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  3. Windows doesn't "just work"

Windows doesn't "just work"

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  • S [email protected]

    I almost never had Linux not boot after a fresh install, even with nVidia hardware. It happened a few times like 10 years ago and never again. What hardware are you running?

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    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #222

    If you're willing to put up with the low security options provided by default and don't have a weird laptop, maybe.

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    • S [email protected]

      Laptops have historically been a little iffy yeah. Personally I haven't had many issues except for Nvidia optimus, but since most of them are non standard and proprietary it used to be kind of a pain.
      Now though it's much better, at least on newer hardware, even my newest laptop with hybrid graphics just worked out of the box.

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      [email protected]
      wrote on last edited by
      #223

      Lol "the main computer market is iffy"

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      • L [email protected]

        Was windows dev for 10 years, I switched to Linux for work and I'm never going back : everything is simpler (may not be easier though) and makes sense whereas you constantly work against the system in windows. It's an opinion so widespread they even made a subsystem to use Linux tools on windows.
        As a user windows installation is an utter nightmare, getting rid of the thousands stuff you don't want is horrible. And also you may not even be able to install it without special ssd drivers that you have to side load manually (for some pretty basic asus hardware)
        Also don't get me started on the nearly mandatory microsoft account 🤢

        K This user is from outside of this forum
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        [email protected]
        wrote on last edited by
        #224

        You don’t have to get rid of all the stuff, it doesn’t break the system like missing sounds or whatnot. Some of its even helpful like weather and news. Plus it isn’t that hard to make a Microsoft account, don’t you need one anyway for Minecraft? And since when do you need drivers for an SSD, don’t those usually work out of the box?

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        • ? Guest

          What PCs? Certified by some Linux supporting company? If you buy a random laptop or pre-made PC, chances are high, that it won't work. And I'm not even a "beginner", who does "beginner" mistakes. No, I'm actually a Linux pro. I work with Linux literally every single day, even in my free time.

          S This user is from outside of this forum
          S This user is from outside of this forum
          [email protected]
          wrote on last edited by
          #225

          Nah just stuff I built myself or random laptops.

          • Some old Lenovo laptop with an Intel iGPU and an AMD GPU I can't remember, worked out of the box but was a bit finicky for some things. I don't remember what it was, it broke years ago.

          • ASUS TUF FX504GM (1060 maxq), zero issues on X11

          • Lenovo Legion 5 (3070 + AMD iGPU), zero issues, daily driver

          • Custom Desktop (1070 + Intel iGPU though I didn't really use it), some issues but i was testing Wayland years ago. Good on X11.

          • Custom Desktop (7900xtx + 3080), zero issues, daily driver. It used to just have a 3080, it's fairly solid on Wayland as well but not perfect.

          • A few other random laptops and desktop some friends owned over the years, fairly smooth on pretty much all of them.

          I've found in general that anything that doesn't have an Nvidia card as the display output works fine. Wayland is getting quite usable on Nvidia as well, but there are still growing pains. Still, no black screens anywhere.

          Sure I've tinkered a bit during the years, but I almost never had a black screen on install. I did brick my display drivers a few times (just Nvidia being a pain, mostly) but it was mostly my fault.

          It may be you've just been really unlucky. There are definitely hardware combinations out there that cause problems, but I haven't really found any particularly problematic ones up until now.

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          • ? Guest

            How to install the app on Linux.

            You search for it. Highly likely it is not available or barely functional.

            IF it works, it's only packaged for Ubuntu, Debian and Arch. If you use Nix or something even more niche, good luck with proprietary software or sometimes even openly available open source software.

            K This user is from outside of this forum
            K This user is from outside of this forum
            [email protected]
            wrote on last edited by
            #226

            Or, you DO find it, but it’s glitchy/outdated (I think there was an issue with Steam). Or you search for the program, find the website, download a .tar.gz, wonder what the hell is this double extension abomination, double click it, doesn’t work, look it up, apparently it’s a type of container like a zip and not a basic program like an exe and instead of using the GUI like a normal person you have to type “tar -xcv” or something that might as well be black magic (I can’t even remember the correct letters), then to actually install you have to find the magic “make” “sudo make install” command, and it still fails.

