←back to thread

535 points raddad | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.201s | source
Show context
pvdebbe ◴[] No.11388636[source]
This has a faint scent of an early April fool joke.
replies(1): >>11388969 #
tempodox ◴[] No.11388969[source]
It does, but then find me a Linux user who doesn't dual-boot into Windoze for desktop apps. This way, you save one reboot. I wonder, however, how stable this will be...
replies(10): >>11388992 #>>11389097 #>>11389189 #>>11389282 #>>11389313 #>>11389508 #>>11389581 #>>11390681 #>>11390925 #>>11390993 #
reacweb ◴[] No.11389189[source]
At home, I am using ubuntu since 2009. The first year, I have dual-booted a lot. Progressively, I have stopped. The last time I have booted in Windows was december 2014 to check if it was still working. If a desktop app does not work with wine, I do not use it.

If you can have all the comfort of Linux (huge catalog of software that are easy to uninstall, network transparency, ...) with the assurance that your hardware will be fully supported by the OS, it would deserve a try.

replies(1): >>11389928 #
1. pvdebbe ◴[] No.11389928[source]
I had similar progression when I switched to Gentoo in 2007. I would boot into windows maybe every 3 months, and it was always a hassle with the security updates. Wiped out the partition after a couple of years of checking into windows maybe once every 6 months.