I’m here because it’s eventually going to be the better alternative.

FOSS by its nature, will keep on improving. And proprietary bloatware, by its nature, will only gonna get worse.

  • necrxfagivs@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It was my main concern, so I dualboot (my main drive 500gb SSD runs Fedora while I have another SSD of 1TB with Windows 10).

    Most games I play are running flawless on fedora (rn I’m playing No Mans Sky), as most Steam Games (you can check protondb for your favorite titles) and I’ve been more than a month without booting windows, but other titles as Fortnite can’t run on Linux.

    For your games on Epic and GOG you can use Heroic Launcher. Gaming on Linux is getting easier on daily basis.

    • joshuaacasey@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Two things are preventing me from switching to Linux

      1. Gaming (specifically fucking anti-cheat – which is arguably the biggest issue with getting games to run on linux)
      2. Hardware that doesn’t have native linux compatible software (sorry, not sorry, but I’m not looking to mess around with unofficial third-party software for my Elgato Stream deck and Elgato Wave 3 microphone. I want officially supported first-party software so I can have the hopeful convenience of it just working without having to fiddle around with it (which I undoubtedly would have to do with unofficial software)
    • heimur@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That’s really cool—thanks for the insight! I might have to look into that one day. I’m already using three hard drives, and nothing would prevent me from having Linux on one of them. One last question if you don’t mind, how do you handle spreadsheets? I have to admit I’m quite experienced (read: locked in) with Microsoft Excel, which I do use for personal things regularly. Do you use Open Office (which has never grown on me), Google Sheets, something else? I guess that could also be a case of booting up Windows but it feels a bit cumbersome just for that.

      • necrxfagivs@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Also, you can always try Linux first in a Virtual Machine (for example VirtualBox) to get a feeling of it without altering your hard drives, I started that way!

        Regarding spreadsheets, I use LibreOffice Calc. Is not as feature rich as Excel but for me it gets the job done. I’m not sure if it works, but maybe you can set up a Windows Virtual Machine in Linux to use excel in it.