• @passiveaggressivesonar
    link
    65 days ago

    Honest question, how would my life improve if more people switched to Linux? God bless all the maintainers that have made it simple enough for an idiot like me to understand it

    Most things work right out of the box and those that don’t I could do less with anyway, Linux is perfect

    • KillingTimeItself
      link
      fedilink
      English
      85 days ago

      linux would gain more support, more developers, and more market share, making it more universal. All of these are going to be beneficial to everybody.

      • @passiveaggressivesonar
        link
        15 days ago

        Already got lots of support and universality hat more do you need? X4 is native on Linux

        • KillingTimeItself
          link
          fedilink
          English
          13 days ago

          on the server side, sure, on the development side, sure, on the desktop side? Not very much, it’s usable, thanks to the core of dedicated users, but to be “perfected” it needs a larger userbase.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          55 days ago

          Beyond games, hardware support would still be a pretty big one. If Linux is widely adopted enough, it makes more and more sense for hardware companies to make sure their new devices will be supported on launch day. Not having to worry about my network card being too new from a brand that has poor/no Linux support would be a pretty big factor in influencing my purchases the next time I’m looking for a laptop. Pretty sure I’ve also encountered people complaining about being unable to use all the features that their new GPU offers under Windows, because the company hasn’t released a Windows driver and devs working on Linux are still in the process of reverse-engineering things to write an open driver that is feature complete.

          Another big one would be configuration of peripherals, as there are a fair number that assume you have Windows to run their proprietary configuration tool. I’ve come across mice like that, as well as mechanical keyboards that require some proprietary Windows program if you want to flash the firmware and customize your layout.

          More Linux users also makes it a more attractive target for devs in general. That could mean you get a cool, new hobby project that someone is working on and decides to make a FOSS Linux version, could mean companies at least offer a Linux version of their proprietary software that doesn’t have a comparable Linux alternative. There’s a lot of software out there that people need for work or school, especially in more niche fields, where there’s not a viable Linux alternative and your job/school isn’t going to change their entire workflow just for you.

          I’m sure others can come up with further examples that wouldn’t occur to me.

          • @passiveaggressivesonar
            link
            14 days ago

            Just about the only points I’d accept, would be nice to remap the mouse buttons and not have to rip my teeth out for drivers

    • DiplomjodlerOP
      link
      55 days ago

      Less corporate shitfuckery all around. Right now Windows pretty much has a monopoly on the desktop, which is why they have completely stopped caring about users. Once Linux gets above ten percent market share or so, they’ll take notice. And then whine about “communism” or some bullshit.

      • @passiveaggressivesonar
        link
        14 days ago

        Cool, they’ll take notice but I’m not going back and neither are a lot of people I’m sure. Not going back