are several Windows debloating scripts out there, use one of them, create a local account and add PiHole or something for your privacy to your network, it's done within an hour or day, compared to investing multiple weeks trying to get Linux up to the Windows level of functionality. I've been through this, as a hardcore Windows user, you will still end up with a bunch missing applications and general ease of use / functionality (like no UNC path support anywhere in Linux, drag'n drop not working correctly, missing transfer compression when doing remote desktop work etc.). It surely depends on what you are doing with your computer, the more professional or die hard you make use of Windows, the harder the switch to Linux will be, if you require Adobe Camera Raw for photo development, you are screwed on Linux, the same goes for file management, there just is no Directory Opus like file manager on Linux. If you don't need this kind of software, then you might get along.
@lambtron-692 ай бұрын
less is more, that's the way of linux, and the reason why I love it. I use debian because I love boring but stable and secured distros, I'm also new to linux and I like it, it reminds me of using XP and Windows 7 the desktop experience that I miss
@DimkaTsv2 ай бұрын
Don't quite understand pretense with Windows. Disable internet connection. Create local account. Do whatever you want without giving this information to Microsoft. Well, except using Microsoft Store which also has separate login. Winget should still work though. And even if you logged into Microsoft account, you can just unlogin from it and switch to local account afterwards. It's not like you use day to day PC without ever logging into something anyways. Like you logged onto KZbin to leave that comment. You logged into account on your phone to gain access to application store. No matter if it is iOS or Android.
@ewenchan12392 ай бұрын
But you DON'T have to sign up for a Microsoft account, to use Windows. Win10 isn't like that. With Win11, you can press Shift+F10, and then type in "oobe\bypassnro", press Enter, let it reboot, and then you can set up your system with an offline account. IS it an extra step? Yes. But are you REQUIRED to have a Microsoft account? No. What you wrote here is woefully inaccurate. You could LITERALLY google it in a matter of minutes.
@CedroCron2 ай бұрын
The problem is that it's a Windows world out there so while I run Linux, I can't get away from Windows 100% because of certain things that are made and only work for Windows... So it's most of the time in a VM for me but sometimes it has to be dual boot on a bare-metal install. It's also really difficult finding support sometimes for what you need without getting a ton of opinionated jerks jumping all over you for doing something a certain way etc.
@knghtbrd2 ай бұрын
What you're doing with a VM is annoying, but it's a necessary step to getting rid of Windows IMO. Making that easy to do is probably one of the major next steps. When Apple went to Intel, there was a product called Parallels, it was all about virtualizing Windows in a way that was as transparent as possible for the Mac user. A VMware product followed. Unfortunately the VMware product was kind of neutered on the UI in that you couldn't tweak all the settings you normally would because "dur-hur-hur it's for Mac users". But seriously we kinda need a Parallels/VMware Fusion for Linux. Sure, more configurable because you can do a lot with those … but the sane defaults, and ideally operating in a "rootless" mode, but let's start with a sane defaults it-works-first and tweak later if you want. Perfect solution? No. But improving the experience for Linux users is an iterative process.
@k.chriscaldwell41412 ай бұрын
In my opinion, the “jumping on” situation is improving. But the “use this distro.” as a solution is still annoying.
@chris_schenkelАй бұрын
The neckbeards are out of control.
@TruthDoesNotExist28 күн бұрын
I have the more richard stallman, if it's closed source I won't use it type attitude
@rdsii642 ай бұрын
I want a t-shirt that has the Debian logo, but I want it to say "I don't use Arch by the way"
@janvangorp69182 ай бұрын
I use Debian by the way😂
@Jorn-sy6ho2 ай бұрын
I’ve the Debian with ‘think correctly’ text. Love it!
@pabllosee2 ай бұрын
It's fine. No one's perfect.
@Earl.Norris2 ай бұрын
Of cause I use Debian.
@Earl.Norris2 ай бұрын
Are you not using Debian yet?
@jr.jackrabbit10Ай бұрын
Hearing an expert and a novice be so mutually intelligible when discussing the issues that linux faces gives me so much hope for the future. Hopefully people can learn to cooperate more and "crab in a bucket" less.
@seriouscat223125 күн бұрын
The problem is that linux and design simply do not mix, and when they do, the end result is bad, as in Gnome. So everyone is gathering the same low-hanging fruit again and again. Everything that is obvious has been done a long time ago, but everything that would require thought and commitment gets avoided. This lack of attention to design is what mostly plagues systemd, KDE and Wayland. The whole OS is a pile of mechanisms (things you can use) uninformed by policy (what you specifically need to do and want to do).
@iankester-haney33152 ай бұрын
At some point, you have to acknowledge that the documentation might not be clear. I've seen plenty of barebones documentation that doesn't get into specific details.
@BrunodeSouzaLino2 ай бұрын
What documentation?
@MikkoRantalainenАй бұрын
Which software does have clear and accurate documentation? LaTeX might get close but I cannot think of anything else. And even LaTeX documentation is really verbose so it's not easy reading.
@JV-pu8kxАй бұрын
Good documentation does seem to be going the way of the dinosaurs. There was a time when good documentation, online (Help menu) and print, was considered _half_ the value of the software! What's left is either incomplete or simply not written clear enough. The writers, and the RTFM people, forget that there's many levels of geek. What documentation does exist is often written for level ten geeks, but there are level zero geeks, or non-geeks, wanting to learn.
@peteruelimaa497318 күн бұрын
@@MikkoRantalainen PostgreSQL
@tunin68442 ай бұрын
I share the confusion over aversion to gui tools. When I first tried linux, I got my hands on a Mandrake install cd (in 2004, if I remember correctly) which was known for its "wizards". I ran into all sorts of hardware issues, but it actually ran extremely stable which was quite the contrast with Windows ME (which I was trying to replace). Over the years, I kept going back to Suse (Novell, Opensuse, whatever) partly due to Yast. It may be a silly acronym, but it does have tools for most things you want to do. If you are comfortable with the terminal, it may be easier and faster, but the gui is there for people that are either new or simply don't care to use the terminal at all. It isn't as though the terminal will go away or quit working if good gui tools exist.
@xenomyrАй бұрын
Yes. I try Linux every few years and the same problems persists. Why aren't all OS/Desktop Environment settings centralized in one window for instance? I guess that would be easy to implement. In Windows 11 I can add or remove a program, change the refresh rate of my monitor, update the system, and change the system fonts all from a single and straightforward GUI window. Using commands for daily tasks is not very hard, what's is more difficult is to remember all of them. Also more abstractions (commands) = more mistakes. Most people, including me, don't care to have to "earn the right" to us their OS, they will choose the path of least resistance which is Mac and Windows. Privacy and freedom should be accessible to anyone, not only to a handful of autistic techies.
@seriouscat223125 күн бұрын
It is because GUI tools, to be usable, need to be designed. You need to have in mind how to present the data to the user and what the user might possibly want to do with it. This lack of understanding or lack of interest in how the human mind works and how people learn what their computer is doing is why they don't do it. Or even if someone wanted to do it, the effort required is not negligible. Also, a GUI tool is done badly when it is either too confusing, gives too much data without context, or severely limits what the user can do. The point of a GUI is that it explains things as you go, which means that the programmer of the GUI must be good at explaining things to his target audience.
@ArbiterofMoths23 күн бұрын
@@seriouscat2231 Which is..practically no programmers considering how well most of them handle people 😂
@Diehard7542 ай бұрын
I love that an RTFM response on your forum is bannable. Well done!
@ArturdeSousaRocha2 ай бұрын
That should be the rule in every technical help forum.