            Much easier to double click the .exe, accept the license agreement, and hit continue a few times.

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            • S [email protected]

              Nah just stuff I built myself or random laptops.

              • Some old Lenovo laptop with an Intel iGPU and an AMD GPU I can't remember, worked out of the box but was a bit finicky for some things. I don't remember what it was, it broke years ago.

              • ASUS TUF FX504GM (1060 maxq), zero issues on X11

              • Lenovo Legion 5 (3070 + AMD iGPU), zero issues, daily driver

              • Custom Desktop (1070 + Intel iGPU though I didn't really use it), some issues but i was testing Wayland years ago. Good on X11.

              • Custom Desktop (7900xtx + 3080), zero issues, daily driver. It used to just have a 3080, it's fairly solid on Wayland as well but not perfect.

              • A few other random laptops and desktop some friends owned over the years, fairly smooth on pretty much all of them.

              I've found in general that anything that doesn't have an Nvidia card as the display output works fine. Wayland is getting quite usable on Nvidia as well, but there are still growing pains. Still, no black screens anywhere.

              Sure I've tinkered a bit during the years, but I almost never had a black screen on install. I did brick my display drivers a few times (just Nvidia being a pain, mostly) but it was mostly my fault.

              It may be you've just been really unlucky. There are definitely hardware combinations out there that cause problems, but I haven't really found any particularly problematic ones up until now.

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              Guest
              wrote on last edited by
              #227

              I've tried many many laptops. Don't remember which ones, but they there the most sock common, you can probably imagine. For example, the last one is a budget acer with a Radeon discreet card or something. No NVIDIA. Installed Lubuntu on it. Absolutely standard installation.
              Worked for some while. Then it stopped working. Whenever I booted up the laptop, the screen went black after a second on login screen. Researching for hours and hours did not help to find a solution.

              Funnily enough, I only installed Lubuntu in the first place, because I tried Debian Stable before that and that one didn't boot at all. It did not work even once. So, I had switched to Lubuntu...

              This is one representative example for how those great Linux installations always go in my cases.
              Again, this did not happen once or twice. This happens almost every single time I try to install Linux on any normal stock hardware, whatsoever.

              The only time I had no trouble installing Linux is on my current laptop (tablet, but like a laptop) device. But do you know why? Because I reserched for hours for a device, which fits my needs and is very compatible with Linux. That's why. I had to research tons of hours to find a device, which is actually Linux compatible.

              That said, not even this device works fine. Actually, the opposite. It is dangerous to your health. Yeah, I'm not joking, I literally mean it.

              One time, I started Firefox on it and the screen started flickering really hard. Couldn't control or fix it.
              If my friend would've been there, he would've gotten a seizure 100%, since he has photosensitive epilepsy. Linux is literally dangerous to your health.

              Windows might be annoying and all... But it doesn't give anyone literal seizures.

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              • V [email protected]

                I don't hate US americans but I'll gladly make an exception for you, a well deserved one I must say.

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                wrote on last edited by
                #228

                I pity you. I can think of perhaps 2 people I've ever known that I hate. You hate someone who irritates you on social media. You must live a sad, lonely little life.

                V 1 Reply Last reply
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                • S [email protected]

                  I just don't see it. I run it on all my PCs with nvidia, amd, hybrid graphics, pretty much any combination (I have too many 😅). It works.
                  Even various friends of mine have tried it on their older setups, no problems there either.

                  Unless you're using something like Debian or whatever with crazy old packages, everything works for the most part. Nvidia is still not great on Wayland but it at least works now.

                  I'm not saying your experience isn't valid, I'm not trying to gaslight you, but I'm not sure it's representative of the average experience nowadays.

