ReakDuck

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

But it looks like it can only do Pascal? Like. Sorry but you can't just come out of the corner and say that coding is great on debian because my special IDE for only one single programming langauge exists.

What if I don't want to learn a seventh programming language? What if I want to continue my C++ project in NeoVim? I dont want to rewrite something entirely. Same for PHP, Rust, C, Python.

Your IDE doesn't even support the most important way of editing code. Vim mode.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago (2 children)

If you have a device with a specific usage, then its more than perfect as its stable.

Only need to draw and write documents on a portable convertable? Suits nicely.

Want to code on that thing too? Uh. Idk. Use other distro, would be much easier as debian sucks in this category.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago

In an argument saying at the very end "but it just works for me" while arguing against it, is very stupid and still an argument that seems to be against everything because it just suits him.

I just explained how stupid it is to say that without thinking of the wider perspective of tracking and freedom of using that product.

I interpeted that its a person who dislikes everything except what he is born with. That Windows should always be used and be the number one. Just because noone said it doesn't mean there are no meanings behind them. Get your head up.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (2 children)

If you feel comfortable having every behaviour and text send to Microsoft. Go for it.

But arguing that Windows should be the number one because my daddy purchased it when you were small or smth should not be the main argument. Windows is shit and terrible. Its cool that capitalism led to create binaries only for Windows but not even that did not stop Linux from being a strong competitor without tracking and spying.

Especially, this stupid Microsoft OS is not even a one size fits all thing but tries very hard to be one.

Linux may just work too depending on what games you play or what work you do.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (4 children)

Your windows cant run your android app, IOS app and just doesnt work at all. Hell, I just want to play God of War RagnarΓΆk... Stupid OS. Costs so much and doesnt even run the games and apps I need.

I hope you see yourself how foolish your agument is. "Perfect" doesn't describe how many apps you currently want to use or love, can run. Especially when this piece of software is deeply hardcoded into an Environment or OS. Even a game developed on Windows may fail to run because the environment is off. You will be very wrong with the statement that "everything just works on Windows" when you will soon buy a specific piece of hardware to start an app because otherwise, it wont trust you.

The topic is about a Perfect OS. Philoshophy of why it may count as Perfect. OpenBSD is an important play here as Microsofts steals its apps for its own convience like ssh and many other standards in Server use. Or the idea of an OS that knows where everything is located and can fully automate itself, etc.

Thr developers of the games choose themselves when an app will run and when not. Or where on which platform. It is out of topic to mention that something is only perfect when you can run your my little pony game.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 8 months ago (1 children)

I got some of your points. But Nvidia can be plug and play when choosing the right distro. AMD was always plug and play so I really dont know what issue you had or what distro. Not every Linux is simple.

Arch (EndavoueOS for user friendliness), NixOS or Gentoo dont really uninstall things you just needed. But I had this issue on Debian based distros. When removing one package, its important dependencies can be wiped too, deleting wifi and other important packages. It even says that but I dont like to read a wall of text. I hate debian for this but I would not argue against "Linux" as an entirety.

I tried to setup a very similar setup on Windows on my work experience and dragging windows with super button was possible with AutoHotKey, but was super Buggy. Rainmeter has many weird issues and stop working after updates, and may even force you to reinstall your Windows as a friend mentioned. Transparent Taskbar app was the same experience. What wasnt possible at all was super+right-click to resize the windows. So my workflow was not possible at all on Windows. Thats where Gnome and KDE are golden. Especiall with widgets and extensions enhancing your desktop experience further where I would need to deeply search and hack around in Windows.

Regdist was sometimes needed to be manually configured depending on what you wanted to do with your Desktop. So there is no install thing. But when something provides and needs the regedit, then it happens behind the scenes on the installer of the app, so you downplay the actuall issue and desire to change your desktop in an weird way.

In terms of Compilation. Thats where Arch Linux and many other distros are satisfying, community scripts with a push of a button (AUR). Combine this with Pamac or some other store and you literally have a push button to install complex things. I never compile things myself but just install the things through AUR and let the job be done.

I see that you have had harsh issues with Linux because you either didn't knew its alternatives or didnt understand the issues. I tend to rather have solvable issues on Linux than not understandable magic solutions that sometimes dont work on Windows. And you cant gain knowledge of the issue or solution as everything needs to be hidden and magic on purpose.

Linux is literally better on the Desktop Experience because you can decide how you work and how things should behave. Impossible for Windows except you hack yourself your C# dotnet application that controls your Desktop over the Windows API as mostly thats the only way for Windows. On Linux... you can choose your path. You can choose your Desktop, Distro, whatever. Things become easier and easier over time. But as an only consumer, I guess only Operating Systems like SteamOS are ideal. But many people show how they can live easier with Linux Mint or EndavourOS than Windows. Not everyone's experience.

And I already mentioned why I dislike Windows. Once you have control over your workflow, you will want to have it everywhere. Unfortunately, Windows wants to be a one size fits all OS and doesn't let you change much unlike Linux Desktops.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 months ago

Others mentioned how they did it so I would rather have pain for a day or two than lifelong

[–] [email protected] 4 points 8 months ago (6 children)

Something that just has a perfect fit and full transparency. Something that is only done on Open Source Operating Systems.

OpenBSD can be seen as perfect because the code base is very strict and securely written. Making it a nearly bug free OS. But I never used it.

Linux Distros that have a large repository to install apps from can be seen as perfect because you cant create a chaos where you dont know how to uninstall things, as everything is installed through the same package manager. Satisfying for updating too. Something like NixOS, Gentoo or Arch.

I dont see them as the "perfect" but Windows.... even debloated. Its still a huge chaos.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (4 children)

Telemetry and many more unsatisying solutions and issues on Windows.

The AMD GPU drivers just sometimes dont detect my monitor.

I cant change between headphones and speakers except when I install some weird drivers for my soundcard.

Updates... every application needs to be running and eating cpu to check individually for updates, even when not used.

Installing dependencies, lirbaries or applications... either figure out how to compile things and manually set paths everywhere or find the right exe in the big web.

No other desktop with different features. Lacking desktop features that slowly get copied from linux to Windows like PowerTools and other things, but still doesn't have everything. Most desktop tools and eye candy just dont work after a few windows update and tend to break. Many more issues when you just use apps that use the buggy Windows API.

Changing internal things need to be mostly done with regedit. Least user friendliest solution.

But thats whats bothering me on Windows. I use Windows 11 with Ameliorated to play VR games. The rest is unsatisfying and nonsense to do on Windows as Linux has a much greater overall Desktop experience with KDE or Gnome depending on your preference. Much more automation with packages and syncing.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago

Its faster than thr OLED so no, you can install games on your Steam Deck and it is very very user friendly.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 8 months ago (3 children)

But you say its still possible?

[–] [email protected] 8 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Not really, no

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