@solarlune
Same
Even using Fedora, which is more stable and much less "edgy" it's much more sane than Windows (I can't compare with Mac, never used one in fair conditions).
@solarlune The learning curve is a growing problem, given people are becoming increasingly less literate even when it comes to the commercial OSes but... yeah
Whenever I have to use Mac or Windows they feel downright archaic. It's a non-stop sequence of being in absolute awe that so many people use that and think computers just "are like that", that nothing really works properly and just aggros the user non stop
"PEOPLE PAY MONEY FOR THIS", I keep shouting in disbelief, over and over
@solarlune Keep remembering all the "there's no sound in Linux, lmao" jokes and whenever I open up sound config and just curl in a ball and cry in Windows. Meanwhile in Linux, Pipewire makes trivial all sort of things which sound like absolute wizardry elsewhere...
Open up settings in a Mac only to find out you can't even change the screen resolution or disable a laptop's built-in display..
Also, good luck remoting into either of those. Different nightmares on each
It's seriously wild
@VileLasagna And yeah, audio connections are so trivial with Pipewire now, it's crazy. No extra sound drivers or whatever to route audio. It's very nice, for sure~
But at the same time, there still is a lot Linux could learn from Windows and Mac, to help it be simpler and more approachable.
@solarlune I find that both Windows and Mac are more arcane these days, actually. Windows is non stop spam and the entire system is a series of threat actors. All of the tools which used to be good in Windows (Start, updates, control panel....) are hopelessly crippled
Mac is even worse. Trying to do anything at all in that system is a nightmare. I worked a year with it and basic tasks still seemed insurmountable. At least it has working ssh going for it but very very little beyond that