Why are you people still using Windows?
It is convenient. I use Linux(Debian), macOS and Windows at work. Linux is good for data wrangling, working with clusters, and servers, but when I come home I just want to click things and have them up and running. I haven't really kept up with developments on gaming support for Linux but the last time I tried, over a decade ago, it was a hassle and half the things I wanted to play simply didn't work or needed hours to days of fiddling. I also detest Valve, so I'm certainly not touching any of their shit. Nowadays I run a dual boot at home, but most of the time I'm on Windows. I usually start up Linux only if I have to login into our servers to check up on work from home.Why are you people still using Windows? Unless it's a 100% work machine (and your job is locked to Windows only solutions) I see no need to suffer this shit.
it was a hassle and half the things I wanted to play simply didn't work or needed hours to days of fiddling
Windows: The perfect operating system for the normie majority.
- Believe that Linux is too complicated
- Only want to play Electronic Farts multiplayer games
- Can't run some industry standards apps that needs for work mainly from Adobe and Autodesk in Linux, and Wine is not reliable enough.
- Habit
You are me a year ago. Just download EndeavourOS, its noob arch fork, and use an app called Lutris. Imagine getting all emulators, dosbox, everything into one app. You wanna play old shit from 93? Here you go. You wanna play modern game? Here you go. You have to remember this stuff is going fast, 3 years ago it was unusable for me, now its really nice and since you already use multiple systems I guess you'll manage to waste 5 minutes of your time to google correct shit if that one weird problems sometimes pops. Just like in windows.It is convenient. I use Linux(Debian), macOS and Windows at work. Linux is good for data wrangling, working with clusters, and servers, but when I come home I just want to click things and have them up and running. I haven't really kept up with developments on gaming support for Linux but the last time I tried, over a decade ago, it was a hassle and half the things I wanted to play simply didn't work or needed hours to days of fiddling. I also detest Valve, so I'm certainly not touching any of their shit. Nowadays I run a dual boot at home, but most of the time I'm on Windows. I usually start up Linux only if I have to login into our servers to check up on work from home.Why are you people still using Windows? Unless it's a 100% work machine (and your job is locked to Windows only solutions) I see no need to suffer this shit.
Windows: The perfect operating system for the normie majority.
- Believe that Linux is too complicated
- Only want to play Electronic Farts multiplayer games
- Can't run some industry standards apps that needs for work mainly from Adobe and Autodesk in Linux, and Wine is not reliable enough.
- Habit
You are me a year ago. Just download EndeavourOS, its noob arch fork, and use an app called Lutris. Imagine getting all emulators, dosbox, everything into one app. You wanna play old shit from 93? Here you go. You wanna play modern game? Here you go. You have to remember this stuff is going fast, 3 years ago it was unusable for me, now its really nice and since you already use multiple systems I guess you'll manage to waste 5 minutes of your time to google correct shit if that one weird problems sometimes pops. Just like in windows.It is convenient. I use Linux(Debian), macOS and Windows at work. Linux is good for data wrangling, working with clusters, and servers, but when I come home I just want to click things and have them up and running. I haven't really kept up with developments on gaming support for Linux but the last time I tried, over a decade ago, it was a hassle and half the things I wanted to play simply didn't work or needed hours to days of fiddling. I also detest Valve, so I'm certainly not touching any of their shit. Nowadays I run a dual boot at home, but most of the time I'm on Windows. I usually start up Linux only if I have to login into our servers to check up on work from home.Why are you people still using Windows? Unless it's a 100% work machine (and your job is locked to Windows only solutions) I see no need to suffer this shit.
You can install every GOG game with Lutris, it's just a couple of extra clicks.
I'll probably get a new machine next year, I guess I'll give gaming on Linux another try then. Does this work with games bought on GOG?