@a.b-Clay2 ай бұрын
@@ArturdeSousaRocha I agree with your sentiment. But If you're brave enough to explore a whole different OS and kernel, you should be equally brave enough to RTFM. People should never be toxic and discourage questions! But people should also not be intellectually lazy. Look, I've read the extensive literature on several distros: Debian, Fedora, Arch, Qubes, Tails, Kicksecure, etc-word for word in many cases. And guess what. None of it was in language that wasn't perfectly clear. And I was able to solve the vast majority of my issues by simply RTFM. Only after I've exhausted that and searching through at least two or three forums for answers will I then ask. And I'll preface my question with the research I've done. And when I take those steps, experts of the forum literally jump to answer my questions
@TechWaltMD2 ай бұрын
@@a.b-Clay I've received and seen rude responses even WITH prefacing questions with places and sites I've researched. And some of the documentation is not well fleshed out, leading to questions from people who are less familiar with the project.
@jim7smith2 ай бұрын
@@a.b-Clay your sentence in the second paragraph: "And I'll preface my question with the research I've done.", is the key. I have seen great response and answers to some difficult issues by following that path. "Experts" who would normally not answer what they perceive as simple question actually swoop in and give you an elegant answer while telling you where you could find it. Anyway, just wanted to let you know you give good advice.
@adamk.71772 ай бұрын
@@a.b-Clay but it's OK to be 'intellectually lazy'. There is no one way to learn, and sometimes asking an expert is better than reading an entire book to get a sliver of information. The fact that you are upset is more a *you* problem than a *them* problem. If you are responding to a question on a forum like that, it is your job on those forums to help. If you don't want to help, just don't respond. Nobody is forcing you to answer, and answering rudely discourages new users instead of helping. So you are actively working against everything those forums are trying to do when you tell someone to RTFM, regardless of your problem with the way they're learning.
@BoDiddly25 күн бұрын
This was a great interview, and the title holds up to the content!
@PremiereStoss-qm9un2 ай бұрын
I switched from windows to Linux about 1 year ago. I had problems with hardware with many different distros (Ubuntu, Debian, SuSE, etc). I finally installed Manjaro and it worked with ALL my hardware. So, I have been running Manjaro KDE and now I barely touch my windows.
@peterwstacey2 ай бұрын
It's not just the distro, it can also be the Desktop Environment. The only major hardware issue I had was it randomly not registering the Nvidia drivers upon booting, which turned out to be a XFCE issue (fortunately the folk at Linux Mint forums were very helpful)
@markw911316 күн бұрын
I just bought a brand new laptop from ASUS which was worth $1500. It has a Ryzen 9 in it without the AI chip. (I don't want AI) I didn't even start it up with the Windows11 disk in it. Instead I bought a new M.2 drive and installed Linux on that. My chosen distribution was Zorn. It all went smoothly but the speakers on the laptop don't work. I found that to be a common problem across all distributions with that system. But I can plug in a USB speaker and it worked plug and play. I was disheartened when you said the Libre office should be removed and I should get a newer version. Seems like I have been using my old laptop more these days. Now is the time to make Linux shine when everyone is being forced into Windows 11. I'm not a developer but I'm determined to get a powerful Linux system to work so I'm good going into the future without Microsoft.
@cgjoh2 ай бұрын
What we need as a set interval of Linux summits, where anyobe of any distro is welcome to come and share where they are what theyve done and where theyre going.
@erickleefeld4883Ай бұрын
The Steam Deck is an interesting product, because it takes an Apple-like approach to creating a Linux consumer product. Valve selected all the hardware components, and they designed and are maintaining an operating system to work on that specific hardware product. The desktop mode is this extra little thing built in for a gaming device, but I really do think that Linux vendors should think in these terms.
@digitalnomad9985Ай бұрын
It would be good if developers could try to incorporate these advantages without a view to lock-in.
@digirydeАй бұрын
"The operation is secondary...." This is the key to linux becoming a popular OS. It needs to be invisible to the end user. The vast majority of users have neither time nor desire to have to bugger with the engine of the system to make things work. They want to put the key in, start the car, and then drive with a minimal amount of fuss. They are not being paid to fuss with the system.
@SubTroppo2 ай бұрын
The main problem as I see is that there are too many distros which I suspect leads to manufacturers dragging their feet on hardware drivers. I have resorted to Meta AI (on my phone) to get specific advice because internet searches have brought up too many variations of effectively bad (incomplete) forum advice in posts. When your phone can connect to a screen without wires easily, tablets, laptops will be in decline and desktops might only be for gamers. nb I am not a power user [Linux Mint & Puppy Linux] and I also keep my toe in the Mac OS pool. Thumbs up for the discussion!
@harveybc24 күн бұрын
You hit most of the problems I've noticed with Linux. It is great to be able to customize but like you said, most people just want it to work. In truth you shouldn't even notice the operating system, it should just let you do what you need to do. One thing that amazes me is the bit that Linux will work with everything. The first time I played with Linux was when Gnome was a brand new thing. Back then it was more amazement when Linux worked with your hardware. Usually worked with desktops but laptops almost always had issues. Linux has come a long way. As to helping other people out there are too many who push using terminal. While it is often the best way terminal scares most people who have only used Windows or Mac. Heck, years ago some of my duties was doing LAN management on a Novell network back in the days before any GUI existed for Novell and sometimes the cryptic commands in Linux terminal intimidate me.
@SandcastleDreams12 күн бұрын
Thank You!
@lotusson27 күн бұрын
Two things. Regarding their discussion about how hard it is to convince people to switch because you're not selling them a product, you're selling them an idea. I found that to be a very enlightening way to look at it.
@ericsperling9724Ай бұрын
I feel the same way about CRON. I want a GUI for scheduling tasks and everywhere I googled this topic, everyone just said "go to the command line and learn how to use cron". I'm forced to use some crappy terminal editor for the crontab when I'd rather just double click on a file and edit it with a GUI editor. Or better yet, why can't someone create a friggin GUI for cron?
@LordWaterBottleАй бұрын
I think KDE Plasma has a chron gui. I don't know if it's any good, since I've never used it, but I saw it in the settings earlier today. I can find it again if you think you will try it.
@EgilhelmsonАй бұрын
There are crontab editors out there, but I have never found one that let changes be commented out, or blocks of similar lines be kept together, commented for use in six months, or any other things convenient for my use. Hence, my crontab editor is “$EDITOR”, usually vi, sometimes emacs.
@mserica64872 ай бұрын
One of the complaints I have with some of the Linux support forums I've been on is that people want you to jump through a lot of hoops for troubleshooting but then they just don't seem to know what to do afterwards. It feels like people are just trying to show-off.
@7thAttempt25 күн бұрын
If you want the younger generation : AAA Gaming. If you want Enterprise Desktops: A standard that is worth investing to build apps and management tooling against. Nailing those will mean general public adoption.
@themomawАй бұрын
The biggest problem with Linux is that it isn't an operating system. It's a kernel. And then dozens (hundreds?) of teams that don't agree with eachother on anything take that kernel and make dozens (hundreds) of different versions of something that isn't compatible with eachother. You said it yourself: When you want a new program, it's not "Windows, Mac, and Linux" versions, it's "Windows, Mac, and Maybe". What Linux needs to actually succeed is unification and standardization so that it becomes an operating system and not a vaguely aligned galaxy of Stuff that happens to start from the same kernel.
@SergLapin29 күн бұрын
This is correct. On top of this, as it was highlighted by Linus, distros are going nuts with reuse of the libraries and etc. And very proud when ther complex application is 500kb, but relies on 1gb of dynamic libraries. While windows apps are huge, but mostly self-sufficient. Everybody hates those annoying c++ runtime packages.
