• 7 Posts
  • 52 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • Much better OS updates, Updating the OS doesn’t all the time require restart (you should do that anyway), but OS updates don’t happen suddenly forcing themselves, when you maybe doing something important.

    Typical updates on Linux take MINUTES, and (sometimes) a single reboot.

    And for the record, with regards to @oats point #1 for the negative, I have a school machine (university level, research-related work). Matlab, Mathematica, R, Rust, Intel and Nvidia (CUDA) Fortran are all available for Linux. And, in many instances, many CPU-intensive applications may only be available on Linux (and Linux clusters).


  • I think that, IMO, you have to have a reason to move AWAY from Windows. The fact that you’re asking the question tells me that you may have problems with Windows (and maybe Windows 11 in particular?). TPM and an initial user creation process that requires a Microsoft account come to mind.

    I still recommend Ubuntu or Mint Linux for new users, although I dislike Snap packages (in the case of Ubuntu) and I recommend getting away from Snaps as soon as possible. These distros pretty much just work. I’m more fond of the MacOS look and feel, so this is what my desktop looks like currently .

    EDIT: I should point out that this is actually STOCK Ubuntu 23.04…

    As you can see, my setup is very similar to MacOS (but not EXACTLY the same, which I prefer). Mint Linux is basically like Windows 10, only much better IMO. You pretty much can’t go wrong with these two…