this post was submitted on 13 May 2025
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[–] hOrni@lemmy.world 10 points 2 months ago (22 children)

Honest question. Is there some particular reason why people are against 11? Except the usual reasons people are against windows?

[–] Piatro@programming.dev 16 points 2 months ago (4 children)

With the steam deck proving that Linux gaming was not only possible but easy, I could remove gaming as a reason to keep windows, which meant the only thing I actually wanted windows for was an Adobe subscription that I hadn't used in over a year. With windows fighting me the whole time, Linux got out of my way and let me use my own device how I wanted to. Which by the way sounds like I'm using it for something complicated or specialized but I'm not, I need it for web browsing, gaming, and light photo editing, that's about it.

So that's the positive case to move away from windows. The other side is that Windows is actively hostile to me as a user. I don't want or need copilot. For starters I don't have the hardware to really take advantage of it, and I don't want it using power unnecessarily. I don't want office 365, I don't want OneDrive, I don't want another UI on top of the 5 other UI frameworks that exist in windows which only serve to make it harder to change things to what I want. I don't want to sign in using a Hotmail account I made when I was 12 and haven't touched in years. I don't want windows telling Microsoft how I use my own device. There's some cool stuff in windows 11 like WSL which is awesome for me as a dev in my day job, but it's not enough to keep me in a system that, by design and direction, is trying to lock me into it.

Xbox app is another example, where my game controllers sometimes work and most of the time don't. Sometimes there's cross play with steam, sometimes not. Sometimes even installing the game doesn't work and I have to re-download the entire game again. Just bafflingly bad and costs me more than steam ever has. Ridiculous.

[–] hOrni@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (3 children)

Gaming is the main reason I own a pc. I understand it's possible on Linux, but is it as easy as on Windows? Not to mention, that I pirate most of my games.

I am contemplating switching to Linux, but I am too afraid, that I will run into something I didn't realize windows is necessary for.

[–] Wiz@midwest.social 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

If you use Steam quite a bit, check out the ProtonDB Web site. That can tell you the level of compatibility. 90% of my library seemed to be covered, and it's seamless. I was impressed!

Edit to say: One problem I had was getting my Brother printer to work over WiFi. That was some annoying arcane wizardry, but I finally got it to work.

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