@jornott839922 күн бұрын
I don't agree with the "repositories are bad" sentiment. The main issue with repositories is that there are dozens of package managers and formats around that ignore each other. If all the distributions could agree on a common standard for packaging and repository management, that would lessen the burden on software developers to support different distros with their own repo. In the next step, they need to get all those "my programming language has their own package manger" projects on board as well. Python, Ruby, PHP, and many other languages invented their own package managers and each of those are completely ignorant of the distribution provided system.
@lumeronswift21 күн бұрын
There definitely seems to already be a vaguely aligned galaxy of stuff... but I would argue that it wouldn't be "open source" if there was a forced framework. What you could argue for is a few distros aligning with certain standards and aims... and I would suggest that Debian, Arch, Fedora, and Gentoo already do this.
@ZeroG20 күн бұрын
@@SergLapinGuess you never heard of .NET lol
@cybermonkeyusaАй бұрын
The number one reason that people will not adopt, Linux is simply because it does not run the software that they use. It was pointed out earlier in the video that light room was on negotiable for the user. It’s not just commercial software, but it’s also not everyone wants a system that they can tinker with. While people will argue that windows 11 has issues, it’s still runs all the software that most users want to run. I do think people could move to Linux if some of the geek was stripped out and it ran commercial software. We’re seeing a generation that has grown up on Google Chrome books and they are doing just fine. I disagree with the host when he stated that people don’t want to change.Mac is a good reason that people do change from platforms like windows simply because they find that it fits a need. In short, I do think that there is a place for Linux, but the community has to determine what problem is at solving and why do I need to switch.
@yourhandleshouldbe26 күн бұрын
I do ux design. It is my job every day to make sure that the software and digital interactions that are output by my team never require reading any manual. If you want widespread Linux adoption you already failed when RTFM is ever an answer to anything. Matter of fact you already failed before anyone even expends the energy to seek out an answer on a forum. The interaction design should always be self explanatory to the people any system is designed for.
@SuperBoppyАй бұрын
The developers who want to make it harder to use Linux just so they can brag how smart they are just hurt the cause of getting more people to use it. (9:54 mark in video). I loaded Mint on an old laptop, just to play with Linux, and I loved it. Linux needs to move in that direction, with GUI development, also software and hardware compatibility. I'm okay with a learning curve with Linux, and so many instructive videos could help. Those who want to help people could, perhaps, point people to links of good videos or other helps that could really propel people's knowledge to where they gain confidence in the OS. Windows 11 (which I don't have - 10 on my PC's) seems to be a nightmare. It would be nice to have confidence when "taking the plunge" and make a serious switch over to Linux.
@jktolford82722 ай бұрын
RTFM? *Write* TFM, *publish* TFM (in print or complete downloadable format like pdf), *link* to TFM. Even then, there are people who don't do well w/ manuals, but there is a paucity of assembled, accessible, indexed documentation.
@YamahogАй бұрын
Yep, and also the Forum admin could post , " In terminal type ' man < program name > ', then press enter and RTM if it isn't available as a pdf from the repository... presuming the user downloaded the man-pages along with said app.
@jktolford8272Ай бұрын
@@Yamahog I became aware of the man command after posting. Yes, make newbies aware of *how* to read the manual, assuming it exists. Your suggested post could be boiler plate or pinned in forums.
@MrMayaFx2 ай бұрын
I am 52 years old I tried Linux Foodora since the beginning of 2000. In those days we didn't know Wi-Fi and I found a problem in using my printer and accessing the Internet via Ethernet because there is no drivers for them in Linux. After about 7 years I installed Ubuntu in my laptop and again I can not connect to the WIFI because of the driver problem. I think Linux developers fixed a lot of these problems and I will try Linux in on anther SSD in my desktop.
@sillymadeupusername29 күн бұрын
I am also trying Linux again for the nth time _ Fedora 40 - installed it last week on an exworks laptop I just retired last week so I have all the time in the world now. I installed 3 days ago and so far everything has been a breeze. It picked up the Wifi OK. I can see and access my Windows shares on my desktop (took some time and a flash of inspiration). VLC didn't work - someone in internet suggest installing from FlatPac - Hurrah! Plugged in my android phone - worked. Installed LibreOffice Calc - worked. Bluetooth - have an issue - this laptop has no Bluetooth - need to buy a Bluetooth dongle. My main point is with video/sound file - codecs/licencing seem to have been always an issue - I have hundred of Terabytes of videos of all types and I want to watch them all - I hope I can this time around.
@NVM_SMH18 күн бұрын
My wife: Promise me you haven't changed anything. Promise me you aren't going to touch anything. The computer has to be predictable and consistent. That's one of its features.
@a.b-Clay2 ай бұрын
Great conversation. Thanks for filming this. I'm definitely not a Linux noob, but you still put words to issues I couldn't define nearly as well
@buriedbits6027Ай бұрын
This was a very healthy and honest conversation. Thank you gentlemen. I am new to Linux so I appreciate the topics covered and the sincerity.
@bcase532818 күн бұрын
Could the Linus community set up free Beginner classes and beginner questions for the most popular beginner distributions types, and make it easy to find?
@RusselsPairOfDucks2 ай бұрын
I had the exact experience you're talking about at 38:50 : trying Ubuntu and not being able to upgrade OpenOffice because it wasn't in the repo. When I asked why in the Ubuntu forum, instead of an answer I got questioned "what do you need the latest version for, what exact features are so important to you?". In general, I found the forum a genuinely unhelpful, scornful and toxic vipers den. Sure, you can solve most Linux issues if you dedicate a weekend to it every so often, but I'd rather have a life. I've kept away from desktop Linux since first trying it and its' forums.
@knghtbrd2 ай бұрын
This, honestly, is why I am so excited for Flatpak. It's a solution that doesn't solve every problem, and I don't even know if LibreOffice (since OpenOffice is basically dead nowadays) is available as a flatpak … checked, it is! … but decoupling OS version from app version means that you can run the most current apps or, y'know, not, as you please. Again it's not yet a perfect solution. There's a few apps I've found aren't "perfect" under flatpak and some (OpenRGB) I never got to work at all no matter what I tried. But still, it's solving a lot of that kind of problem. I realize I'm making it sound like we just need to fix this one little thing to make Linux a good desktop OS for everybody, and I know it's not that simple. But … actually it kinda is. Fix one little problem, fix another little problem, keep fixing each little problem in turn and eventually we're there, technologically speaking. Of course the biggest problem … is attitude. The first or second comment under this video was something to the effect of "typical windows user complaints, cliche, nothing to see here." Kinda actually NO. Sometimes yeah they're common Windows/Mac user complaints, sure, but when a longtime Linux user says that people constantly trashing devs of key projects (not even the projects, but the devs behind them) because they don't like the projects … that's not a "windows user complaint", that's a recognition of toxic BS that only a longtime Linux insider is gonna recognize. You might have a beef with a Linux developer or even a group of them (sometimes they're toxic too), but if you don't like something about a project-say that OpenRGB saves its profiles in a binary format-going off on CalcProgrammer isn't going to help that, is it? IDK, I guess I'm all over the place in this comment, sorry. 🙂
@pikkuraami17 күн бұрын
Those are exactly valid questions. Latest version in open source software is mostly development/testing builds. Think of it as getting access to MS software development lab where things break every so often and at least twise a day. What you should focus on instead getting stable versions of software that you daily drive. Which is more stable like software you get from proprietary sources with bugfixes and few changes. Distributions do generally good job with that development/testing version gatekeeping. That way you can avoid most stability problems with software you use.