Try getting and AMD gpu if you can, its hassle free on Linux. Nvidia is retardo and doesnt release drivers on Linux, just because.You are me a year ago. Just download EndeavourOS, its noob arch fork, and use an app called Lutris. Imagine getting all emulators, dosbox, everything into one app. You wanna play old shit from 93? Here you go. You wanna play modern game? Here you go. You have to remember this stuff is going fast, 3 years ago it was unusable for me, now its really nice and since you already use multiple systems I guess you'll manage to waste 5 minutes of your time to google correct shit if that one weird problems sometimes pops. Just like in windows.It is convenient. I use Linux(Debian), macOS and Windows at work. Linux is good for data wrangling, working with clusters, and servers, but when I come home I just want to click things and have them up and running. I haven't really kept up with developments on gaming support for Linux but the last time I tried, over a decade ago, it was a hassle and half the things I wanted to play simply didn't work or needed hours to days of fiddling. I also detest Valve, so I'm certainly not touching any of their shit. Nowadays I run a dual boot at home, but most of the time I'm on Windows. I usually start up Linux only if I have to login into our servers to check up on work from home.Why are you people still using Windows? Unless it's a 100% work machine (and your job is locked to Windows only solutions) I see no need to suffer this shit.
I'll probably get a new machine next year, I guess I'll give gaming on Linux another try then. Does this work with games bought on GOG?
Heroic Games Launcher is also good and has GOG integration.You can install every GOG game with Lutris, it's just a couple of extra clicks.I'll probably get a new machine next year, I guess I'll give gaming on Linux another try then. Does this work with games bought on GOG?
All the more reason to get off Windows. However, as you said, most normies are lazy, and, instead of trying to make things work with Linux, they embrace consoles instead.Shit breaks all the fucking time on windows, theres always some annoying change, theres always the OS doing things you didn't even know you didn't want it to do, and then theres it doing things you've explicitly instructed it NOT to do.
There is couple of options for launching GOG games on Linux.You can install every GOG game with Lutris, it's just a couple of extra clicks.
I'll probably get a new machine next year, I guess I'll give gaming on Linux another try then. Does this work with games bought on GOG?
honestly think that the next step after recall is that M$ will force a worse version of SmartApp. So they will dictate what you can use in your computer, and they will use it to ban certain sites and certain old school games and try to encourage you to play Forspoken Tier shit.
It's old news, Nvidia drivers stopped giving problems in recent times, as long as you are using the official ones.Nvidia does offer a lot of gpu servers for mining and machine learning so there should be drivers for that. I can imagine that these applications have different needs than gaming. But shouldn't Nivdia know how to write drivers for Linux? Do they just neglect the graphical side or is this no longer a problem?
Nvidia does offer a lot of gpu servers for mining and machine learning so there should be drivers for that. I can imagine that these applications have different needs than gaming. But shouldn't Nivdia know how to write drivers for Linux? Do they just neglect the graphical side or is this no longer a problem?
Nah, that would be like lukewarm water going to °100C instantly, resulting in the frog leaping out of the pot. They'll take their time, so that won't be the next step unless 'the next step' means Windows 30 years from now or so.
Nvidia does offer a lot of gpu servers for mining and machine learning so there should be drivers for that. I can imagine that these applications have different needs than gaming. But shouldn't Nivdia know how to write drivers for Linux? Do they just neglect the graphical side or is this no longer a problem?
Just don't get the latest gen, unless you are comfortable with updating kernels and mesa packages often.Nvidia does offer a lot of gpu servers for mining and machine learning so there should be drivers for that. I can imagine that these applications have different needs than gaming. But shouldn't Nivdia know how to write drivers for Linux? Do they just neglect the graphical side or is this no longer a problem?
Nvidia does write drivers for Linux. They work, but they provide a worse experience than using AMD's open source drivers. Since Nvidia's drivers are proprietary, they can't be included in the kernel and they're slower to adopt new Linux features than AMD's open source drivers. There are open source Nvidia drivers, but they're crippled due to decisions made by Nvidia and are worthless for gaming. When I first switched exclusively to Linux years ago I was using an Nvidia card and it was fine. There were some extra hoops to jump through to get things working and I had a bit more stability issues. I've since switched to AMD and I haven't looked back.
That said, Nvidia does seem to be actively trying to make things better on Linux and I'm sure it's better than when I was last using an Nvidia card. I wouldn't go out and buy a new GPU just because you're switching to Linux, but if you're already in the market for one I'd recommend leaning towards AMD.