this post was submitted on 06 Feb 2024
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[โ€“] [email protected] 47 points 9 months ago (18 children)

That's it Microsoft...keep pushing more people to use Linux. ๐Ÿง

[โ€“] [email protected] -3 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (9 children)

Look, no hate, but I always find these kinds of comments funny because I've been reading them for over twenty years.

It's not going to happen, certainly not in any significant numbers.

Hell, look at the fediverse. The vast majority of internet users find signing up to mastodon hard, let alone lemmy. How the hell are these people supposed to install linux, for example when they follow many an 'easy' linux installation guide, but then find Rufus isn't able to create a bootable USB stick in fat32? How are they supposed to verify their data, or hell change the bios settings when the guide they read gives them the wrong key to press to enter the bios? And then if by some miracle they do manage to install linux, you expect them to move away from all the apps they've grown used to? They'll try to install MS office on linux and blame this not working on linux.

TLDR: Gretchen! Stop trying to make mass linux adoption happen! It's not going to happen!

[โ€“] [email protected] 4 points 9 months ago

I don't think entry level users are what will be converted, at least first. It's users like you and me. Users that, for whatever reason, haven't preferred Linux historically. I've tried the new popular distro every few years to 'check in' with Linux, and each time I ended up running into some issue which reaffirmed my preference for Windows sooner or later.

Until I tried Debian 12 a couple of months ago, that is. Between nonfree drivers, Wayland and its compatibility throughout the ecosystem, and updates to GNOME, it's honestly been refreshingly user-friendly and feels more optimised than Windows.

Importantly, in searching for alternatives to Windows-only software I use, I didn't have any problems and in one case actually ended up finding new software I prefer.

The peace of mind of my OS not trying to sell me something or trying to farm my engagement is nice too, but not why I'd recommend giving it a try. I've always gotten behind it in principle support of free software, but now I can get behind it actually using it. I'd recommend it because it genuinely seems better in my general use.

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