@SandcastleDreams12 күн бұрын
"Toxic vipers den", I'll remember that as I make the plunge! 😂 I have been watching interactions on YT and some on Reddit off and on for a decade and when I tried to describe it to my husband, I asked, "Do you remember the snotty attitude MAC users had towards Windows users back in the 90's?" They kept that snotty attitude until Adobe made a Windows version of Illustrator and Photoshop. Then, they lost the corner on the "elite" market so to speak. So, that's what I've come to perceive this toxicity as...elitism and just plain snottyness. Maybe the newcomers should all ban together and create their own forum after they've been at it awhile and turn this ship around.
@buriedbits6027Ай бұрын
10:13: Up to this point, I found the points made to be quite valid. For new users, Linux can sometimes feel a bit overwhelming. I’m currently trying Debian because I’m genuinely interested in learning, and I plan to stick with it. I also agree with the importance of forum members showing empathy toward newcomers. While some questions might seem basic to experienced users, we all start somewhere. A little patience and understanding can make a big difference in helping others succeed on their Linux journey! 😊
@kenworks60682 ай бұрын
Thank You! I've been using Linux for 30 years and I'm still looking for better GUI interfaces. This is because my life is too loaded down with trades to memoize or look up every linux command and how to script them. Software is really just a small part of my life though I still have a home lab with a server and 10 Gb fiber back bone. The command line works for me, and I've used it with big iron as a backbone telecom hub tech. So I'm a newbie still though I started with tubes. analog computers and core memory. Linux would be so much better if more focus was put on tools like Webmin. Standardized dialogs present new uses with options to control the deep functionality to the OS offers. I use Linux every day. The team, group and individual contributors have and are making the world better for everyone - Thank You All
@sunnybluesand273025 күн бұрын
Im thinking about bidding on a Dell laptop that has Mint 21 Cinnamon OS. I was looking forward to an alternative to Windows 10 but, now I'm thinking this will require more skills than making some novice settings adjustments, be too limiting :(
@theatermusic872 ай бұрын
The issues your both talking about with software versions and finding them, updating them etc applies to docker as well. Windows installers for all their issues come as one packages easy to get and install file... Linux and docker often don't, especially if there's something that needs to be configured
@stephenanthony5923Ай бұрын
Started in 2022. The learning curve for Linux was rough but also kinda fun for a knowledge worker like me. And it made me realize how Windows mis-trains users about how computers actually work.
@SandcastleDreams12 күн бұрын
If I want to drive a pickup, should I have to learn how to work on it first? Should I have to learn how to rebuild the engine, set the timing, change the sparkplugs, install a radiator, replace the fan belt, and rebuild the transmission?
@miket.220Ай бұрын
I switched to Linux Mint Cinnamon a year ago and love it. But i spent a month with Mint in VM on my Win10 machine testing it out before I made the switch, making sure I had all my software I needed. Can’t recommend this highly enough. My computer is a 2012 Mac Mini, and I initially switched to Win10 because Apple abandoned my machine years ago. Mint breathed new life into it, even over Win10. My biggest complaint with Apple is abandoning a perfectly good computer like my upgraded Mini so soon. It works beautifully for the average user.
@Breto1512 ай бұрын
Finally someone else said it... I've been saying for years that it is great that there are so many distros of linux but that is also it's biggest weak point. There are just TOO many distros and UI's now and because of that none of them work correctly. (I guess it just takes another Bret to say it! :D )
@SwiatLinuksa2 ай бұрын
With all due respect, who's telling you to use 600 distributions? what's the problem? You don't want to choose, use Ubuntu, Fedora or Arch or Debian. Don't limit the choices of others because you limit their freedom
@Breto1512 ай бұрын
@@SwiatLinuksa Wow... you so missed the point
@SwiatLinuksa2 ай бұрын
@@Breto151 probably yes
@rdnowlin12062 ай бұрын
New user. From my understanding, there are three main forks of Linux - Debian, Redhat/Fedoria and Arch. Then comes the Desktop environment. Which are too many to list. I picked Debian w/ a KDE environment.
@SwiatLinuksa2 ай бұрын
@@rdnowlin1206 that's right ;) and few maybe 7 independent made from scratch - 4mlinux, Pclinuxos, OpenMandriva, Void, Puppy, LFS,Gentoo.. i know - SystemD free are here too but they're not for daily easy/new user..
@alphascorpii18526 күн бұрын
That's the point, selling a product, not an idea. Many people use their computer for simple things, not talking of gamers here, and what they want is just a product that works, send mail, surf the net. Obviously you don't need a computer to do this, your phone does it, a tablet does it, and those products are very popular for a good reason : they work right out of the box. I'm a Linux user for more than 15 years now, I love it, and I will never go back to Windows, but I'm not an "average" user, I have a (small) knowledge about OS.
@cgjoh2 ай бұрын
No i agree with jay, down with repository soup.
@timhoenningerАй бұрын
I started out running Ubuntu, tried different flavors and settled on Mate. Used it for years and continuously had issues with update degrading and irregular crashes. I moved to Linux Mint Mate, no problems with update degrading or crashes. Linux Mint Mate works so well it’s boring. I have bash, Python and C/C++ available to write scripts and programs. LMM is my everyday computer but I have a dedicated windows computer running the software for amateur radio equipment and another dedicated windows computer running Mach 3 for my cnc machines. If the support for those dedicated windows machines becomes available in Linux I’ll switch them immediately. I supported windoze for years and it’s just a resource hog bloatware.
@knghtbrd2 ай бұрын
It's weird that Brett encountered "oh, you need a GUI for that??" if he was hanging out in Linux Mint spaces … they kinda frown upon that sort of behavior. Unfortunately AFAIK there is NOT a GUI for that even on Mint, yet, but y'know … that could exist. It should exist. But definitely that "RTFM" attitude has been a problem since 1997. I like the direction of smallish immutable distributions with containerized apps is the direction for the end-user desktop. It's probably not the ultimate solution for everyone, but it's a good default-sane defaults is what Linux really needs to strive for. I think an update to this video in a year or two would benefit from collection actionable points from this one, such as: Hardware support. Is there either a better chance Stuff Will Work or at least you're able to determine in advance what will and what won't? (Recent changes with Nvidia might give a couple free points on that one already!) Network config and sharing configuration: Can this be done from a GUI or at least without learning how to write config files yet? I'd look at basic setup for wired and wireless, personal firewall because you need one, and file sharing. (Printer sharing? IDK.) Software availability: Can you get the stuff you want? Like do you know where to get it from and can you get a reasonably recent version? How do you know where to get it from and what's involved. Pick several test apps. Stuff like that. And put those points out there somewhere soon so that people can look at this list of pain points and maybe address them. And maybe pick a few distributions to test out? Let's give them real report cards. Observable, measurable, actionable. I think this sounds like an interesting project, honestly! Wouldn't mind contributing to it. I wouldn't mind testing stuff to see how it fares either. I'll throw in one of my own right now: Input devices. Keyboards, mice, … and game controllers. Wired probably works, but what about wireless? Do any special features work? What if the wireless is BLUETOOTH, how stable is it? And I'm including game controllers because yes, Linux gaming is becoming more of a serious thing. Oh, and for wireless devices … can you do things like read battery levels? If there are settings for the device, what works? (Perhaps that gets into a hardware database a little?)
@cgjoh2 ай бұрын
I think the best thing to do is that we all agree to make a linux distro that is as vanilla linux as possible, and whatever that is, we support it in every other distro, so that there is a clear starting point, and from there they can enjoy the possibilities.
@TheJosephAller2 ай бұрын
When it comes to gaming too much goes into setting up everything. I would argue gaming based distros have more of a place
@TheJosephAller2 ай бұрын
Also, vanilla distros exist. Arch, Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, etc... These are usually want most DIstros are based off. So if you want a basic start in Linux, start with these. Be warned though, Arch has a huge difficulty curf. So you might want to skip it
@cgjoh2 ай бұрын
@@TheJosephAller I use Arch, but it's still different enough from Debian which is the parent of Ubuntu. What Im saying is we need to agree on a standard, and make that distro synonymous with Linux.
