Fusion360
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- !lemmy411@lemmy.ca: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
I've found real solutions to pretty much everything but this. For Fusion, I still just have to run it in a windows VM under Linux.
I want to be able to rely on all the things I want to do on my PC "just working" I don't want to come home after a long day of bullshit looking forward to playing a game or working on a project and have to do a bunch of troubleshooting because something is fucked up. I'm not there yet with Linux. To be fair I'm not there yet with Win 11 either so I'm in a tight spot.
I did buy a laptop so I could try it out more aggressively but have ran into a lot of roadblocks and just have a lot of things that I haven't had time to figure out yet.
Man i wish Mint worked out of the box as well as virtually everyone on here says it does.
I am a former software engineer, and don't want my home PC to be a hobby. I'm like 6 hours into trying to make my (simple) audio setup work on Mint Cinnamon and it's intermittent at best. Never have even thought about it on Windows.
It is plug and play compared to Linux of old, it's clearly come a long way. But it's nowhere near as easy as Windows still, for anyone who isn't trying to make this a hobby
That's exactly how I feel about it as well and largely contributes to my hesitation.
I read and hear how so many people just gush and gush about how Linux Mint or this distro just 'works out of the box'. What they don't tell you, is how they must have had to spend hours getting something to work. Like sure, Linux Mint or a more friendlier distro will work out of the box - if you do nothing but just browse online and maybe install/uninstall programs you may want or need from the software package manager.
But I have had my battles before trying to make things work on linux distros, like getting proprietary functions of a browser to work. Hell, I have even had to fight a little just to get a displaying clock! Like with its formatting from 24hr to 12hr, I'm not saying getting it to display or anything but I don't get this desire to default to a 24hr format. And I have had to fight at times to switch formats.
The point is, I or others should not have to spend more time than we need to, to get things to work when there is already an OS that readily does that without question. It doesn't make us dumb, it doesn't make us incurious or boring or uninterested in computers and technology. It's about patience and respect of time and if some Linux distro is not going to respect my time or patience, regardless of how welcoming it appears, then it is not worth swapping to.
I have never had an issue and I've ran mint on dozens of PCs, laptops, audio outputs. Perhaps this is something to do with hardware or something proprietary. Even certain cords your connecting with. Mint and especially LMDE based on Debian is and has been the most flawless experience even on old hardware and current I have ever seen.
I dislike Ubuntu backends and find their support eventually introduces some breakage and prefer the stability of Debian but the polish of mint is top notch. I've used external speakers, headsets, TVs, monitors, and even blue tooth on mint to nearly never having an issue. Aside from having to select which output I want the sound to go to.
I find this odd especially given your using "dumb" desktop style speakers.
Most recently when I used Windows was because of work. I've been seeing these posts for a while now and I can make some valid arguments.
- Anti cheat games
- Adobe products (Web is not the same)
- MS Office desktop
- Work has processes linked to Windows specifically (server that only works on IIS Express maybe?)
- Big legacy codebase where they don't match filename casing.
- Specific Visual Studio scripts or plugins for a DSL.
- Security requirements that need windows APIs (like mandating crowdstrike)
- Music production with a Ableton (it works but it's not noob friendly).
- You have deep knowledge of Windows and getting up to speed on Linux would take a year without guarantees you have a comparable system.
- Your client is on Windows and you're making a desktop Windows app that's not cross platform.
Thankfully none of these apply to me so I'm on Linux but I can see how this is an issue.
I would like to add two more points
- Certain pricey applications aimed students and researchers (non CS background) which are only released for Windows
- Inability to learn a new way of using the PC after learning the "windows way" for 20 years. Even Windows shenanigans are second-nature to mildly-PC literate people.
I just want Serato DJ Pro to release a Linux version...
My Windows 10 PC is just as, if not more secure than any Linux machine on the planet.
