• desconectado@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    I use both. Sadly, I have lots of software that doesn’t work (or works pretty bad) on Linux. I love Linux, but there’s no denying it can be frustrated, specially if your hardware doesn’t support it, and that applies to too many people who has no saying in the hardware they use.

    So in what world? Corporate world, science, CAD modelling…

    • wildcherry@slrpnk.net
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      9 months ago

      There is a big misunderstanding in people’s mind. LInux claims to run on pretty much every system (and it does ofc), but people take it as in every device and drivers is supposed to run flawlessly. I bought a 200 euros thinkpad knowing lenovo supported Linux directly, and I’m more satisfied with it than my 3000 euros macbook pro. In fact I havent opened my work one for 6 months+ lol

      Mandatory I use arch btw

      • scratchandgame@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        Current distros doesn’t support many hardware platform, despite being very well funded. Compared to OpenBSD. (NetBSD is too much, right? and it is not really usable.)

        Fedora: Only run on amd64, arm64, arm, ppc64le, s390x

        Debian: i386, amd64, arm64, arm, ppc64le, mips64le, s390x, riscv64 (testing).

        Alpine: same as Debian but no MIPS support

        Add your own here.

        There isn’t sparc64 support at all!

        https://www.openbsd.org/sparc64.html The other architectures that OpenBSD supports have benefited because some kinds of bugs are exposed more often by the 64-bit big endian nature of UltraSPARC.

        https://www.openbsd.org/want.html It is important to spread sparc64 around the development community, since it is the most strict platform for detecting non-portable or buggy code.

        OpenBSD: alpha, amd64, arm64, armv7, hppa, i386, landisk, loongson, luna88k, macppc, octeon, powerpc64, riscv64, sparc64 (all equally supported except Alpha)

        (VAX is discontinued after 6.9)

    • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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      9 months ago

      I use a Windows 10 virtual machine for this purpose and run Linux on my bare metal hardware. And if I absolutely have to use Windows, I can boot the virtual machine, use Windows, and then shut it back down again until I need it again.

      • desconectado@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        I mean, that’s what I do, do you think that’s feasible for everyone? No. Not everyone is willing to go through that much hassle.