@gruntaxeman37402 ай бұрын
@@TheJosephAller Fedora and openSuse are made for developers who develop for Red Hat or Suse environments. Ubuntu LTS is also very enterprise stuff and it is bloated, but it is used because it is available for free. So I do value Debian a lot when it is not some enterprise environment or user is not a developer but also want all workstation/server features. Debian has many desktops that can confuse but I believe when X11 is soon dropped, some of the desktop environments are gone too because they just don't have enough resources to refactor them to Wayland. I use a lot Xfce on virtualized form but that is likely one that has no future. I bet for Gnome, LXQt and KDE. Gnome has best usability but LXQt is actually nice when computer is intended to run single application made with Qt.
@binkycsАй бұрын
I think Fedora fits that mold probably the best right now. Rolling release, repositories are up to date for every package that I've needed at least, and GNOME is perfectly fine for most users imo. A little combination of Mac and Windows aesthetic. The only issue is, some software is only distributed as .deb and not .rpm. The way I see it is, Ubuntu or another Debian based distro needs to take the model of Fedora's release and up-to-date mantra. Or Red Hat needs interoperability with .deb packages. Also, .appimage needs to be more integrated into the DEs so that I don't need to create a .desktop file just to open the damn thing from the applications menu. That is super annoying because I just don't want to go through that hassle, because I just don't really care about learning the structure of the .desktop file, remembering where they're stored, and figuring out a place to put the .appimage I just downloaded.
@dwightsmith5174Ай бұрын
WOW!! 15 minutes in and they voice every issue and concern I've had trying to switch. Bravo!!
@nomadic_shadow2 ай бұрын
This is a really great conversation. You guys really tackled some important stuff about linux adoption.
@tonystorcke7 күн бұрын
Flatpak is so beautiful to use. My data is separate from my app so when if I uninstall the app, I don't have to lose my data. This makes reinstallations so easy. Even Windows and Mac do not have this functionality. Flatpak fixes several of the problems you have mentioned.
@Mega_Casual2 ай бұрын
The Windows versus Linux discussion about wanting a gui to setup network shares reminds me of the old days when the die hard web designers bragged about using a text editor rather than a software package like Dreamweaver for example. Using a text editor to design web pages did not make them cool or better, just made them feel more elite . Nothing wrong with wanting more gui stuff in LInux with a caveat. That the admin should be able to perform the same tasks in terminal if need be if the gui is mis-behaving..
@justanothercomment4162 ай бұрын
The difference was, software like Dreamweaver created garbage HTML. It was the difference between people who could and people who took pride. The fact it required more skill to create a higher quality product was the point of pride. Given the bandwidth limitations of the period, it mattered.
@l30n.marin3r02 ай бұрын
"Let's bloat the one thing that works just fine by itself with a graphic interface but give people the option to use the one thing that works just fine in case the other we added, that we don't need, fails" Great logic. Now, if we we're talking about making better documentation with actual use cases and updating the man pages, then I'd be right behind you. The thing is, just with your comment, I don't think you use any linux distro
@fanis40932 ай бұрын
not only if the gui is mis-behaving but also for other reasons like you want to do it with a simple ssh.
@araaraavery2 ай бұрын
@@l30n.marin3r0 as someone that uses arch btw and prefers to interact with my machine at the terminal, the whole point of this discussion is how to broaden the userbase and adoption of linux and other open source software. The simple fact of the matter is that people (in general) DO NOT WANT TO USE THE TERMINAL as the main way of interfacing with their computer. Technically yes, a gui is 'bloat' in the same way if i go to a burger place and they tell me they only do ketchup and mustard as toppings bc all other toppings are 'bloat' and they don't want to deal with slicing and keeping other fresh toppings. Yes, adding 'bloat' introduces more potential vectors for things to break or make them needlessly more complicated but, trying to say guis are bad because they're 'bloat', is great logic akin to calling someone stupid because they want to put bacon on their burger when ketchup and mustard are simpler and just less hassle. the option to do something in a gui rather than at the terminal (just like wanting more than ketchup and mustard on your burger) is just that: an option. Without this option present, dont be surprised when nobody wants to come eat your burgers.
@l30n.marin3r02 ай бұрын
@@fanis4093 if you're sharing files over the network you would only need to set the server once, which is not really that difficult even with ftp but you could just scp over the network and you'd be fine, no need to ssh and then again, even that is easy. Samba is even easier and it even works with iPhone without the need to download any extra apps on the phone. Haven't tried scp with an iPhone and I installed some packages on Arch that make it way easy to connect to the phone just by plugging it into the laptop. Do you have to read? Yes Could it be done better an easier? Also yes
@dennysawyer3980Ай бұрын
I love Linux, and it has saved me having to buy a new computer because it works well even on my 12-year-old laptop, but most people don't even want to install their own operating systems. They want to buy a computer that fits their needs, that will run the software they use, and that fits their budget. They want something that's easy to use and that runs their favorite games. Until a manufacturer starts pre-installing Linux, software companies port their applications to Linux, and doing things like mounting network shares is done through a GUI, Linux will never compete with Windows or MacOS. I've been running Linux on my desktop and both my laptops for almost five years now, and every year I still have to boot into Windows because there is still no tax software for Linux that fits my needs, and none of the commercial tax programs run in Wine.
@alphascorpii18526 күн бұрын
You're right, if you must go through the installation of an OS, with all the problems, small problems often, but when you're just a user knowing nothing to computer systems, you just let go and buy a ready to use product. What Linux distro makers have to understand, is that people want to use their computer, they don't want to know how it works. Imagine having your car engine delivered apart of the bodywork and all you know is how to drive a car.
@tlh839121 күн бұрын
Linux people - wow that's a cool nice distro. Others - it looks ulgy and outdated. That's the issue.😂
@johnmcpherson7603Ай бұрын
Jay good video as always. i am using Ubuntu latest version, but as you said i am also looking for another system just in case?
@yellingintothewindАй бұрын
I use InstaLink's 360 on Linux. There isn't a graphical frontend for controlling them, but their gesture control works out of the box for the advanced stuff, and v4l2-ctl lets you set ptz and all the other standard camara parameters. It's been great, but I've been using Linux for advanced camera stuff for 10+ years so reaching for v4l2 to see what it can do is my first step.
@hundikutsikas1Ай бұрын
I have a laptop of a well-known company produced 5 years ago. All kernel versions released in the last 2 years have failed. I'm waiting, not complaining. It is necessary to develop a handheld device (smartphone) running on Linux. This device can be connected to large screens and keyboards etc. wirelessly or with a single cable.
@sg6610Ай бұрын
I started on Fedora in 2008 and wireless would go down and I needed to bring it back up. However, I am of the mindset of I enjoy it when things break - that's when you learn. I miss cmd line days and now I'm back to it the last 4+ years. I had my wireless stop working on Ubuntu and tried a USB, but Linux is not always pnp and I started learning about device drivers and how to block them...eventually the wireless worked with updates. I still enjoy the troubleshooting aspect and digging deep; I want to know how the OS works inside and out. I also enjoy new things and taking them apart to understand them. Again, that is me; I have patience to dig in and understand things.
@StreetLethal922 ай бұрын
I find a lot of documentation sucks. All to find out just do these 4 commands and you’re done. Too much fluff and not well structured.
