- cross-posted to:
- pcgaming@lemmy.ca
- pcgaming@lemmy.ml
- deFrisselle ( @deFrisselle@lemmy.sdf.org ) 2•4 hours ago
#RUNBSD
- pipariturbiini ( @pipariturbiini@sopuli.xyz ) 2•7 hours ago
I’d love to, but I am too dependent on my VST Plug-in library on Reaper. Running them through Wine/Carla doesn’t cut it.
I played with the idea of getting a Mac for music production, and installing a Linux distro on my desktop for gaming and video editing. But I couldn’t really justify dropping 1000-2000€ on a laptop with inferior performance to my desktop.
Looked into used specimen, but getting a 3-year old model only gets you a couple more years of software support.So Windows 11 with a local account and many policy modifications it is.
- toastal ( @toastal@lemmy.ml ) 4•6 hours ago
Be wary of sunk cost fallacy. Sometimes you gotta bite the bullet & allow yourself to see it as some wasted money with the opportunity to start over with something with less lock-in or the boost in creativity of now having to work with new constraints.
- glaber ( @glaber@lemm.ee ) 2•6 hours ago
Have you considered running the software you need from a virtual machine inside your Linux distro?
- veee ( @veeesix@lemmy.ca ) English21•21 hours ago
Most likely an unpopular opinion, but I took this opportunity to try something new and made the switch to macOS at home as my daily device. If I do end up gaming, I’ll probably just get myself a Steam Deck.
After switching to Mac OS I have 0 interest in using Linux on my actual conputer. I still have windows machine for work, and my servers are all Linux. But any machine I want to use is gonna run Mac.
- windowsphoneguy ( @windowsphoneguy@feddit.org ) 23•21 hours ago
Which ironically also requires you do buy a new device
- veee ( @veeesix@lemmy.ca ) English10•21 hours ago
The irony isn’t lost on me!
- Snot Flickerman ( @SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English18•21 hours ago
You’re already closer to using Linux by doing so. Lots of people are unaware that macOS continues to be Certified UNIX. Many of the command line tools function very similarly to their Linux counterparts.
- Nobilmantis ( @Nobilmantis@feddit.it ) 14•19 hours ago
“Learn” linux not even a requirement, a lot of distros work fine as a normal-person-os out of the box (Ubuntu & any of its spin-offs, Manjaro, Deepin, etc), with maybe some minimal youtube/forum troubleshooting, probably comparable with the amount you would do on windows.
- Snot Flickerman ( @SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English9•18 hours ago
Eh, I’d say the biggest learning curve is updates and how they’re generally password protected.
It’s actually not straightforward to a new Linux user how to bypass entering your password every time there are updates, and with how often Linux updates, this can create headaches and confusion for new users.
Especially with coming from Windows and being used to Microsoft arbitrarily forcing updates in the background. They are confused because Microsoft gave them zero control, while Linux actually gives them full control, and that can be confusing when you’re used to updates being forced on you in the background.
Linux expects you to be an adult and handle this shit, and does a lot less hand-holding for the casual user, and this can be overwhelming for some new users, because it’s a lot of extra personal responsibility they formerly didn’t have to think about. Some people just don’t have the extra mental energy to dedicate to it all.
- gnuplusmatt ( @gnuplusmatt@reddthat.com ) 4•15 hours ago
KDE Discover does my updates without passwords just fine
- deegeese ( @deegeese@sopuli.xyz ) 20•21 hours ago
You think the US govt will let MS drop 2/3rds of US citizens laptops from support?
I think some senators will hold a hearing to grandstand about security and forced obsolescence and MS will be shamed into extending the support window a couple more years.
Windows 10 is over 10 years old at this point. Microsoft learned from XP It can’t live forever.
Businesses typically lease their machines for 2-3 years so they all support 11. And do you really think the government cares about regular citizens? lol.
- Snot Flickerman ( @SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English13•21 hours ago
I’m waiting for Microsoft to inevitably be forced to keep supporting 10 for free[1] longer than they planned, because 11 uptake just isn’t fast enough.
What happened with 7 will happen with 10, and they’ll end up supporting it for another year or two.
Microsoft is trying damn hard to not care about consumers, but the consumer market still matters, so I suspect angry customers will force their hand.
They already plan on charging money to keep supporting 10 past it’s end-of-life date, but I suspect this will have a lot of angry pushback that will result in at least a year or two of free updates. ↩︎
- BlackEco ( @BlackEco@lemmy.blackeco.com ) 9•21 hours ago
to keep Copilot off your desktop or learn Linux
For me it’s one year to keep Windows Mixed Reality working. I’m still miffed that they pulled the plug with no alternative other than putting my headset in the bin and get a new one…
- Chriin ( @Chriin@fedia.io ) 5•19 hours ago
If you haven’t looked into it Monando might be what you need to keep your headset running. May not work for your headset (doesn’t for mine but mines not WMR and is because of my 8kx’s driver)
- BlackEco ( @BlackEco@lemmy.blackeco.com ) 6•18 hours ago
I already did back when Microsoft announced they would drop WMR, but it was (and still is) pretty experimental, with no controller support and 6DoF requiring external tracking.
- Jo Miran ( @JoMiran@lemmy.ml ) 8•20 hours ago
All I need is a native, feature complete, Nvidia GeForce Now Linux client. It is literally the only reason I keep a Windows installation around.
- Dizzy Devil Ducky ( @AceFuzzLord@lemm.ee ) English3•17 hours ago
Probably gonna keep my desktop running win10 by then because I’ll hopefully have a new desktop by then that I can easily set up Linux on. Got too much on my desktop to move over and I certainly don’t know any tools able to make the process any easier.
Probably gonna just use it as an experimental PC that I can test out server related things on.
- skuzz ( @skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de ) 3•19 hours ago
Win10 gets Copilot as well. Pushed without consent. Likewise if you use a program like InControl to lock W11 to 22H2, you can keep copilot at bay. For a time.
Switching to any other platform is better though. Screw them.
- wizardbeard ( @wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) English2•14 hours ago
There are many many business customers that can’t use copilot. They are not going to tell them to just lock into an old insecure version. You’ll be able to disable it, at the very least, on a Pro license using Group Policy.
Like everything else Microsoft does that has legal implications regarding PII.