Why did you switch to Linux? I’d like to hear your story.

Btw I switched (from win11 to arch) because I got bored and wanted a challenge. Thx :3

  • MXX53@programming.dev
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    20 minutes ago

    Back when I was a freshman in college, I had a regular laptop (Sony Vaio) and at the time netbooks were popular and my girlfriend (now wife) had got me one for Christmas.

    Win 7 starter was garbage, XP was fine, but not ideal. I ended up trying out Ubuntu netbook remix since it was supposed to be lighter on resources. At the time I was a pre med student and wanted something for knocking out documents, and reading papers with enough battery to get me until I had to go to work. The iPad wasn’t out yet so that wasn’t an option.

    I had a ton of fun getting it working, even the Broadcom chip was a fun challenge. Once it was working, I just really liked the look and feel. I preferred the Unix file structure to windows as well as the terminal experience, using bash vs powershell.

    I ended up writing a few programs and apps for myself specifically for that netbook, and it quickly became my primary way of interacting with a computer. I eventually ported my Sony over which had the challenge of writing a couple drivers to get some things working with minimal compatibility.

    Following this, I switched from pre med to software engineering and eventually graduated with a degree and I have now been working with software and using Linux ever since. Even now, I am the sole Linux system administrator in the company I work for and manage a handful of servers and deployments.

  • cdzero@lemmy.ml
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    29 minutes ago

    Tried dual booting Ubuntu and XP back around 2006, didn’t really see the point because gaming on Windows.

    2020 got a Raspberry Pi and set up Retropie which gave me a good intro to Linux. Tried to get away from big tech in 2021 and was dual booting Mint and Windows 10. Ended up spending more time in 10 because gaming.

    Got an old laptop from work and it was perfect to throw Mint on because no way it was going to handle gaming. Then I set up a media server, initially with the the Pi and then bought a cheap mini for it - and ran it on Mint. I’m primarily a console gamer now so gaming is far less of a concern for me on PC. Mint everything now.

    I could distro hop or at least try something else, and maybe I will at some stage. But I’m too happy with Mint/Cinnamon to bother.

  • ian@feddit.uk
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    50 minutes ago

    Because Linux had a choice of desktop environments to try out. What a playground.

    My first peek was with Wubi. >2008 ish? Then Knoppix had a live boot. Then all the other live boots followed. Very important easy first step.

    I’m now on Plasma, tweaked to suit me.

  • starshipwinepineapple@programming.dev
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    41 minutes ago

    I switched January this year.

    1. Windows 10 end of life was on the horizon
    2. Programing on windows was a lot of hoops to jump through and i had heard Linux would be better
    3. Didn’t want windows 11/copilot.
  • Linearity@piefed.au
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    54 minutes ago

    Apple stopped pushing security updates for my MacBook.
    Now I can never use anything but Linux.

  • darklamer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 hour ago

    Commodore’s bankruptcy in 1994 was the end of the Amiga, which forced me to switch to something else.

    At the time, the choice of hardware I could afford and operating systems that didn’t suck was extremely limited, a PC with Linux was pretty much the only practical choice and I’ve stuck with that ever since.

  • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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    2 hours ago

    Purely to record / watch TV, films, etc.

    I tried Windows Media Center (XP with some tweaks) and it was dire…

    Found MythTV and decided I needed to “learn Linux” to get it done.

    Now everything (except my work’s laptop) is Linux (Arch btw)

  • azimir@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    Windows 95/98 sucked shit. I liked the games, but the kernels were terrible.

    I dual booted or ran two machines Linux (RedHat 5.2 to 6.2, wtf was up with 7?), then whatever worked (usually Debian based) for a while. Mostly used Linux alone for years, but used Win7 for a bit. That one was okay, but Microsoft can’t build dev tools on their own OS to save their lives.

    It’s been Linux Mint for a long time now on desktops and Debian/Armbian on servers.

    Basically, I’ve been mainlining Linux since about '97 and it’s doing me just fine. Works great for my kids and wife. We’re a mostly Linux household. It saves me a ton of headaches. Easy to install, patch, and almost no other maintenance.

    • Quazatron@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      Same here, I heard about the reliability of Unix while enduring Windows 95’s appalling crashes.

      Last month I finally moved my wife’s Windows 10 laptop to Endeavor OS. She recognizes that her unusable laptop is now snappy and stable.

      My house is now officially Microsoft-free.

  • kutsyk_alexander@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    I switched to Linux because of Linux gaming. Yes, I am completely serious!

    Back in 2015 I had Lenovo laptop with only 2GB of RAM. Windows 7 consumed more than half of that and DotA 2 took over 2 minutes to load the map. The game was laggy. FPS was terrible even on low settings.

    On another hand Ubuntu 14.04 consumed only ~350 MB of RAM. DotA on Linux loaded map in seconds. FPS was slightly better, but the game itself didn’t feel so laggy anymore.

    Linux was (and still is) my only viable solution for gaming on low spec hardware.