How well they have to hold there hand when installing packages. They depend on some one to write a script for ? pacman. Well when your custom arch is broke up to you to hold your own hand. That said they have a fine well kept wiki. And benefits the whole community. "Slackers use Linux" Arch uses pacman. when it breaks your broke. So then leaves you to learn Linux like Slackware. So many Arch users that wanted complete control finally learned Linux by using Slackware. Thank you Arch.
@@10cu7u5 I unfortunately cannot say the same. I like to use the newest versions of software so my Ubuntu became ppa hell and lots of updates broke my system. I'm also very happy to have moved on to a rolling release system because those version updates sucked.
This is an automated comment to display likes & dislikes for the video you're currently watching, since RUclips decided to disable the dislike count on videos. Views: 355972 Likes: 20806 Dislikes: 634 Ratio: 97.0% Last Updated: Dec-29-2021 RUclips, please don't ban or shadowban me. I learned how to do this from your own docs. Lol thanks.
@@massgrave8x i use Brave, it's actually superior to chrome because it has a built-in adblocker and many other features. we should all switch to this browser
windows 11 home edition is terrible, there is no advanced settings u cant realy fix any issues it might have for ur use, i cant either install linux because i have many windows software already installed,😢,
@@PsycosisIncarnated because linux have many pre-configured and working out of the box things, so that's why I prefer linux. With windows you need to dance around.
Six months ago I decided to try dual booting just out of curiosity. I'm studying software engineering and I thought I should at least know my way around Linux. Two days ago I completely moved to Linux because I just fell in love. No more windows for me, thank you very much.
@@1RRaider it does!! I switched to linux on my old junky refurbished laptop and it TRIPLED the battery life. Literally all I did was wipe windows and install linux mint. Also greatly increased the loading speed for apps and websites. You heard correctly!
As a game/game engine developer I write 90% of my code on windows and run wsl to make sure it’s cross platform and works on linux as well. Windows is almost always the target platform as a game developer. Visual studio and it’s set of tools is pretty much the industry standard. That being said when I used to do web dev I worked exclusively on linux. It’s just so much faster to do everything from a console and it’s usually simpler too. Point is, don’t force yourself to use any platform because you “know” it’s better. Use the right one for the job.
@@vuejsdev Recently I tried Fedora on a laptop just to see what it was like, and it's a really good mix of stable but not outdated packages so I'd definitely give that a try
*TLDW* - Privacy (also telemetries not hogging the system) - Customizability (build it for yourself) - "Terminal" (rather the command line package manager and bash)
@@dokols Exactly. These people are just like Apple - Retelling how they're introducing something that is present in other platforms for years and terming it 'revolutionary'.
@@arthasmenethil2201 The vegans say that because they also want other people to stop eating meat. I am not vegan but I understand their reasoning. After all if you think it is murder why wouldn't you try to stop murder?
@@lakrinmex8132 my choice, same as my choise for OS. When other people tell me "oHHhH use Linux" im just getting annoyed because they sound like a cult that dont respect my choise for OS. Same as with the vegans, their cult mentality is repulsive.
I prefer linux over windows, but while I used windows, I did find that you could completely disable all tracking and telemetry through the registry, which can be confusing and daunting if you don't know how the registry works, so its just easier to run Linux on your system, personally Manjaro is my favorite distro
manjaro too here, although while id like to switch to endeavour at some point for a closer arch experience (or even just plain arch if i work up the confidence) i find using pamac in the terminal way more intuitive than default pacman, idk i think i could probably install it on endeavour if i tried, but so far havent experienced anything that is gonna make me switch with any rush
I decided to buy an Dell Ubuntu laptop because of Odin. Never going back to Windows and I was a Microsoft Systems Engineer. If you are doing web development I cannot imagine why you would use Windows, it is a such a pain.
@@czhunor Not much has changed? The hell are you talking about? I wasn't around 15 years ago, so I can't say for sure - but if you don't think that Wine and Proton have made huge strides in even the past couple of years, you're crazy
@@magnusanderson6681 Huge strides, yes. Supposedly 30% of Steam games now I hear, but the first two I tried flat out wouldn't launch. Maybe I could get them to work with a few hours of troubleshooting... Or I could just boot into Windows where 100% of my games work without having to make a huge project out of it. So yes, things are getting better, but there's still a long long way to go. Maybe I'll be gaming on Linux when I'm in a retirement home.
@@karanvora2674 i am on dual boot macOS 11.2.3 and Arch, on my Dell laptop. I must say it i feel very confortable with brew and iterm2 + some oh-myzsh powerlevl9k customisation is very pleasant in macOS
@MΛX not really BSD. Apple took userland tools from Net and FreeBSD, that's about it. The kernel is a mix of Mach, stuff done at NeXT and several other places. It really is a mix bag of various different Unix and Unix-like systems
I still prefer windows. Mainly because that's what i'm used to and it works well for me. I'm more concerned about being able to be productive quickly. I find that with linux/macos I get caught up in details all the time that lower my productivity. I guess if I gave it some time i'd get used to that and learn to work around it, but why bother when windows works fine.
@@juuamjskn2420 I can already do what I want with windows. But if I want to do the same thing on linux I first need to figure out how that works in linux. Which is a productivity loss, at least initially.
I'm slowly starting to realize the benefits of programming in Linux. Gcc and G++ come by default, they are a pain to install on Windows, and programming UART communication in an app is also much more straight forward, not to mention you can open a serial port on the command line with a simple command.
