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290 points XzetaU8 | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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blindriver ◴[] No.44658043[source]
This is why I’m not moving off Windows 10. I’d rather move to MacOS than Windows 11 and if they force me I’ll do it.
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deadbabe ◴[] No.44658051[source]
Why not Linux?
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ubermonkey ◴[] No.44658087[source]
I'm not who you asked, but the reason I migrated to Macs years ago, and the reason I stay, is that I don't want my computer to be a maintenance hobby unto itself. I need to do actual work.

I also enjoy the polish Apple provides in other ways -- the platform features you get if you're on a Mac, use an iPhone, have a Watch, etc, are all pretty great. Cobbling together something like that on my own under Linux probably isn't possible.

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guappa ◴[] No.44658180[source]
Use a stable distribution like Debian and maintenance only happens every 4-5 years, if you don't mind staying with older software.
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aleph_minus_one ◴[] No.44658283[source]
> if you don't mind staying with older software.

The problem is: it depends a lot on the specific program whether I want the newest or stay with some older version of some program. Many GNU/Linux distributions make this hard, while Windows makes this easy.

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1. bornfreddy ◴[] No.44659015[source]
Huh, what? With Linux you can at least dockerize apps and run multiple versions with negligible performance impact. Doing the same in Windows is a mess at best.

Or did you mean that you want to pin an app to a specific version? This can be done also, trivially - not that it is a good idea in general.

replies(1): >>44660540 #
2. delfinom ◴[] No.44660540[source]
Ah yes, dockerize apps. Jump through hoops to use an app, compared to Windows where it's just some clicks.

Nobody ever disputes that there are workarounds to the default packaging workflows of Linux distros. The problem is, your average user, even technical ones don't want using an OS to be a second job outside their real job.

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3. guappa ◴[] No.44668458[source]
Is this the moving the goalposts Olympic games?