@jothain2 ай бұрын
@@StreetLethal92 gotta agree on that. It goes very technical very fast on many man pages. I was quite surprised how good some of the MacOS documentation seems to be. They’re quite well laid out and quite to the point in many cases. I suppose many Linux documentation could benefit from bit of a reworking. Like Debian. I love it and there’s so much stuff in their wikipages, but navigating through it and finding something actually usable is absolute hell. Imo that site should be burned and start from scratch
@PaulaXism2 ай бұрын
@@jothain Do you know what really really gets to me on the man pages?.. It's the way you get every single possible switch and option and possibility.. but NOWHERE is a single EXAMPLE of the command structure to show you the order or syntax... so after all that you end up guessing... I just delete the whole lot now.. save the space and the time..
@jothain2 ай бұрын
@@PaulaXism Yup. I've been there. I tried some program/script that gave short list of examples and their context. It was quite useful, but I've forgot what it was called. Anyway it was something I'd like to see default on distros. I think it was something that cheat sheet in it's name. Should really try to find it again.
@johanb.78692 ай бұрын
That's a very good point, documentation sucks.
@3120sАй бұрын
Out of the 3 main computer makers (Lenovo, HP, Dell) Dell is the least compatible. System76 and Tuxedo Computers makes computers for Linux with Linux preinstalled so they're the best choice if one wants to use Linux as a daily driver.
@markkoops26112 ай бұрын
The biggest problem I found with all the distributions is the lack of consistency in how to configure the same component across different distros. For example, I needed to update the ssl certs last week... Google brought up clear well written instructions at Linux foundation... But the folders specified in the instructions didn't exist...
@bjre.wa.86812 ай бұрын
the "Toxicity segment was spot on. The Ubuntu group needs to restructure their environment. I think most the monitors there are asleep and let a group of Sixteen year old brats run the board.
@fr8trainUS2 ай бұрын
I think one thing Microsoft did early on was too make Windows pretty easy to use for beginners. Sure there is stuff you can dig into the weeds on, but most folks don't need to. Linux took the path of powerful and robust, but not easy to get into, however extremely customizable
@jothain2 ай бұрын
One odd thing I've noticed is interesting. There's tons of desktop UI's, but they all are absolutely horrible for touch screen devices. Hell even Wayland breaks Gnome so that you can't onscreen keyboard passwords. That's ridiculous state in this decade.
@milohoffman2742 ай бұрын
KDE works very well on touch devices, there is even a phone edition.
@xritics192 ай бұрын
Loool and the steam deck??? Kde + touchscreen => no problem at all. Wtf stop to fire bullets on Linux when you don't know!
@iodreamify2 ай бұрын
yep, you're right. But as Jay said in the video, we're in a state of transition and the Wayland people working on different protocols are absolutely aware of this(just look at the accessibility discussions on the software trackers, they're very active)
@jothain2 ай бұрын
@@xritics19 it's purpose build device. Completely different thing that if you buy a touchscreen laptop and install like Fedora on it. Looks like you haven't even tried this scenario thoroughly.
@gabbeeto2 ай бұрын
Have you tried pop os? I don't have touchscreen so I can't have an opinion. Just being curious
@jooch_exe2 ай бұрын
People forget they learned to use one system for years and get frustrated when another system works differently. If all the kids would have learned Linux instead it would be the other way around. New things are never easy, especially when you get older. Try learning to ride a bike when you're past forty. Now add to that the teacher is a bully, that's going to be demotivating.
@lukemillermakes2 ай бұрын
A great solution to the packaging issue would be a gui frontend to nix and home manager: everything available, everything recent, can't break your kernel or display driver.
@tomrest6402Ай бұрын
It is so interesting how many of the Problems I consider Features... e.g. Packard Managers
@smalltimer43702 ай бұрын
I personally love Linux for the fact that it exists and that it is a viable alternative to Windows That said, and as much as I would love to move off Windows entirely, I just can't seem to find a viable path on Linux, so that I can effectively move-off Windows... :( - of this, I have tried so many times over the years, over and over again, and with much vigor, only to come crawling back to Windows - not by choice! hell no, but rather, that I was unable to sustain a suitable level of productivity on the Linux platform to make it viable That being said, and based on my own experience, I believe the missing element needed to propel Linux into Windows user territory, is that of a good VM strategy, so that Windows users can continue to work with whatever software is tying them down at the time, and without having to compromise on productivity as a result of the change.
@PaulaXism2 ай бұрын
Have you not heard of Proxmox then?
@mariojpalomares25142 ай бұрын
I suggest people start reading The General Public License or GPL for short. This will better explain why gnu/linux will never be controlled by x entity or have a certain way of doing things. GPL exists for this particular reason. Also, people are misunderstanding of the meaning of "free". Its not what it think it means. In fact, the GPL is pretty much built on that principle.
@ArbiterofMoths23 күн бұрын
@@mariojpalomares2514 Uhh..yeah, I'm sure any random person will take the time out of their just to read through legal documentation and become enthusiastically invested in FOSS ideology, right..
@mariojpalomares251423 күн бұрын
@ArbiterofMoths Its not going to change just because a few does not like how things are so🤷♂️
@ASilverNMeep8862 ай бұрын
"installing an OS on a refrigerator" is a great paradigm shift I hadn't really considered before. I "knew" that most people don't consider their OS, but it's hard to really duplicate that feeling or sympathize. I felt if you use any two devices with different OS: Windows, Android, iOS, MacOS, ChromeOS, heck even Blackberry/flip-phone era or game consoles, you'd consider how you like to interact with devices. Not everybody has access to multiple devices or upgrades, but considering how people felt about Windows 7 to 8 to 10, it seemed like the effect should have been wider when including other interfaces as comparison.
@az_tinkerer_gamer2 ай бұрын
Yep, people dont like change. I think a lot of people dont do the research they need to make the change. IE. How to run the terminal, how to optimize their distro, etc. When i made the change from windows, i tried to make it a point to utilize the terminal over gui. Granted there were times i tapped and used the gui. Another thing i've found. People dont like variety for some reason. They get overwhelmed from the choices. Whether its choosing a distro or personalization of kde. Myself, i love variety. I dove right in doing kde and loved the personalization. I think ill try my second distro with arch. Anyway have fun and i always enjoy the content.
@jothain2 ай бұрын
@@az_tinkerer_gamer tbh many people make "noobs" believe Linux is very easy to approach, which isn't true at all imo. Let's be real that virtually everyone comes from Windows and stuff is done vastly different in Linux. Drives are handled very differently. Heck I still don't remember all the system related file structures on Linux and I've been using it for decades. I certainly don't mean Windows is simple, far from it, but I also stumble completely false statements in Linux forums about Windows. But if coming from Windows with issues to achieve some bliss from Linux, well it's going to be a rough ride in the start. I'm using virtually all OS's out of curiosity. Windows, Linux, Android and now more recently MacOS and iOS. They all have their pros and cons, but like I haven't crashed Windows in... Decades and yet some people claim it's unusable in some way. Just like I was under impression MacOS is some kind of an holy grail of OS's just to find in very beginning of my introduction to it that it has the worst ever window management out-of-box since like Windows 95. There's good stuff in it too, like I mentioned all have those pros and cons. But anyway I digress. If one has bit lacking base and does the switch to any OS, it's going to be quite difficult. Change needs that open-minded vision. Unfortunately most are displeased in thing X and try to go into another platform likely expecting it to be almost same, but that it just works. Many people have been quite confused in ie. Ubuntu forum where I'm really active when I've occasionally stated based on users needs that imo you might want to actually stick to Windows and I can try to help with your issue. There's been way too many comments about people ramming their Windows installation with Ubuntu and now user is wondering how they can use their diabetes tracking software made for Windows and at same post ask like btw how do I run my Autodesk installation with copyright USB dongle and it kinda breaks my heart to tell some of these that unfortunately you've been told quite rose tinted things about changing OS. Like gaming. Yes it's gotten a s ton easier on Linux, but I'd still urge one to use Windows. However if one uses like Firefox and like old outlook etc. on their dated hardware with Windows that has began to feel slow, using software that's available for virtually any OS. By all means put that Linux Mint out there and see if it works for you. People just shouldn't give false expectations to anyone. Especially to users that aren't tech savvy
@az_tinkerer_gamer2 ай бұрын
@@jothain as clint eastwood said, "a mans gotta know his limitation." Be honest about your strengths and weaknesses. Try different distros, as some are preconfigured out of the box. I know elitists would scoff at that. But a lot of new people want that sort of thing. I started rather recently down the linux hole on nobara. Im more hardware savvy than software. Figured itd be quick to get me up and running. Granted i did a ton of research and ive been rather happy. I will probably install arch the next couple days, as i do like to tinker. I have a ventoy usb made up and multiple drives to play with lol.