For me it’s the tiling managers You can’t switch between windows with keyboard and the mouse follow out the box with windows Linux you can just use hyprland and you got a really nice smooth tiling manager and just learn the Firefox, terminal keyboard shortcuts and then you will start going fast I use yabai on Mac OS and when you add another window I have to drag it into the workspace with the mouse then hit my hotkeys to automatically arrange the windows In hyprland I just open the window and it automatically gets arranged into the workspace
Now I like the comparison! But rather just stay with one distro as distro hoppers tend to have a bad experience. Not saying it would be for your case! But in general you don't win anything if you move around too much. Try out couple and use the one you like most! But I hope you stay on Linux side! It's great having people around rather than just not too many and have this closed circle of people with similar experience.
Please! I repeat Please! Stick with your distro Do not distro hop It'll ruin your experience with Linux and would just leave a bad taste in your mouth. Also the main reason for hopping is just the different desktop environment. But the thing is, you can get any desktop experience you want on your distro. Just dig a bit deeper and you can have anything.
@@muhammadnaqi1220 I disagree. Especially if you partition your home, boot, and root directories I think installing different distributions is a great way to learn linux and the different ways that linux can exist with different configuration philosophies. Also, distributions are often much more than just a different desktop environment. Different distributions have different ways of installing programs, different ways of configuring your system, different methods of package managment (and obviously different software repositories). These are all decisions that are made by the design philosophies of distribution maintainers, and as a result you can learn a lot by experiencing the differences. Do you really think all these different distributions exist only because they want to distribute a different desktop environment? Of course not, that would be absurd. Its much more complicated than that. For example, the largest difference between most distributions, is the software repositories. Sure, a lot of these repositories overlap among distributions (i.e. aptitude on Debian based distrubitions, such as ubuntu; yum on redhat distributions; and pacman on arch based distributions, such as manjaro)--but that's only because maintaining these repositories is an enormous endeavor. In fact, I'm not even sure how to go about installing a package manager from a different "family" of distributions even though I suspect it probably is possible (with a lot of work). While I tend to agree that distributions "don't matter," I also don't think its bad at all to distro hop as you can learn a ton by do so, and you don't even have to lose all your customization by simply partitioning your /home directory on its on partition and mount it on every distribution you install. The whole point of linux is that your computer is yours that you can do what you want with it. Part of being able to do what you want with it is learning the different ways linux can be put together, and distro hopping is a good way to dip your toe in that water without building Linux from scratch.
I like your channel. I'm an old person (31 lol) switching careers and have a year or so left on my CS degree. It's nice to get a perspective from someone who's reasonable and in the field. Thanks.
@@jasonstorm5726 You're both young enough to legally be my sons. Thanks for reminding me but good luck with the cyber-security career. Next year, I celebrate 4 decades as a "techie" in telecoms, then IT, and for the past 12 years, cyber-security. I get to harden Linux servers and I get paid for it! Life is good.
I'm really, really old (76). Don't get overly attached to any one OS or programming language. Trust me, it will all change as you get older. Remember, a good programmer can program in any language/OS. I like to say, a good programmer can write FORTRAN in any language.
Watching on my Linux Mint 20 desktop right now. Also, bought a Raspberry Pi so I run the Raspberry version there too. As a regular desktop it has been my main OS for 5 years now. I have resurrected several older machines to make them useful again with some lighter distro's as well.
Great video, but I think you missed a couple big points! 1. You mentioned Linux is used on tons of web servers. The point you missed is this: naturally, if you're already working in a similar environment, getting a web server running is less of a server admin job and more of a job of understanding which distro and package manager is installed. If you're working in Windows, WSL fakes a Linux shell, but it's far from it. I'm a Ruby/Rails developer, and it's amazing the amount of issues people have getting the basics installed with WSL. It's just not right. And, unfortunately, people that want to experiment end up getting turned off by WSL. WSL is kind of the anti-Linux. 2. I know you might jest, but macOS is, IMO, the step between Windows and Linux. macOS runs a fully-featured zsh shell (used to be bash, which is what most Linux shells run, but you can always change it) out of the box. The addition of iTerm and the homebrew package manager makes the terminal every bit as powerful as Linux. No, you can't customize things anywhere near as much, and you can't do certain things on a system level, but I don't have time to mess around with how my UI looks, or tweak the performance on my Wifi card, let alone reinstall distros or window managers on a whim. I have a wife and a kid and a business. Sure, it's fun to mess around with, and my backup computer runs Linux since it's so old, and it's great. But I can get up and running with my dev environment every bit as fast on macOS as I could on Linux, and everything will (99% of the time) just work. Similar to Linux, a smaller user base results in less security issues, but, like Windows, you do have to wait for a security patches if necessary. Also, similar to Linux, privacy is a huge priority, but, similar to Windows, that doesn't stop you from installing Google Chrome with all its tracking stuff either. I know some people are really anti-macOS. And that's fine. You use what works for you. If that's Linux, Windows, macOS, or, heck, running a virtual terminal on an iPad into a Linode server, good on you. I'm not here to argue the merits of one OS over the other - at the end of the day, they can all accomplish the same thing. Well... except WSL. That sucks.
It doesnt take much to know which distro you are on. If you know that then you should already know tha package manager or else you probably shouldnt be messing around on linux.
@@travisgoesthere or, they should mess around more. I learned a lot early on messing around in my systems. Just do it in a VM or have a good backup plan. Also +1 to OP because WSL is far from perfect
macOS is much better dev environment than linux. No fiddling around with hacks to fix common problems. Its consistent, doesnt break and has all the necessities to be a good dev environment.
Another reason for Linux is if you're doing anything with Docker. Sure, you can run Docker on Mac or Windows, but it isn't a real native OS-based container, it uses a behind-the-scenes Linux VM. On Linux, you're getting a native, kernel-supported containerized environment.
I actually have had linux crash on me and take a whole day to fix. Every time though, it has been because of complications with the NVidia driver which is not open sourced. Each time I've learned more about backups and saving my files somewhere secure so that when I do need to roll back or start over from scratch, it is less catastrophic. If you're running linux with an NVidia driver, especially if you're asking it to do CUDA programming and handle multiple displays at the same time, LEARN HOW TO USE BACKUPS!!!