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                  wrote on last edited by
                  #229

                  Yeah, I am very familiar with Debian on servers. It works great on servers. Have experienced with all kinds of stability stages regarding Debian.

                  However, Desktop Debian usually does not work. Then I switch to the one, which should work the easiest, so Ubuntu or some derivative. And this usually still needs tons of troubleshooting over hours to make it work to a minimum standard...

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                  • E [email protected]

                    Lol "the main computer market is iffy"

                    S This user is from outside of this forum
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                    wrote on last edited by
                    #230

                    Historically, yeah. Nowadays (as in the last 2-3 years) I don't really see many issues. It's fairly solid in my experience.

                    And let's be honest, Windows is a nightmare as well on many laptops. If you wipe them and start from scratch, there is a non zero chance that you'll have to source like half the drivers manually.

                    E 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • ? Guest

                      Yeah, I am very familiar with Debian on servers. It works great on servers. Have experienced with all kinds of stability stages regarding Debian.

                      However, Desktop Debian usually does not work. Then I switch to the one, which should work the easiest, so Ubuntu or some derivative. And this usually still needs tons of troubleshooting over hours to make it work to a minimum standard...

                      S This user is from outside of this forum
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                      wrote on last edited by
                      #231

                      Everything Debian based is an absolute clusterfuck in my experience. I mainly use Fedora or Arch, never had a problem with them.
                      Every single time I've tried using anything Debian based it's been a shitshow. Maybe that's the source of your issues.

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                      • ? Guest

                        I've tried many many laptops. Don't remember which ones, but they there the most sock common, you can probably imagine. For example, the last one is a budget acer with a Radeon discreet card or something. No NVIDIA. Installed Lubuntu on it. Absolutely standard installation.
                        Worked for some while. Then it stopped working. Whenever I booted up the laptop, the screen went black after a second on login screen. Researching for hours and hours did not help to find a solution.

                        Funnily enough, I only installed Lubuntu in the first place, because I tried Debian Stable before that and that one didn't boot at all. It did not work even once. So, I had switched to Lubuntu...

                        This is one representative example for how those great Linux installations always go in my cases.
                        Again, this did not happen once or twice. This happens almost every single time I try to install Linux on any normal stock hardware, whatsoever.

                        The only time I had no trouble installing Linux is on my current laptop (tablet, but like a laptop) device. But do you know why? Because I reserched for hours for a device, which fits my needs and is very compatible with Linux. That's why. I had to research tons of hours to find a device, which is actually Linux compatible.

                        That said, not even this device works fine. Actually, the opposite. It is dangerous to your health. Yeah, I'm not joking, I literally mean it.

                        One time, I started Firefox on it and the screen started flickering really hard. Couldn't control or fix it.
                        If my friend would've been there, he would've gotten a seizure 100%, since he has photosensitive epilepsy. Linux is literally dangerous to your health.

                        Windows might be annoying and all... But it doesn't give anyone literal seizures.

                        S This user is from outside of this forum
                        S This user is from outside of this forum
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                        wrote on last edited by
                        #232

                        Have you tried anything not Debian based?

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                        • S [email protected]

                          Have you tried anything not Debian based?

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                          wrote on last edited by
                          #233

                          Well, a very long time ago, I tried plenty of distributions on old hardware and that worked enough, so I could at least boot. But yeah, older hardware was always easier for Linux.

                          At some point I switched to the ones, which are most likely to succeed. Ubuntu is the biggest one out there and should work the best, with the most support and acceptance across the globe.

                          If not even Ubuntu works on those devices, then what will work, out of the box?

                          Besides, Ubuntu has already diverted enough from Debian, that I wouldn't really put them in the same basket, at all, anymore...

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                          • S [email protected]

                            Everything Debian based is an absolute clusterfuck in my experience. I mainly use Fedora or Arch, never had a problem with them.
                            Every single time I've tried using anything Debian based it's been a shitshow. Maybe that's the source of your issues.

