Weirdly never thought I’d see the day that I’d consider daily driving Linux again… but here we go! Let’s see! 👀

@Yksi It's really easy now.

I had to switch to Linux literally out of necessity and now I have it installed on two personal devices I use almost daily.

And I mean this when I say I never thought I was going to be the kind of person who could figure out how to use a Linux terminal.

Truly we live in times.

@Sketchy I used to run Linux by default in 2006-2008 (didn’t use windows), then got a MacBook…. And still ran Linux on the MacBook by dual partition (needed to for uni). Dropped Linux in 2010 and then finally moved to windows 10 in late 2017… it’s now 2024 and I’m going back to Linux…. (At least for a while anyway to see!)
So far seems to be doing everything I want. Only exceptions are:

iCue (and it does not recognise my mouse/keyboard through open RGB)

Not keen on how it handles some stuff with triple screen setup.

Need to figure out steamdeck/macros for switching audio devices.

Otherwise. Yeah.. it’s neat!!

@Yksi ah, you are an advanced computer user.

I wish you the best of win and may your quest be sick and epic.

The irony of my linux quest so far has been my steamdeck is what made me start learning about it in the first place, and I understand steam's version of linux entirely less than just regular debian 12 at this point.

What blew me away was how much nicer running krita with a tablet was on a linux pc than a windows pc for me. Like that shiz was just plug and play with minimal tweaking at all.

@Sketchy I wouldn’t say advanced. xD perhaps a little more than the average joe… but not by much! At least not these days! It’s true what they say about “use it or lose it” and I have definitely lost skills since I stopped using Linux!is Krita an art package? I vaguely recognise the name 🤔

@Yksi Maybe!

I mean from a drivers standpoint. I didn't have to install any drivers or anything to get my wacom tablets to work.

Krita is one of the free open source art programs.