@@mrkansas Lol. Wish I'd take my own advise more often. I should have added that learning how to use backups is great, testing and validating backups is even better.
Did you know you can re-install Linux and use the same "home" folder? I did that after I managed to crash my system playing around with stuff and retained all my files. Just do a custom install and select the previous home partition as the new home partition and use the same username. (Works on Ubuntu at least)
Security by obscurity isn't security. Just because most people don't know how to comb pick a Master lock doesn't make the lock a good choice. They can be opened in seconds without the key. Linux is arguably more secure because when problems are found they're fixed, quickly. Another issue is the feature set. Windows does everything, built in, on by default, cloud printing, remote desktop, work folders, etc. You can do that stuff with Linux of course but one has to choose to. If you don't do those things they're still sitting there operating with Windows. Among the first things I do with Windows is turn off all the stuff I don't use, remote assistance, WebDAV, etc. PowerShell is indeed a power shell. I too resist moving completely away from Windows for Adobe stuff. But alternatives are getting very good, gIMP, KDENLive, Libre office, this stuff is good enough now for casual users & runs perfectly on Linux. The *need* for Windows is going away. If all you do is browse the web & write a letter now & then there's no value in running Windows. PDF manipulation... There's no better than the stuff for Linux. Now with Wine 7, Linux is a very functional replacement.
I somewhat agree with you on many points but... I've been using Linux (and Windows) almost 25 years and until recently couldn't find a Linux distro that was ever reliable for more than a few months until something flaked out on it and had to be reinstalled. I am currently doing all my development on MXlInux and it's going quite well. During that time I've found Windows to actually be more reliable. I may have gotten a BSOD once in a while but at least then you know what happened. In Linux if it crashes hard the whole machine just locks up and you don't even know why... I am running VS Code and JetBrains IDE's and they both run equally well on both systems. I only use Windows now on another machine for running DAW software and other audio related stuff.
True, tried Ubuntu 22 against Windows 11, both are crap, but at least windows works with everything it promises it does and I never had to reinstall it or deal with a random crash without any feedback message, I even tried going back to Ubuntu 20, of course, the run was much better, but it just took +3 months to start having problems too, while my public beta-test (a.k.a. Windows 11) had a smoother experience all the time (I still hate that drag to taskbar was removed)
The only valid argument is, the package manager. Bash is available on Windows and works well -- coming from someone who's been using Linux since 0.99 release! Working in WSL2 is like working on Linux to be. And putty is brilliant, by far the best terminal program ever, and I coded a whole C++ socket server for a medication order picking robot in vi (not vim) through putty working on a SCO machine of our client. The reason why I use linux to code, is ease of us. My compilers g++, gcc, clang-* are just there when I install the developer suite. And when I need Cmake or some obscure development library a single line will do. But when you do anything other than C/C++ it doesn't make a difference. Especially when you are on JAVA or JS or PYTHON which have their own package managers.
Winget (or scoop for more portability) also is pretty decent as a package manager. I personally also actually prefer Powershell to Bash and similar shells on Linux (I like that everything is an object and that I have the option to use explicit names following a common naming convention). Windows terminal is one of the best terminals on any OS. And powertoys in general has a lot of great features. There's lots of stuff really annoying about Windows (like telemetry), but it is entirely possible to get rid of everything that annoys me. This requires some effort (often involving the registry), but so does setting up and customizing a Linux install to my liking. I think if I had a Laptop with better Linux compatibility and if Gaming compatibility gets as good as on Windows (as might very well happen thanks to steam deck), I might in the future switch to something like NixOS (as it actually is different enough from Windows that entirely new stuff is possible that wasn't possible / as easy on Windows (or most other Linux distributions)).
I love linux and used to run ubuntu or arch as my main system. I switched back to Mac OS after running an update in Ubuntu and losing my WIFI for the first half of a day on a client's jobsite. Now I run the only good OS there is. Emacs
If you would have been using timeshift , then you have reverted to a previous state of the system. Once said that, in like 10+ years Ubuntu LTS has never let me down.
I appreciate losing your wifi is a bit of a pain in the backside, but did you just give up with Ubuntu that easily? My wife has "all Apple" stuff and has been through three Macbook upgrades, even she has had two or three real "stinker" corruption problems that put her out of service for a day or two until Apple support fixed it. (Despite having built and fixed computers for over 30 years, I wasn't going anywhere near them to try to fix them for fear of voiding the warranties!) But even that hasn't deterred her from staying with Apple (poor woman!)
I had to reinstall Linux several times in the past - especially on hardware not fully open. It is not more reliable. But I run it on many platforms and it is reliable. It gives good performance. It is not automatically a better performer than Windows though. I run industrial control software, mathematical simulations, a bunch of design software etc on it. All these packages were created on Linux and they do perform better than the translated windows versions.
I'm glad Privacy is getting their word out. Another RUclipsr I watch was sponsored by them, and it's one of the first times I've actually gone out and gotten what a RUclipsr sponsor promoted. Very useful. You got one of the best sponsors, man.
@@noadevamshmanoj3618 the us is the worst country in regards to privacy. The reason most of us don't have privacy is because of the NSA, and other huge information gathering conglomerates in the world.
Regarding gaming on Windows: thanks to the steam deck, valve has been working hard on SteamOS, which is a linux distro customized for gaming. While you still might run into games which dont run well on SteamOS, the vast majority do. Furthermore, if you have amd hardware (especially gpu), it is very well supported on SteamOS since the steam deck utilizes an AMD APU. So don't let gaming, hold you back if you are thinking about giving Linux a try, because every year that passes SteamOS is in a better state (it is already in a good state mind you).