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                            Guest
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #234

                            I don't know, maybe. But I don't wanna set up something as rare as Fedora or manual as Arch for some older people, who just wanna do basic stuff. I don't wanna support advanced setups like that. Helping them with some Ubuntu stuff is already enough.

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                            • S [email protected]

                              I pity you. I can think of perhaps 2 people I've ever known that I hate. You hate someone who irritates you on social media. You must live a sad, lonely little life.

                              V This user is from outside of this forum
                              V This user is from outside of this forum
                              [email protected]
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #235

                              Thank you for your pity, I shall bask in your magnanimity henceforth, oh superior one. Thou hast no equal on this space rock.

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                              • K [email protected]

                                You don’t have to get rid of all the stuff, it doesn’t break the system like missing sounds or whatnot. Some of its even helpful like weather and news. Plus it isn’t that hard to make a Microsoft account, don’t you need one anyway for Minecraft? And since when do you need drivers for an SSD, don’t those usually work out of the box?

                                L This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wrote on last edited by
                                #236

                                Yep exactly, since when do we need a driver for the nvme controller 🤗 at least on Linux it works out of the box.
                                Apps on windows do break the system to some extent by using resources. As a developer I think that KISS is a paramount principle and waste is bad. Account = waste, unneeded 3d viewer = waste, notepad with subscription ad = uber waste.

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                                • E [email protected]

                                  This isn't a Windows issue - this is an Office issue

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                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #237

                                  Oh, don't get me started on Windows issues. Lol. But the only reason we use Windows at work is for Office, otherwise Tue CAD software has a Linux version yet runs better.

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                                  • S [email protected]

                                    Historically, yeah. Nowadays (as in the last 2-3 years) I don't really see many issues. It's fairly solid in my experience.

                                    And let's be honest, Windows is a nightmare as well on many laptops. If you wipe them and start from scratch, there is a non zero chance that you'll have to source like half the drivers manually.

                                    E This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #238

                                    To get to a working state you're very likely to be fine. They're all using Intel wifi and some elan touchpad, so the basics work well enough to bootstrap up to your vendors website.

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                                    • lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.mlL [email protected]

                                      As somebody who works in IT at a Windows-only environment, I know exactly what you mean.

                                      I have to fight with Windows on a weekly basis. Driver issues, firmware issues, software crashes/lockups, performance issues, etc etc.

                                      Just this week, I have two users experiencing issues with their monitors. Identical enterprise grade laptops, identical drivers, identical docking stations, all totally up to date on Windows 11. Their old Windows 10 computers worked fine. Still trying to figure out what's wrong.

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                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #239

                                      The Windows 24H2 update broke my Bluetooth audio, the sound is completely messed up and makes the system lag a bit. Uninstalled the update, Bluetooth works. The update automatically installed itself again after a few weeks and broke it again but I can no longer uninstall it for some reason.

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                                      • F [email protected]

                                        The Windows 24H2 update broke my Bluetooth audio, the sound is completely messed up and makes the system lag a bit. Uninstalled the update, Bluetooth works. The update automatically installed itself again after a few weeks and broke it again but I can no longer uninstall it for some reason.

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                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #240

                                        @feddup @Lettuceeatlettuce Sadly the Debian 12 update did the same to me. I fixed it and it stays fixed. But its annoying nevertheless.

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                                        • E [email protected]

                                          To get to a working state you're very likely to be fine. They're all using Intel wifi and some elan touchpad, so the basics work well enough to bootstrap up to your vendors website.

                                          S This user is from outside of this forum
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                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #241

                                          The kind of people who would install Linux on their PC are the same people who'll reinstall Windows to remove all the bloat manufacturers put on their laptops by default.

                                          Whether or not the basics work well enough to go scavenge for drivers is irrelevant. The fact that I have to do it means it's no better than modern Linux in that regard. It'll boot and in 90% of cases it'll just work, when it doesn't you'll need to install some drivers.

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