←back to thread

Ubuntu on Windows

(blog.dustinkirkland.com)
2049 points bpierre | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
matt_wulfeck ◴[] No.11391211[source]
microsoft is leveraging FOSS Linux to get Mac users. I think it's a real smart move.

The author points to using grep and Xargs and some other tools to quickly update a package. That's the key here. These bash/Linux utilities are productivy boosters for all the Linux and Mac/bsd people out there. I can't imagine living without them and they're necessary for any system I develop on (which is currently a Mac).

replies(6): >>11391411 #>>11391451 #>>11391515 #>>11392124 #>>11392170 #>>11393505 #
simonlc ◴[] No.11391411[source]
I completely agree. I only really switched to OSX because getting node tools to work on windows and cygwin is a pita.
replies(2): >>11391709 #>>11392450 #
tostitos1979 ◴[] No.11391709[source]
I've been "stuck" with a 2010 Macbook since Apple isn't refreshing it's laptop hardware soon enough. Plus I'm sick of soldered in RAM and other BS.

For devs that do heavy Linux work (but have stuck with a Mac OS for GUI/app reasons), is it time to move (back) to Windows? If so, what would be a good laptop to get at the moment?

replies(7): >>11391787 #>>11391803 #>>11391857 #>>11392064 #>>11392420 #>>11393251 #>>11394878 #
x1798DE ◴[] No.11391857{3}[source]
Why not move to Linux?
replies(1): >>11391950 #
matt_wulfeck ◴[] No.11391950{4}[source]
Just out of curiosity, what does a Linux desktop offer that's not also natively offered in Mac and also highly polished?

Every year I try a switch to Linux desktop. This year I made it as far as trying to get multiple monitors working well. I also dabbed in gaming. In the end I went back to my work=Mac game=Windows duopoly.

replies(5): >>11392134 #>>11393355 #>>11393718 #>>11394991 #>>11401124 #
zeveb ◴[] No.11393355{5}[source]
> Just out of curiosity, what does a Linux desktop offer that's not also natively offered in Mac and also highly polished?

A GNU userland. A plethora of tiling window managers. A selection of clean terminals. Every single thing Debian's or Arch's repos offer which one must turn to brew for.

And of course there's freedom too, which is nice.

> Every year I try a switch to Linux desktop. This year I made it as far as trying to get multiple monitors working well.

I've got multiple monitors running on Linux, over HDMI, at home & at work, at differing resolutions & orientations. I use arandr-configured xrandr scripts which set my desired orientation with a quick keystroke in my window manager. What more does one need?

replies(1): >>11393729 #
matt_wulfeck ◴[] No.11393729{6}[source]
Maybe HDMI is better supported that DisplayPort.
replies(1): >>11393952 #
diyorgasms ◴[] No.11393952{7}[source]
I've got monitors daisy chained using displayport on Debian, in mixed portrait and landscape modes. This is using an NVIDIA card and GNOME. It was plug-and-play.
replies(1): >>11396238 #
1. willtim ◴[] No.11396238{8}[source]
That's great that it works for you. But for Skylake hardware, Displayport MST is completely broken and Intel have no plans to fix. The major players simply are not heavily investing in desktop linux, leaving the community to try and fill the gaps.