My personal reasons: 1) Productivity: If I mess up my system (and yes it happens to the best), I can wipe and reinstall within minutes. That means I can be productive anywhere on any machine (even on a train or during a flight). It's really powerful if you think about it like that. 2) Freedom of distribution (really important): I can install and wipe as many Linux OS as I want to (it's prob. so obvious that you didn't even mention). All this Docker hype wouldn't be possible. Imagine you had to ask you boss for permission to spin up a container because you need to buy a license. This is actually a big deal, but gets often overlooked. 3) Toolchain Management + Scripts: I can go to my project's Readme, paste the quickstart commands into terminal and am good to go. It allows for dummy-proof setups.
As an Ubuntu (20.04) user, I approve Linux as the programmer's OS. And this video! 😁 And for all those who said that they were "first". I beat ya'll to it! 😜
There is normally a configuration or workaround that can be got to work. IBM and Lenovo Thinkpads have specific hardware drivers in the kernel itself which usually means they can work okay - but, yes, it can be fiddly.
I don’t agree that with Linux terminal always lets you uninstall software 100% without residue, is just an illusion, same as with MacOS but worse there. I think (sorry people) that package managers are overrated, but if you’re much into it Winget looks promising and well you also have Chocolatey package manager for Windows
As for the stability: Windows got a lot more stable in recent years, and Linux somewhat less so. And even if the OS trudges on it'll still disrupt your work if the X or wayland session hangs itself. The privacy issue is a real concern with Windows, and with Windows 11 Microsoft is now making a Microsoft account mandatory, even if you paid full price for "professional". Also after their push for SAAS with office, i wonder if they plan the same with the OS. The main thing why *I* prefer Linux over Windows for work is, that it's tailored for working with the command line and gives you all kind of tools (basically the gnu stuff). Just doing a grep on a codebase and get all lines e.g. some variable was used or function was called in an instant is something I can't do in Windows as easily. There are likely ways in nowadays IDEs to get the same result, but the command line really gives far more flexibility and quicker access to a greater variety of tools than a menu system can. Also I can apply that grep to any text file, not just some source code I might have managed by an IDE on Windows.
Despite what the haters say, dev on Mac OS is solid & pretty close to a Linux experience (despite the cost factor). I would switch completely to Linux, if not for ease of use with iPhone (copy/paste, iMessage etc). Just so hard to give up those conveniences for me, but if I could get around that, it would be Linux all the way.
I think major point is missing. Packets management and distribution. Usually if you want something - you have it in your distro repo, or community repos or flat pack. And you know what that it's reliable and secure. It's just like having steam for all the soft you have.
I’m assuming Linux is what you use on your PC. What about your laptop? I remember from your old videos that you used to have a MacBook Pro at one point.
@@dexternepo yeah I’m aware of that... my question is in reference to him previously using a MacBook with macOS on it (for iOS development, if I remember correctly)
@@RealArnavGupta That is kind of mandatory unless you use somekind of cloud Emulator and compiler server, but that is always a pain compared to having a Mac and a Iphone for that
While I prefer Linux for programming especially node.js environment, my full time job requires me to code on visual studio , sql server and .net hence Windows is necessary. As a programmer you have to to be open minded on this kind of this or that thing. You will get used to any environment , language, framework.
@Cad Bane the problem .net people scare to change . still a lot of winform developer . one interview i ask they want new project next year but using winform not wpf or winform core ? dont forget those webform which hardly confuse with angular , mvc some more .net core ? old ashx much easier then web api . hehehe
These aren't the best of arguments to use Linux as a developer. I've done a ton of development on Windows, Linux, and Mac (I'll admit, lightest on Windows) and I still agree with the premise. Environment: is the number one and two reasons you should prefer to develop on Linux instead of Windows. 1) The raw tools ecosystems for most languages are command line based which is a much more core and integrated experience in Linux. They will work in Windows, but it usually takes more effort setting up the PATH for you user (figuring out that is even the problem), and if those tools need to integrate with native tools like gcc, Windows quickly becomes almost shit out of luck. LLVM/clang has really saved Windows' hide in that department. LLVM is natively available in Windows. 2) Linux GUI environments are extremely customizable for your productivity style, and for many this will be a tiling Window manager like i3. i3 is blazing fast at window/workspace switching, very flexible in terms of Window movement, and very organized as a tiling(and tabbing) window manager, and all of this is manageable via keyboard. I wish I could use i3 as a window manager in Windows and I would pay for it. Other window managers exist in Linux as well and outside of i3 many people using Linux have radically different desktop areas. Security -- that's not specific to coding since you're referring to how secure the OS itself is and not something that transfers to your code. If you're writing code on Windows, you're tech saavy enough. Reliability -- Windows has been quite stable since Windows 7? Yeah, they have some patches that come out and do some pretty dank things, but I imagine a server host would be configured not to take screeching new updates A.S.A.P -- or at least a sys admin is in control to balance if they need a patch for security, or if it's just an 'update' to fix things that aren't broken. Performance -- there is some truth to how lightning fast Linux can be even on older hardware. This becomes even more ridiculously true if you're capable of operating without a GUI environment and do things via the shell. Even if you introduce a gui environment, Linux is still likely faster if you pick a more manually pieced together system over a distribution that tries to give you everything to make it as close to Windows as possible.