But one of these days Iβm going to have to actually power it on again and then I guess Iβll have to do something.
just make a vm of windows and use Linux for EVERYTHING else
I have terabytes of games, shit internet and no patience for things that don't just work immediately. I can only tolerated windows because I've already fixed it and I don't have to keep fixing it anymore.
Who knows what will happen with my next gaming laptop though, if it's fresh and empty I won't have that excuse, although there is always 'cbf' to fall back on.
Nvidia and Asus suck with linux. With default drivers of any popular distro, my CPU fans won't go over 4k RPM on their own, despite the thing easily heating past 90ΒΊC.
Only on windows, running asus' "rog gaming center" piece of shit, the actual maximum speed of the fans can be turned on, it's loud as fuck, too. I suppose it runs at around 10kRPM, which is a HUGE difference.
I gotta check how linux support is for huion kamvas right now, since I have one as my main screen no less (the laptop screen gets all fucky when it heats up, which takes 2 minutes after turning the thing on)
There is too concentrated which is bad (mac, win), and there is too fragmented which is bad (that is your Linux/distro universe). In other words, in one world, a single entity controls and is responsible for everything, and in another world, no one is. I am not getting into what is worse or better, rather what is usable for an end user.
And then there's the tacit wisdom of the FOSS/Linux world savants: "Uh, if something is not done or not available β you can just fork it or raise a PR, can't you?" completely escaping the fact that almost the entirety of the users of either world are just end users.
I run Linux but itβs hard because no Adobe, no Microsoft, and no esports fps games except cs.
I flipped in 1997, so any software I might have missed since those days are probably not around anymore.
Windows 95 was pretty shitty in comparison to Linux, and a lot of software broke with NT 4.0
It was an easy choice at the time. Linux was the operating system for this new fancy thing called the internet. Software development turned into a career, and Linux is just a very nice stack for building backends and infrastructure.
I do have an old ThinkPad around running windows 10. I've only used it three times in the past five years: To unbrick an Android phone, to set the MMSI on a marine radio, and to update the maps on my car's satnav.
I still need to provide binaries for Windows, so build and compile for multiple operating systems.
I love Linux. Deploying software to customer sites was historically challenging on Linux due to system dependencies. Containers alleviate most of those problems.
I made the change about a year ago now. I saw the end of Windows 10 coming up and decided to install linux in a dual boot and try my best to use it exclusively for a couple months until I properly got used to it. You will need to accept that not every program you use on Windows will be available and you may have to try out a couple replacements before you find something that works for you. But most things have decent alternatives. Especially considering how much is done in a web browser these days, there aren't too many programs I really miss from Windows (mostly 3D CAD and RAW image processing).
Also, note that the differences between distros is way overblown when it comes to compatibility, it is mostly just a case of whether your package manager has the packages you want available and how bleeding edge the packages your distro uses are. Debian based distros (e.g. Ubuntu and Mint) tend to use slightly older packages than ones that are rolling release like Arch which should theoretically be a bit more stable.
Small? My biggest issue is tiny and probably fixable but not to my skill set. A big workflow for me is finding images in browser and dragging them to a folder to save. Linux can do it but doesn't save the file extensions and renames the file to a number.
Bigger would be there it's no replacement for Irfanview. There are multiple tools that add up to its functionality but not as easy or fast.
Bigger yet would be VR support. Some games in general, really. Most of what I play works on my Steam deck so I know Linux covers 80% of my gaming needs excepting VR.
Too much annoyances migrating my PC.
And I already got a taste of it with my SteamDeck.
Yeah, not worth my nightly effort after work (and I won't build my library solely on Steam/Valve, lol)
I ended up doing it, but my hesitation prior to the switch was gaming. I did it anyway though, and now with Proton I don't miss a thing.
Get a couple USB sticks and backup your documents folder. Having backup, aside from being a generally good idea, should make you feel safer to test and experiment.
I do understand the general concern about running your Windows apps, but I'd say just trust yourself and see what you canake work, and what you can find good alternatives for. I'm at a point now where there are Linux apps that I really like but can't get to work quite right on Windows. It's not a one-way thing.