b_a_t_m_4_n t1_j9ya7lu wrote
Reply to comment by papetrov99 in Windows 10 users are being offered a Windows 11 upgrade despite not meeting the requirements by GOR098
The main problem with Linux is clueless idiots trying to impress everyone with how clued in they are by parroting something their mate told them about Linux up the pub 10 years ago.
papetrov99 t1_j9yaest wrote
My experience with linux is that its super good for the basic stuff but as soon as you want to do something more complex that you do on windows you can run into weird issues where you end up spending hours looking through config files. Just keep using them on servers imo until Google or someone else decides to make something that works well.
b_a_t_m_4_n t1_j9ybyb1 wrote
I use it as my daily driver for everything. I've been designing my house for the past two years. I just don't recognize this picture you paint.
Have I spent a few hours fiddling with config files to get some esoteric bit of hardware working? Yes. Have I spent a few hours fiddling with drivers and the registry to get some esoteric bit of hardware working in Windows? Again yes. Once, when I set the system up.
IME Linux, once set up stays set up. It's Windows that randomly breaks, chokes itself on it own bloat and commits suicide by update.
FlyingCockAndBalls t1_j9ywjy4 wrote
Fr. Almost every time linux has broken on me, it was entirely my fault. Only thing I can think of that wasn't my fault was a bad grub update but that took less than 5 minutes to fix. Meanwhile I've had windows just spontaneously break for absolutely no reason
b_a_t_m_4_n t1_j9yxcvv wrote
Ah well, we won't talk about the times I broke Linux by poking bits I didn't understand properly....
__i_hate_reddit t1_ja1gtq4 wrote
oooh what are you using to design your house?
b_a_t_m_4_n t1_ja2ijl1 wrote
I'm using Blender. It's saved me, I don't know how many, thousands of pounds going round the design consultation loop with an architect because by the time we handed them the brief we had already honed it down to what we wanted and they just made some regulatory adjustments before going straight on to planning.
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