I agreed with most of this video except of the WSL2.0 part. I'm a very heavy terminal user and to be honest, Windows Terminal is a fucking Godsend to me. It IS linux, even allows me to install my choice of distro's, Ubuntu, Kali, it doesn't care. It's a terminal, and it saves my preferences in a JSON. This allows me to install shit on top of it such as StarShip, to make it look pretty, nice fonts because I'm not a fucking heathen working on terminal, I'm a human and I'd also like nice fonts thank you very much. Microsoft has gone to insane lengths with WSL and Windows Terminal to make all of that a reality, and for me it is, it really is. Sure, you need to do some work, but they do enable you to customise it to your likings, powerfont and glyps and the whole shit, you just need to take the time to do it, and then, in my professional opinion, there is no reason anymore to go for a macbook OR a full linux machine, Windows has it all built inside and on top of it, you can get a 100% functional linux terminal (even better if you go to town styling it) experience wihin windows using WSL2.0 and Windows Terminal. My two cents.
i use arch, btw. And full ego-trip here, that segue was one for the history books. I patted myself on the back on that one. You can give me a pat on the back, too. Just go to privacy.com/forrest to get $5. Actually $5 on whatever you want to buy. I bought a month WoW subscription for $10 instead of $15... it may or may not have been after a few drinks, wanting to relive my glory days and prepare for TBC. If you know you know. Oh, and I don't want to pin _my own_ comment. Type something clever. Let me pin yours.
add that on windows, every development tool/framework (git, nodejs, etc) feels like something patched and forced into windows, while on linux everything is well integrated and feels smooth, all running natively instead of being its own CLI with its own annoyances, don't get me started with containers ...
It doesn't just feel that way, it _is_ that way. Windows support is an after-thought, if it was given any thought at all. If you look at Windows-first tools and frameworks, they're well integrated in Windows. Though as much as I wouldn't want to use anything other than git, git's CLI is ridiculous even on Linux. It's pretty clear it was never designed, it's just... grown. Because ultimately, it started as Linus' inhouse tool. Which is actually quite common in the open source world, for better and worse :)
@@LuaanTi agree about it being an in-house tool, but you have to agree that it's an amazing in-house tool none the less, and with all its caveats, it's just awesome if you know how to use it properly, more if you are in an automated environment, it's just mindblowing
I always get issued a MacBook at work and I will say I've found the programming experience on MacOS is a bit cleaner in terms of the community support. Maybe this is just a consequence of the way Linux works, but I've found whenever I try to work on coding projects on Linux I'm liable to get things into a weird state where I can't fix it.
@@danieljohnkirby9412 Means nothing. I know plenty of senior this and that who know squat. Titles aren't necessarily knowledge. Coding projects really have nothing to do with your OS. If you are reliant on something very specific that your particular OS has then you already have an issue.
@@travisgoesthere lol that's what I'm saying, coding projects don't depend on your OS, but most firms use MacBooks, most of the ecosystem is set up for local development on Macs at this point. Like when I started Docker-for-Mac was a huge cludge (it relied on this cludgy way of setting up a VM running Ubuntu that would then run your docker instances), now it's seamless. It's not that I can't use Linux, I use Linux on my personal machines all the time, if I was allowed to use Linux at work I probably would but most employers aren't so keen on that idea because as soon as you have some issue you have to Google no one else in the company has seen it.
I've been a programmer for 15 years. I find some of your claims untrue and I agree some of them: Good of Windows: 1. Windows has been much more reliable than any Linux distro I tried. I always encountered unresponsive UI, driver failures on Linux. You can blame manufacturers for driver issues or application developers for unresponsive or crashing applications but this is my experience. 2. You can turn off the data collected by Microsoft during the installation, and I always do. And Linux doesn't inherently prevent application developers from using your data. Although I think Windows should provide a single UI to manage all kinds of privacy options and should not hide some options here and some there making it harder to manage etc. 3. I can play games on Windows. Most of the games I play don't run on Linux. 4. Sometimes the application you want to install doesn't provide a binary or a way to install. It requires you to download the source code and then make/compile it yourself. This is no cool for me, not always. On Windows, I always has installers for the applications that I need though the installation/uninstallation is not as clear as I want it to be. Good of Linux: 1. Awesome standard tooling: GNU. Also the file paths and LF makes Linux so much better that Microsoft had to implement WSL. 2. Free as in free speech: You can study it, you can change it. 3. Free as in free beer: You can install it on any number of devices and you don't have to pay. 4. Lightweight: Linux is lightweight compared to Windows and you can choose what to install. This is so much better to avoid installing apps/services you don't want to use. The apps/services use your computer's resources, they increase the risk of bugs and security issues and also increase the need for updates. So thank you Microsoft for serving enterprises and gamers. Thank you Linux for serving power users, freedom users and all kind of server applications / supercomputers / embedded devices.
Linux is really good. I'm serious. I'm an artist, I can do art on hd canvas without much lag. In Windows, it lags like crazy. Thanks Linux. I had to go through some crazy learning curve to use linux efficiently the way I wanted. Gone through Ubuntu to Arch to MX to what not. And finally settled on bare bone Debian ( the wifi is broken 😁 due to something I did ). It is vey stable and uses like 250 mb of ram on idle. It's just crazy worth it. I am doing client work on 1st gen intel i5 with no graphics card, 4 gb ram, and a milky screen. I'm grateful though. It works 👍. Thanks to Linux and it's community.
Linux beats Windows in almost all categories for me. The only place where Windows is ahead is software availability, and that's something that's in the control of developers. If every software available to Windows were also available on Linux, I'd never use Windows again, it's basically gone from an operating system into a malware system
@@kushalarora1019 honestly thats the type of setup im thinking of changing to, just Full Daily drive arch linux and setup like a VM with XP to play some old games.
Tried linux multiple times over the years. Always felt like a full time job and just want things to work. Windows 7 and 10 have just worked out of the box and I never had an issue for over 10 years. When I use linux, it's through a virtual machine.
you can use the command in powershell to disable the data collecter "Set-ItemProperty -Path "HKLM:\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\DataCollection" -Name "AllowTelemetry" -Type DWord -Value 0 "
I recently made a switch to Linux Mint because I found a “bug” with Windows OS when it comes to Emacs and how it handles I/O buffers and flushing it. Best decision I ever made.
