• @Veedem
    link
    English
    183 months ago

    That is an absurdly large QR code. I recently switched to MacOS (I know Linux exists and it’s not for me) so I’m glad I’m away from this kind of nonsense.

    • yeehaw
      link
      fedilink
      English
      163 months ago

      My love is for Linux, and my job gives me a Mac. I’m pretty happy. My first time using a Mac full time. I’m blown away how much it’s not a piece of shit like windows has become. Windows just feels like a sinking ship with bandaids all over it and slow to do anything. Christ the calculator app has a loading screen. A 386 should be able to load the windows 10 calculator app in a nanosecond. What is it really doing? Gobbling up and packaging past calculations to copilot for analysis or some shit. Ridiculous.

      • @marx2k
        link
        English
        73 months ago

        My love is for Linux, and my job gives me a Mac. I’m pretty happy

        Same here. Absolutely love it. The only thing I don’t love is I’m not able to get MacBook without an x86_64 chip. VirtualBox doesn’t work on M-series ARM chips so I’m left without a standard way to run virtual machines :(

        • @ShittyBeatlesFCPres
          link
          English
          23 months ago

          I’m also a Linux user who got a MacBook Pro for work reasons and Parallels is nice, especially for Windows VMs. I was also annoyed to find I couldn’t use Virtualbox on Apple silicon and reluctantly bought Parallels. It’s expensive but it has a lot of features and nice touches so I don’t regret the purchase.

          Basically, it’s like everything Apple-related where you initially go “Wait, how much does it cost? Fuck that.” But then once you buy it, it’s actually really nice and you don’t feel ripped off. (Or not as ripped off, anyway.)

          • @marx2k
            link
            English
            13 months ago

            I do love it. My issue though is making cross-platform VM configs using Vagrant. I had something really nice going with virtualbox since it was usable by Linux, Mac and Windows. Now I’m not sure what the common demonator would be :/

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          23 months ago

          I put the blame on Microsoft here. I am more pro-ARM than I’m pro Apple; I had a surface pro X and ended up giving up on it because Microsoft has put zero effort into enticing developers to make ARM versions of their apps. Google drive still doesn’t have a functioning app (!!) for Windows on ARM, which at this point has existed for over 10 years. (Emulation doesn’t help here as it needs drivers).

          In contrast, Mac has had apps since basically day 1 of Apple Silicon, and ARM support in Linux has been pretty good for years.