←back to thread

290 points XzetaU8 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
jksflkjl3jk3 ◴[] No.44658589[source]
I can never understand how anyone with an interest in tech hasn't switched to Linux for their personal desktop/laptop at some point in the last 20+ years.

Why would you want to use a closed source OS controlled by a corporation with a past as checkered as Microsoft's?

replies(10): >>44658605 #>>44658612 #>>44658618 #>>44659474 #>>44660267 #>>44660541 #>>44661427 #>>44663894 #>>44664752 #>>44682775 #
shevis ◴[] No.44658612[source]
Gaming. Linux gaming has come a long way (especially thanks to the steam deck) but the vast majority of games are still only released on Windows.
replies(3): >>44658677 #>>44659139 #>>44659919 #
__rito__ ◴[] No.44659139[source]
What stops you from dual-booting?

You use Windows for games, and only games. For everything else, you use Linux.

This is a practical setup.

replies(5): >>44659387 #>>44660622 #>>44661307 #>>44661405 #>>44661482 #
dataflow ◴[] No.44660622[source]
> This is a practical setup.

What if you need to check emails or take care of some other task mid-game?

replies(2): >>44661428 #>>44662197 #
AndroidKitKat ◴[] No.44661428{3}[source]
This is what stops me from dual-booting. I don't enjoy Windows as much as the next person, but dual booting inevitably requires me to just duplicate logging into services and installing the same programs in both OSes, and then if I don't boot into one of the OSes for a while, I end up having to wait for updates (admittedly this is a much worse problem on Windows, but it's not not a problem for Linux) and any other things that need to happen just so I can use the computer.
replies(1): >>44664326 #
1. dataflow ◴[] No.44664326{4}[source]
FWIW you have a partial solution here which is to run a VM that boots into the same system that you also dual boot into. It's still inconvenient, but not nearly as bad as having to terminate your app and reboot.