and what if any do you miss from windows?
My main gripe with linux is still game and other software support.
Other than that everything I can think of is so much better than windows for me.
Pros: it doesn’t do anything you don’t make it do.
Cons: it doesn’t do anything you don’t make it do.
Unlike windows or mac with their expensive licenses , once installed, Linux is yours
You can just pirate windoes very easily, easier than typing in your credit card number.
Pro: It just works and does what its told. Cons: I am concerned that long term viability of open source software in an AI and profit driven via job cuts world.
Miss from windows? Absolutely nothing. It just pisses me off. I have to manage Azure, Windows Server, Deployments, and other microsoft crap. It always just sucks.
Pros it’s not windows.
Cons its Linux.
You will curse it and praise it in the same breath for the rest of your life.
Windows has better accessability features than linux does. Itsn ot talked about much but ive been in meetings with people with disabilities, survivors of accidents, etc… and Windows is the only real option. If you are blind there are standard programs that they use.
Its the one area i think linux could use real work. A couple of places ive put in pull requests to help out from time to time.
Otherwise linux is generally better ;)
Depends what you do on Windows. As someone who never really got into gaming and who loved programming it was the obvious choice.
Windows singularly fails in some of the most basic operations you could want from an OS. It makes me so angry the way it takes so long to copy a bunch of files, for example. Or if it won’t delete some files because one ‘is still in use’ but it won’t tell me which one or which program is using it! Why? Its infuriating.
Linux has none of these issues. And with a enough time, native ports of some of the games I used to play became available. I would never go back to Windows now.
Pro: it’s GLOSS - Gratis Libre OSS.
Con: it’s run terribly. The Linux foundation could be doing a much better job. 1-2% of its funding go into the linux kernel.
Linux Pros - I don’t even notice anymore after decades of use. I think it’s great. I guess i could say that it’s nice that it won’t try very hard to protect you from yourself.
Linux’s Cons - CAD software still sucks which means i’m never going into a career based on design, engineering, or 3d printing. Also, I guess I could say it won’t try very hard to protect you from yourself.
So, there is some aggravation (not really a con) in terms of package management systems.
You have MANY options not limited to your standard repo tools like yum, pacman, apt, etc. You also have 3rd party ones like flatpak and snap. You could also throw in the AppImage format to that. Arch has the AUR on top of that which usually means you’re running paru or yay. And then you have things like brew and crates which you might run into.
Working in any of these is straightforward, the problem comes from having to manage them all independently of one another at the same time. Pacman will update standard repo, but not AUR. Paru will update standard repo and AUR, but that doesn’t help with flatpak/snap. Then docker/pods/lxc are in their own little world while you get those handled.
In the end, the more complex you build a system the more complex it is to manage, but it still is an aggravation. I’d still take it over the one-size fits all approach Microsoft has, though.
might I recommend topgrade to you in these trying times?
Thanks! I’ll take a look at this.
Pros:
- Trustable.
- Free.
- The user is in control.
- has many UI.
Cons:
- Still has a bad error message style. I blame GNOME for this. If GNOME follow macOS’s error message style, we won’t have this problem.
- Still has an annoying app installation way. This is why I use AppImage.
I am sorry if my English is bad.
If you have bleeding edge hardware then Linux driver support is usually a pain in the ass. On windows there’s one, maybe 2 Windows versions. And manufacturers typically make drivers for windows first.
Got older hardware? It’s probably gonna work great on Linux.
Linux’s only objective is to get better.
Any commercial OS has the sole objective to make money for its owner.
Which in turn means it has to eventually get worse. It’s the natural progression of capitalist ideals.
There’s only so much value you can squeeze out of a product before you have to start reducing quality to make more gains.
Linux is how home computing was supposed to be.
Pros :
- Reliable, I have nothing to fix and no unusual behaviors or settings on Cachyos. If I set something up the setting won’t change on its own.
- Private, no telemetry. No NVIDIA service sending all the apps I launch to HQ.
- No forced software. I can choose to remove most components I dont like and replace them.
- Gaming works as well or better than Windows once its setup.
- I can revert to a previous image of my system right at boot. Very reassuring to know it’s easy to revert to a previous state/version of my system.
- More lightweight system, I use way less RAM on idle than on Windows. That’s more RAM to use for actual useful stuff like gaming.
- it’s free. Doesn’t require an account to use.
- it’s secure. Much less risk running a linux system than windows. You are a harder target and also a less attractive one for hackers.
Cons :
- I can’t play games with kernel level anticheats.
- I sometimes have to spend 10mn when installing a new game to set it up on proton.
- You are still expected by most people to handle their proprietary files coming from Microslop. You have to be able to sign PDF files and return office files.
- HDR support is not really good for games and it often is difficult to have working.
Overall, having switched 4 months ago, I have no regrets and honestly it was a great upgrade for me. Beside the money lost on a game like BF6 I’m very happy to be on linux.
I was really annoyed by my W10 setup anyway. I constantly had settings that would change on their own. I often had bad days where you feel the system struggling even though nothing changed. It was very frustrating. Linux solved that. I dont have bad days on my system. It runs exactly as I left it when it was shutdown. And this expected stability is very comfortable for users.
Highly recommend the switch to cachyos for all Windows gamers. And even for non-gamers it’s a very functional and reliable operating system.
Less mentioned downside - digital rights management is significantly degraded in linux. Most commercial streaming apps/sites will work but but only at SD or 720p.
Yeah Cachy is the bomb.
Is cachyos much better than garuda? I’ve been on garuda for a few years now and dont know much about cachyos other than its another arch based distro.
I never tried Garuda so I can’t help with the comparison.
Is Garuda debian based ?
Cachyos is the first time I touched an Arch based distro and I was very impressed by how stable and “fresh” it feels. I guess Arch deserves its good reputation.
I have been updating my cachyos like two times each week which is a quite high update rate and the only problem I had was this :
Steam stored his cache by default on my home partition and filled the disk completely. I then updated with pacman without noticing I had no space left and the process failed. The system wouldn’t boot which was scary. I took a bit of time to think about it and remembered that I can revert the system with BTRFS snapshot. So I checked the cachyos wiki on how to revert and in 2mn i was back to the exact state before my failed update. It broke once because of Steam and the system was very easy to fix.
A beginners could learn to use snapshots easily in the GUI for it and I think would succeed in restoring the system. Would the same be true if a Windows didn’t boot ? Honestly I don’t think so.
I even was able to setup in the GUI for how many snapshots I want to keep so i constantly have around 30 snaps ready to recover my system up to a month and a half ago.
Garuda is another easy arch like endeavor/cachy. I believe they even both provide kernel images with the cachy patches. But they aren’t the default. The really big negative with garuda is their default theme choice and setup. Endeavor/Cachy provide a much more vanilla setup out of the box. Making them a bit less problematic over all.
No gaming distro outperforms any other distro by any measurable means a user would notice.
Actually depending on tasks it can be up to a 25℅ boost. Though in gaming tasks it tends to be a 2 to 5% boost. Which while more moderate can still be felt. Where catchy excels is it’s CPU optimization. So if you’re CPU bottlenecked it can make a big difference. That said garuda and endeavor both give you the option of installing a cachy patched kernel.