@gio53402 ай бұрын
Absolutely loved the insight, awesome collab from 2 fav channels Please provide more visibility for collaborations from the community to test, develop, innovate. I’d love to get involved
@zooziz572428 күн бұрын
I don't have time to listen atm, but biggest problem with Linux is that there isn't a distro that has everything to build a Userbase from folks leaving windows Mac. Seperatly all of those things exists but no single distro does it. What I mean by that is looks themes of both win and Mac out of the box. First boot screen it should give you a choice of picking the looks. Then paint, just paint working paint clone. Photoshop clone, some easy light music production app, video editing app all light not industry giants, but they must work out of the box and be intuitive so that you could retain hobbyists or tinkerers of arts too. And that's all that's needed for Linux to be main desktop. Once you hook folks in they'll stay and then more devs will follow or some of them users will become devs too.
@SandcastleDreams12 күн бұрын
Exactly!
@tracesmith357211 күн бұрын
It's more than that. In many cases, the Linux equivalent of a lot of software written for Windows just doesn't have the feature set. That's another thing working against open source. We're working against money and motivation if we're competing with M$.
@zooziz572411 күн бұрын
@tracesmith3572 I understand your sentiment but honestly the biggest problem is ego at this point. I've tried to switch to Linux since 2014 and only this year I finally did it because of AI. I don't need to interact with community anymore therefore I was able to fix problems. Linux community doesn't understand what an avg user is therefore whenever you ask a stupid question they think you're lazy and haven't read all the documentation while in reality I was a full time worker and was hoping that someone will help me since I don't have enough time to go through hours of websites and Documentation. Never ever was it a case where Linux community would understand that even when I explained. Ever since AI became widely available I've setup things how I want it and even then things just don't work and I need to constantly jump between distros arch/debian to cover my needs. But the thing is since I've finally managed to setup things where I can do without windows 100% I now know that it's egos of devs that stops Linux from becoming truly a widespread OS. All is there gaming, music production, video editing , programming but they're all over the place with horrible horrible UI and UX and constant new feature development because that's what these folks truly want - cutting edge features and theh don't care that nobody can use them. They constantly talk about year of the Linux but when you explain to them that majority of people sit on their computer for 5+ years therefore we don't need to chase newest hardware and fry systems after random update, they don't care. Only distro that has it almost right is Linux mint, but Linux devs look at Linux mint as something useless therefore the young blood does not develop on it so the team is small and slow but steady. It's all there for Linux to gain huge huge proportion of users they just refuse to develop distributed that out of the box ask you to choose windows or Mac theme for familiarity and was of use. They refuse to make distributed that has hobbyist level music app that has midi sweep, production sweep and easy to use plug and play guitar vst implementation. They refuse to make a 1 to 1 paint clone they need to out some stupid twist on it, they refuse to have light Photoshop etc etc etc. All of it is there they just keep bloating it for no reason instead of aiming for mass adoption.
@SandcastleDreams11 күн бұрын
@tracesmith3572 Why not start offering Linux compatible shareware? Wouldn't that help with the Financials? I was reading some articles on ZDNET because I kept hearing about Nvidia and other things going bad, I finally checked out system requirements for Linux. ZDNET covered more indepth than the gb ram and hard drive stuff. I thought I had to choose between different versions of Linux with different desktops and nobody seemed to have photos that U could zoom in on (I'm on a phone), so it's been confusing to me. Come to find out it comes loaded with 3 desktops and you choose according to the age of your pc. WOW! Several articles down, he asks a question. If MS came out with a Linux Compatible MS Office Suite, would you buy it? At $500? I was thinking, was there anything I would be willing to pay retail for? MS Publisher. However, there are a number of older apps that many of us would like to see on Linux and would pay for. Some of these were developed as shareware for Windows some were freeware and are now abandoned. I know the idea of creating shareware is probably anathema to the open source community, but some of Hung onto our old PC with our old Windows OS because of the proprams we could run on it. For instance, Mowin Maniac and Toaster Run from the After Dark Games. People would pay for those games if they could be programmed for Linux. Cross stitch programs would also be good options. Alot of people switch to Linux because Windows won't let us keep the oldies but goodies. You can't run stuff from the XP Era or the Win98SE Era and they'll keep pushing until there is nothing left but AI, a browser and a word processor. Go on Ebay and look up software. There isn't much of anything, except the older stuff. It's like Microsoft is sucking the creativity out of everything. But I found my CD's for Gimp, OpenOffice, 7Zip, Scribus, etc. A Lot of us are using hotspots with limited bandwidth we need CD's and Thumbdrives not only to replace downloads but to have a backup. Sell those! You all need a marketing director!
@esra_erimez10 күн бұрын
33:01 *this* I agree. My dad gave me one of his old D600 laptops with Kubuntu on it just to shut me up when I was a kid. I really didn't know any better about Windows or even MacOS. But, it was magical to me I just wanted to explore the OS, it was like discovering Narnia in the back of a wardrobe to me
@DontFollowZim2 ай бұрын
It's mostly problems everyone talks about, but there are some decent insights into problems that aren't mentioned much
@OraOraOra2 ай бұрын
Great Video! I'd love more of these podcast type videos!
@yanasittaАй бұрын
There are too many nerds that treat Linux like it's a MMORPG and think you need to earn the knowledge the way they did. They act like elitist gatekeepers that want to maintain their superiority. Kudos to those that don't have that attitude and offer a hand to pull the rest of us up.
@ArbiterofMoths23 күн бұрын
@@yanasitta "The world must suffer..as I have suffered"
@V1CT1MIZED12 күн бұрын
Even mmorpgs use catch up mechanics because they know new people wouldn't play without them. Linux nerds are stuck in the 90s still.
@ewenchan12392 ай бұрын
I think that the biggest problem with Linux is the fact that there aren't very many people who ACTUALLY, COGNITIVELY recognise, that the very thing that they love the most, is imperfect. Whenever you ask a question about a problem or an error that you encountered, they get so defensive as though you just called their baby ugly. That's NOT the issue. The issue is what's captured either via a copy-and-paste of the error message or, if you're not in a position to capture that, to take a picture of the monitor. When you recount your experiences (with using Linux, where you've ran into problems), Linux fanbois would tell you that you're wrong, until you produce the receipts (pictures/screenshots) and then they are, interestingly enough, they get VERY quiet after that. THAT is, what I think, is the biggest problem with the Linux community -- where they will ridicule, belittle, berate, etc. you, calling you all KIND of names, but the moment that you show them the picture of your monitor of the Linux kernel panic, then all of a sudden, they get very, very, very quiet from people who used to be very loud, when they were ridiculing, belittling, and berating you. That is, what I've found, to be the biggest problem. There are some that will actually try (or at least attempt to try) to help you figure out what went wrong. But there are quite a number who don't/won't.
@ArturdeSousaRocha2 ай бұрын
I may be stereotyping here but there seems to be a lot of of immature personalities in that bunch, judging from symptoms like the percentage of anime girl wallpapers. I may be reading this very wrong, though.