I do feel that windows has had a great deal of optimization in the recent years. My current laptop was a low spec laptop which took 10 minutes to open a web browser of windows back in 2019. I installed Ubuntu, and just as he said, it made my laptop usable. But linux being open source, inevitably has it's bugginess. My laptop would randomly crash on zoom, or the settings for thunderbird would mysteriously be deleted, or mailspring would suddenly take up an incredible amount of diskspace. On a working pace, it is just too disruptive to deal with such breaking issues. I switched back to windows, though it has it's little pauses, it is absolutely usable. Kudos to the microsoft team! In my opinion, linux being used on servers should not be a big factor in OS decision on a client desktop. Much of the problems I have faced with linux has been on the front end.
The fact that it's open source doesn't imply "bugginess", it imply that more people around the world are working on it, than just Microsoft team. Your problems could be solved by debugging, but as a Microsoft user which i think you are,i think you just rely that thinks will sort out eventually in an update or something like that. So linux possibly is not for ya
@@vladmusteata4250 I do believe there is better source control when working in a corporate environment. There are more eyes on the software’s performance, and there is a more unified mindset in the software architecture. Documentation and support are also important factors. Sometimes it’s just a matter of more rigorous testing and scaling up to find such bugs. Both of which might not be as available in an open source community, at least not in on a quick pace. I am definitely not a competitive developer, but I have nothing against Linux, I used it at my previous workplace, and advocated it’s simplicity and performance. Just that with the daily rigor of work, it’s not possible to set aside time to search and repair a bug, which could put work on hold for months. That being said, I have respect for people who fix their own systems. Kudos to you!
@@tianli8172 What makes you think that GNU/Linux isn't developed in "corporate environments"? Why do you think that free software projects are incapable of finding bugs? Your claims make no sense. Your complaints smack of someone who's never actually used a GNU/Linux system, certainly not one of the major distros, and is just imagining things.
You brought up a good point (albeit a little uncourteously), that if you utilise GNU tools for your entire workflow, you’re unlikely to face these mainstream distro application bugs. Because GNU is awesome, and really stable. I myself am trying to switch to a full GNU environment using GUIX and Emacs. Idk why I’m receiving so many personal blows for siding with windows 😂 it’s not a binary thing you know, these days with docker, you can run Linux on any host. I run above said Emacs through a container for my current workflow. That being said, it’s been a couple of years now that I’ve been running on windows, I have faced my frustrations with it, mainly due to the limitations of X servers. I’m intending to switch OS, I’m gonna out once I get guix sorted. But I don’t think I’ll go to a mainstream distro, perhaps rde? I would recommend you try it
I permanently moved to Linux after my Windows PC decided to run updates during an important presentation. I lost control of my PC for 20 minutes. The CEO I was presenting to walked away after 5. Windows had downloaded stuff in the background, then decided to pop-up a "please install" box that took the focus away from my presentation, just as I was pressing Enter to go to the next slide. I threw Windows off my computer a few days later.
Developing on Linux is great. Things just work without wrangling OS and Tool of choice discrepancies for 1/2 your project timeline. DotNet works awesome on Linux too, docker actually works as intended, etc. Nix shell is an awesome tool as well. Saves to much time. You can setup a dev environment a lot easier on Linux. Everything is available. Want a dotnet IDE. Sure. VSCode works, but you can also use rider. Want to setup some services? Docker is dead easy on Linux and doesn’t make your system crumble. I still use windows and MacOS. But nothing compares to what Linux gives for development. Been using Linux as my daily driver since the 90s. Now Manjaro i3 is my main. I also use void for some things and slax as a rescue boot. Oh. And ventoy… a miracle utility.
Just works out of the box was something touted to me since the 90s and I've never had that experience with Linux, there is always something bugged or not working as expected.
@No_Name I’d say: any distro that you feel comfortable with. My take on “beginner friendly” distros is that all distros are “beginner friendly”, but some are configured better for a better experience, iykwim. I’ve installed Linux Mint (KDE) and Manjaro (XFCE) on friends computers and they are happily using img their PC without much hiccup
@@manticore4952 I hear you. It definitely requires a level of tinkering when things need attention. IMO, Linux doesn’t get in the way for configuring your workstation with a myriad of developer tools that you may need to get your work done. I feel on windows and MacOS, things like Java, python, containers and automation tools (Ansible, terraform, etc) can be painful to make work effectively and not get in the way
Unfortunately i'm still stuck on Windows because of Windows Forms Apps and whatnot 😩, but .NET itself has made crazy advances towards being multiplatform.
Fun fact, I use WSL 2 and I ran geekbench on wls ubuntu and on windows, wsl was faster by ~6% WSL2 Ubuntu vs Windows Single core: 825 / 788 Multicore: 3126 / 2907 CPU: Intel Xeon E3-1230V2 4 Cores, 8 Threads And also when I install npm packages it's A LOT faster on wsl, because windows defender slows down everything.
I tried linux for a while, I really liked the terminal but had a major issue with device drivers and the fact that I have to dual boot it since I need windows too for things like gaming. There was always some kind of error everytime I booted linux, and although they were temporarily fixable, it would take 15-20 minutes everyday or sometimes even hours. I tried clean installing and had the same problems, and that coupled with the fact that visual studio for windows had everything that forced me to use linux, I no longer use it.
I normally use a Mac and have a spare compute that dual boots to Windows 10 and Ubuntu. See that you prefer Arch Linux, probably have to take a look at that as well. Would love your take on Windows vs Linux vs OSX 😆
I actually really like macOS. It's Unix-based so solves the problems I have with Windows - and it's just well put together. Only take a look at Arch Linux if you have the time to spare haha people spends days, weeks, months, and even years getting it to fit just right. And even after that you'll still tinker with it all the time.
