• naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    In the caverns of systemd, where the audio pulses and you are surrounded by the mad scribings of a thousand journals; you will lose yourself, and find something else. You will come back both more, and less.

    • David Gerard@awful.systemsM
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      1 year ago

      i tried using windows for a week when i was without my own laptop and had to borrow the loved one’s spare gaming rig. even just living in firefox, i hate windows with the fire of a thousand suns. and this was a relatively well behaved win10.

      • self@awful.systemsOP
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        1 year ago

        much like vampirism, daily driving Linux makes exposure to windows feel like turning to ash in the rays of an uncaring but aggressively annoying sun (the sun is also siphoning your data)

      • naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 year ago

        My wife uses windows and sometimes I dual boot it to play games with her.

        She laughs at how rapidly I transform into a raging boomer but I forgive her for she does not know.

        Linux has problems but windows is just fucked up. The moment you want to do anything outside the lines it becomes an utter horror show. no univeral interface (I’m stupid, you can tell by my posts, so I just learn CLI and do everything that way), no nice consistent model like “everything is a file”, no scripting language everything respects. It’s insane and baffling.

        I know Microsoft has brilliant people working for them so windows is inexplicable

        • Deborah@hachyderm.io
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          1 year ago

          Windows is the best desktop OS for accessibility across the board. Consistent UX, broad app support, better tooling. Not true for every use case, but incredibly broad adoption by disabled users for good reason.

          (Also the best compromise between usable business desktop, & IT controls. Linux is not a reasonable desktop environment for most workplaces, and macs inexplicably lack enterprise tooling.)

          In other words, like every OS, excellent for some use cases, terrible for others.

        • self@awful.systemsOP
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          1 year ago

          the least infuriating way I’ve found to use windows is in a gaming VM with a dedicated GPU where if windows decides it needs to update, reboot, or crash my actual work in Linux won’t be impacted

          increasingly, running games and apps in straight Proton is a better option in general though. both options give me slightly better performance than raw windows, cause the gaming VM has very good compatibility due to it mimicking reference hardware, and Proton implements the windows API on top of a higher performance kernel with none of the shit parts of windows slowing it down

          and all it costs you is your sanity

          • raktheundead@fedia.io
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            1 year ago

            I just really want to be able to play racing sims in Proton without them breaking. That seems to be one of the last frontiers for me to give up Windows entirely.

            • self@awful.systemsOP
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              1 year ago

              if you’d like I can dig up the tutorials I used to set up the gaming VM I use — it’s very durable (under NixOS) with maybe one breakage in the ~3 years I’ve been using it, it uses a dedicated graphics card so performance is excellent, and there’s a number of ways to attach input devices and audio so that latency isn’t an issue

              • raktheundead@fedia.io
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                1 year ago

                The problem tends to be more that the games I want to play aren’t particularly playable under Proton to begin with; Assetto Corsa’s listed as Silver under ProtonDB. That and I’ve got to use third-party drivers for my Logitech wheel to get working force feedback, which I can do, but it’s a faff I’d rather do without.

                That said, I’ll be looking to build a new PC soon when the newly-announced AMD cards come out, so I’ll probably look more into getting things working properly then.

    • froztbyte@awful.systems
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      1 year ago

      don’t worry about losing yourself though - everything defaults to ext4 and the ubuntu devs have pinkypromised that it’s no longer totally awful dogshit that you regretfully notice only after some time and you’ve loaded significant data onto the system

        • self@awful.systemsOP
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          1 year ago

          it’s fine and I use it for extremely performance-focused (see: linux gaming) and embedded systems, but LVM+ext4 is generally a better idea and I use ZFS for systems where extreme reliability and storage flexibility are important (so just my NAS machine really)

          • froztbyte@awful.systems
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            1 year ago

            it irks me that linux-zfs still has no good native encryption outcome. I had to do zfs on multiple mdraid mirrors, but ugh. that you directly lose out on the zfs insight into block device health there… big sad

        • froztbyte@awful.systems
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          1 year ago

          my response is halfway partly a shitpost (but only very partly)

          if you’re a general user, it’s probably fine. if you’re someone who cares about specific properties of things, it’s probably less than ideal and something else would suit you better - but you’d probably already know that

          some details: ext2 and ext3 had a lot of journal-damage/restoration issues, along with fairly severe density issues over much longer term use. the design characteristics also didn’t lend itself well to higher performance (and this started showing a lot as the SSD age came around). ext4 has improved somewhat on the first and third parts, and soooorta has dealt with the second if you squint