@ewenchan12392 ай бұрын
@@ArturdeSousaRocha I dunno. I've interacted with some "seasoned, Linux 'professionals'" and their attitude towards people who don't know what they know, don't really change all that much. I think that this video hit the nail on the head with the question "if you're not here to help, then why are you on a forum?" There are quite a number of people who are like that. I can't tell you how many times I've gotten that kind of a response from Linux users, in the comment section of other Linux KZbin videos.
@castigo19862 ай бұрын
Such an interesting conversation: I can definitely relate with some of the problems with switching, especially moving away from known procedures and software. But with the growing compatibility of games on linux and AMD attitude towards open source, I think switching now it's relatively easier for gamers and general users. Plus, most work now is really browser based, until you need a specific closed source software that won't run on linux.
@gruntaxeman37402 ай бұрын
Mounting network shares in Debian: -add package: nfs-common -command as root user: mount -t nfs remotehost:/path /thishostpath -making it permanent needs to add it to /etc/fstab like: remotehost:/path /thishostpath nfs defaults 0 0 Details can be found from NFS documentation.
@JuiceCard2 ай бұрын
Born on Windows. Raised on Linux. Educated on Mac, is my 0.02 cents and after 30 years I’ve come to realize the desktop doesn’t matter if sh|t plain just doesn’t work. Why I called it “Open Sore” v open source.
@ironfist77892 ай бұрын
I think it is important to just identify what you need to do and then see if you are able to switch. If the problems are deal-breakers then maybe it is not time to switch. It is good to try the virtual machines or maybe a different machine for a while with linux. Within linux, for a long time I didn't use wayland because certain games just weren't working with my NVidia card... then I waited until the 550 drivers came out it started working. Now I use wayland on my desktop, so far so good. On my surface go I still need X because skype won't screenshare on wayland yet. Don't stress over stuff not working, just use what OS you need to and maybe in the future the holes will be fixed with people addressing the shortcomings. As far as community, I would say that the internet can be toxic in general a lot of times, but I don't know a solution for that other than to look in different places.
@tehtapemonkey29 күн бұрын
Cool show, thanks for having Jeff on your show!
@mrright10682 ай бұрын
There are so many abandon projects in linux how can I be sure that if I move my business processes to a native linux app that it will be supported? Devs are so fickle now at the first chance they are on to a SAAS solution which is always in your pockets with fees. For that experience we have MS.
@zedpassway414016 күн бұрын
I tried to do linux but I didn’t come from Windows. I came from Mac. I found after awhile that it took 3 steps in Linux to one step in the Mac. I finally went back to the Mac.
11 күн бұрын
3 steps in what?🤔
@buriedbits6027Ай бұрын
One of the things I truly appreciate about Linux is its ability to breathe new life into older computers that might otherwise be considered obsolete. Many machines that no longer receive security updates or support for their native operating systems can run a modern version of Linux, depending on the distribution. This is incredible to me. When you think about what a typical student needs for school-whether it’s in high school, university, or even grade school-the essentials are pretty straightforward: a web browser, maybe an email client, and a text editor. Gaming is fun, sure, but for studying and productivity, these basic tools are crucial. With Linux, people who can’t afford to buy new computers can pick up an older, used one and install a current version of Linux, turning it into a fully functional and modern machine. This untapped market could really benefit from wider awareness. Shops selling affordable, used computers with up-to-date Linux installations could provide a powerful solution, especially since the software is free. While this concept is well-known within the Linux community, I don’t think it’s as widely understood by the general public. There’s so much potential here for giving old technology a second life, especially for students who need reliable, budget-friendly computers for their education.
@jakobw1352 ай бұрын
The complaints lodged by your guest are VALID, but, you shouldn't let other people's INSULTING ATTITUDES discourage you from your goals or your preferences! Look around and you'll find civilized individuals who will give you the best answer they know!
@mademepickaname2 ай бұрын
It's amazing how far Linux has come. I remember first using it in the late 90s, Red Hat 5.2 at the time. Hardware support was nearly nonexistent unless you had old vanilla hardware. If you bought the latest sound card for instance, thinking it would work was a pipe dream. It could've been literally a couple years before it was supported.
@sbmb961329 күн бұрын
For those that have tried linux and are unsure which distro to go with, NixOS is probably the most future proof solution, given its frequency of updates compared to other linux distros.
@JingleJabringle18 күн бұрын
28:14 this is already happening so I can see it in business environments. I work at a college and employees are provided a laptop with a multiport adapter to provide a "desktop like" experience.
@rdnowlin12062 ай бұрын
Problem with Linux: move /home directory to 2nd drive. Why is this task a pain to execute?
@Gaius__2 ай бұрын
It isn't. Take a snapshot, restore it to the new drive, edit fstab to correctly identify the drive and mount it as /home ... done. Not counting the time it takes to create and restore the snapshot (which is just sitting and watching the progress bar) it requires about 90 seconds of very simple work.
@riseabove30822 ай бұрын
You just named off one of the easiest things to do in Linux. Now go try that in Windows.
@TradersTradingEdge2 ай бұрын
I like LInux, but I love FreeBSD/OpenBSD.
@tendosingh56822 ай бұрын
Why?
@mmaruszewiczАй бұрын
I'm using Arch Linux, and the LibreOffice from the repo it is a current version 24.8.2!
@paspa072 ай бұрын
Simple things like wallpaper slide show from a specified folder for a dual monitor setup with different image om each monitor can take one a whole week to figure out on linux til you give up
@Chris-j6x7p15 күн бұрын
Sydney! No way, that's where I grew up. Hope you had a great time while you were there!
@JoeSweeneybigjoe2 ай бұрын
Regarding the RTFM comments, I would prefer people provide the snippet of help and reference the part of the manual if it exists. Some manuals don't cover all hardware and use cases (even in windows or Mac).
@jsimmonstx19 күн бұрын
My wife doesn't like Linux because the apps that are 'like the Microsoft apps" are not like them enough.
@billsmith12462 ай бұрын
When I started using Linux (it was Ubuntu 16.04) I had been a Windows user. Instead of breaking with Windows immediately, I felt I had to use Windows for various things. I would use a music processor (Mozart) to write or transcribe music for my use at the pipe organ. I also used a template builder to build templates for my Joomla websites without having to learn the process and software necessary to build them from scratch. After a few years, though, I learned to use Sibelius for the music, and learned to use and modify templates that I could download from the Internet. My Windows computer is used, now, for playing games while I'm listening to podcasts on Rhythm Box in my linux computer. That way I can have the games muted so my podcast listening wouldn't be interrupted by the infernal advertisements on the Windows games.
@ThisIsSparta-k2m2 ай бұрын
A lot of the problems could be solved by simply using kde. Why kde is not the standard for all new user friendly distros is completely beyond me.
@stocky98032 ай бұрын
because kde runs like shit sometimes the same with gnome the same with hyprland and i think thats their point here there are so many options that have differing outcomes depending on hardware. I can have a laptop at home that runs on kde fine, smooth sails then run the same setup on a different laptop at the office and it will be a stuttering bucket of shit that breaks and causes all sorts of havoc
@Eimantasks2 ай бұрын
Using KDE will solve lacking professional software support issue?
@gabor_kov2 ай бұрын
Maybe it's just me, but using linux as a daily driver is so much easier than learning linux for enterprise or development. Maybe because i am comfortable wiping out my system if something breaks, happens, while others need their system usable at all times. I am learning linux administration, i love this channel and his teaching style.
@fritzbang480527 күн бұрын
I use many flavors of linux and have for decades. Also used windows occasionally but gave up when they started forcing people to upgrade hardware to use it.