@@fknight Right, thought I saw a MacBookPro lying around in one of your videos. I particularly like the big touchpad on the Mac which comes in handy when editing videos in Premiere Pro. Wow Arch Linux sounds like a mega side project 😆
@@DataProfessor you got pop os, as bioinformatics person too it just works out of the box, even with CUDA and Nvidia stuff. ( It's Ubuntu based ) and really refined.
tbh i dont have problems with Arch for gaming. I use arch and it has been stable enough that it has never broken (other than the one time there was a power outage while a linux image was being generated while installing a new kernel. But still i didnt have to reinstall arch, it was a simple fix). But yeah there are things like Ubuntu or Fedora which people would prefer but usually anything i need that is made for ubuntu is already ported to Arch and i can just straight up install it using AUR.
I thought the reason the companies use linux is cuz it would cost them too much money to code their own os and they would rather just use something that does what they want it to do
I'm so tempted to start the arch journey just to be able to say the thing. But I'll stay with mint until i'm better at coding and have real use cases for an advanced linux distro. Thx for the insight!
I used Linux for a couple of years for the duration of my Computer Science classes that worked on the coding aspect of the degree. Ever since I moved away from those classes, though, I haven't had much need to use it. As a gamer, unfortunately Windows still reigns supreme. I love Linux, though. Very enjoyable operating system, with a vast suite of flavors to choose from.
I was using arch linux installed from scratch, but I didn't like having zero-configuration there instead of just the default one. That's why I prefer other distros like fedora for example.
I used to really like Vim But then I got spoiled by Visual code, so convenient to see all my files on the side and being able to switch between them. Especially on projects with a lot of files The terminal is cool and all but the visual studio code is so convenient
@@ripp102 VSC is superior for those who want their data sold to Microsoft and loves their telemetry (albeit Codium tries to prevent that quite a bit) and are happy with a pre-configured code editor. VSC is a mixture of an IDE and a code editor, a blend that may attract people. *VIM is for those who want complete control over what they want in their IDE and what not to even be in the codebase. It is DIY and potentially powerful IDE. Anybody comparing this level of configuration that *VIM provides with some other code editor is stupid. *VIM is its own league.
I do think that the lack of available hacks is not due to Linux having less users, since as you said, almost all online servers are Linux, making exploits very usable for hackers. I think the security comes from being an open source kernel, with an open source os on top of it, with most of it‘s usage being in high security scenarios, like using it as a web server. Point is still valid though, good video, and I think the same
You mentioning the Linux terminal reminds me of the time my CS teacher gave us instructions to set up C/C++ in our dev environments. Windows - A page and a half showing where to get the right compiler/SDK, how to set env paths, permissions to run, getting the shell/IDE and configuring that. Linux/Mac - Open terminal. apt-get install gcc
Thanks brother for showing authentic content, and also I think windows has become more open minded and is focusing on making windows look more light weight.
I share your sentiment. My old Linux server runs on Slackware from 2006 and only updated Clamav antivirus software and PHP. And for the entire 17 years nobody managed to hack it or Linux OS misbehaved. I only powered it down once or twice a year for cleaning, backing up the HDD and hardware upgrades. Otherwise, it just worked all by itself. Linux is amazing in this respect. I installed Linux on my mother's PC back in 2017 and recently I upgraded the OS, but for 6 years it just worked. The only thing I upgraded once a year was the Firefox browser. Otherwise, it just worked unattended without any issues. Imagine leaving Windows to an end user for 6 years without any attention. I am sure the updates would fill the up HDD and OS would stop working or someone would hack it (like in case of my father's laptop, which due to the hacking had to be wiped and I reinstalled Linux on it and solved the problem). I also use Windows 10 and 11 due to business software and my private PC has Windows due to my game running Windows only, but all my business laptops run primarly Linux since year 2000.
I'm fully expecting more and more people switching to CLI systems in the future. However, the command line *interface* they'll be using will be more like writing commands to ChatGPT.
Video starts. Ad first, sorry. One minute in in the video, two minutes of trying to sell privacy sponsor things. Another minute further in, an ad plays. After ad, trying to sell screen protectors. Almost half the video is a commercial.
I don't think you mentioned it, but the availability of languages from day one is good with Linux - e.g. you can run code. When I was on Windows, it took a bit of messing around to work with some languages, especially Web development - it is not built into Windows (or at least was not) and Windows server is quite different to Windows desktop editions and most people will not have it either.
I tried days to get certain Visual Studio Tools working, 6 hours to download, then fail with something like "Error code: 41", thanks for that. After about 3-4 days of trying, I just moved away from Windows. Windows is a toy OS, it's for your regular browsing and games, that's all.
3:09 But I've wasted a day fixing a borked GRUB2 reinstall (which it shouldn't have done, but okay LOL), but when I did fix it, I felt _like a boss_ I use Artix BTW
With Mint or any Ubuntu distro you can easily make the desktop look like Windows 95, NT, XP or even Win 7 or 10 to anyone walking by or sitting down to it for the first time.
How do you know somebody uses Arch?
- He's gonna tell you. ;-)
How well they have to hold there hand when installing packages. They depend on some one to write a script for ? pacman. Well when your custom arch is broke up to you to hold your own hand. That said they have a fine well kept wiki. And benefits the whole community. "Slackers use Linux" Arch uses pacman. when it breaks your broke. So then leaves you to learn Linux like Slackware. So many Arch users that wanted complete control finally learned Linux by using Slackware. Thank you Arch.
@@nymusicman Since I use Ubuntu, no update has broke my machine EVER! ;-)
@@10cu7u5 I unfortunately cannot say the same. I like to use the newest versions of software so my Ubuntu became ppa hell and lots of updates broke my system. I'm also very happy to have moved on to a rolling release system because those version updates sucked.
@@nymusicman "I like to use the newest versions of software" - and that is your problem, right there.
I use arch btw and gen too
This is an automated comment to display likes & dislikes for the video you're currently watching, since RUclips decided to disable the dislike count on videos.
Views: 355972
Likes: 20806
Dislikes: 634
Ratio: 97.0%
Last Updated: Dec-29-2021
RUclips, please don't ban or shadowban me. I learned how to do this from your own docs.
Lol thanks.
600 dislikes crazy
Me: Installs Linux
Also me: Installs Visual Studio Code
Don't get it.
@@Hsa008 vs code is owned by microsoft
@@TheSnHIMshow ok, thanks.
@dump lump lol
@dump lump don't get fast at coding then
Him: I prefer privacy
Also him: *uses chrome*
😂
comfort > privacy
Exactly. I mean Brave is even Chromium-based, I'll never get why people just won't use it, makes no sense
@@massgrave8x i use Brave, it's actually superior to chrome because it has a built-in adblocker and many other features. we should all switch to this browser
he just uses it for debug only !
"Why I code on Linux"
>list of reasons that have nothing to do with coding
Yeah he did
windows 11 home edition is terrible, there is no advanced settings u cant realy fix any issues it might have for ur use, i cant either install linux because i have many windows software already installed,😢,
"privacy" *uses chrome*
Tbf, if you do web development, Chrome is probably a little easier to work with.
Altought, i am team firefox
@@Kosin-gf7ioTails?
@@Kosin-gf7ioprivacy and anonymity are different. You can have much better privacy than chrome.
@@no_name4796ungoogled chromium
Chromium or chrome? Chromium on Linux is open source. They are not harvesting your private data.
Man's looking like Gilfoyle from the silicon valley show with the long hair and beard.
Gilfoyle was the coolest one
Show was so fucking good. They should have done everything to keep TJ Miller though.
Agreed lol
Yes
Could you specify more I'm not exactly sure who you mean? /S
Windows: requires patience
Mac: requires 💰💰
Linux: Requires Skills
not actually, with windows you need more skill.
Except that Linux doesn’t require skill
Mac: requires absence of brain 🤪
@@Asiro-S what the fuck xD
@@PsycosisIncarnated because linux have many pre-configured and working out of the box things, so that's why I prefer linux.
With windows you need to dance around.
Six months ago I decided to try dual booting just out of curiosity. I'm studying software engineering and I thought I should at least know my way around Linux. Two days ago I completely moved to Linux because I just fell in love. No more windows for me, thank you very much.
oh lololol.
I heard Linux gives Better battery life
@@1RRaider "bett" ???
@@yash1152 I mean Better
@@1RRaider it does!! I switched to linux on my old junky refurbished laptop and it TRIPLED the battery life. Literally all I did was wipe windows and install linux mint. Also greatly increased the loading speed for apps and websites. You heard correctly!
As a game/game engine developer I write 90% of my code on windows and run wsl to make sure it’s cross platform and works on linux as well.
Windows is almost always the target platform as a game developer. Visual studio and it’s set of tools is pretty much the industry standard.
That being said when I used to do web dev I worked exclusively on linux. It’s just so much faster to do everything from a console and it’s usually simpler too.
Point is, don’t force yourself to use any platform because you “know” it’s better. Use the right one for the job.
i wanna switch from windows to linux for web dev, but idk what distro to use. can you tell me one?
@@vuejsdev Recently I tried Fedora on a laptop just to see what it was like, and it's a really good mix of stable but not outdated packages so I'd definitely give that a try
@@vuejsdev choose a rolling release distro for up-to-date packages like arch,opensuse tumbleweed or fedora
Never heard of Windows.
jk, We have Windows here in the wall :p
Never heard of Gnome.
jk, there's one on the lawn ;)
Never heard of Linux
jk, there's a penguin outside my window watching my every move with murderous intent :p
so funny guys..
nerd-talks
@@mnipritom lol
Anyone heard of apple?
*TLDW*
- Privacy (also telemetries not hogging the system)
- Customizability (build it for yourself)
- "Terminal" (rather the command line package manager and bash)
These don’t factor into my coding very much tho.
@@dokols Exactly. These people are just like Apple - Retelling how they're introducing something that is present in other platforms for years and terming it 'revolutionary'.
not using a spell checker, "Customizability" ;-)
@@dokols lol was thinking exactly this
This is not a TLDW at all. I don't know why so many upvoted this lol
I use arch btw
Manjaro here ✌
Arch Linux users are like vegans. All the time want to shout to the world what they are.
@@arthasmenethil2201 or it's just for the memes.
@@arthasmenethil2201 The vegans say that because they also want other people to stop eating meat. I am not vegan but I understand their reasoning. After all if you think it is murder why wouldn't you try to stop murder?
@@lakrinmex8132 my choice, same as my choise for OS. When other people tell me "oHHhH use Linux" im just getting annoyed because they sound like a cult that dont respect my choise for OS. Same as with the vegans, their cult mentality is repulsive.
I prefer linux over windows, but while I used windows, I did find that you could completely disable all tracking and telemetry through the registry, which can be confusing and daunting if you don't know how the registry works, so its just easier to run Linux on your system, personally Manjaro is my favorite distro
@@micahturpin8042 You ever try DWM? Much more customizable and lightweight compared to i3
Also watching this on manjaro, is an impressing distro compared to what i used, also kde is super customizable, i just love it.
manjaro too here, although while id like to switch to endeavour at some point for a closer arch experience (or even just plain arch if i work up the confidence) i find using pamac in the terminal way more intuitive than default pacman, idk i think i could probably install it on endeavour if i tried, but so far havent experienced anything that is gonna make me switch with any rush
Eeeeh, "completely" is pretty bloody dubious; you can mitigate it, lets not oversell things here
As a beginner going through the odin project, they require Linux for the program and I've found it to be absolutely amazing
I decided to buy an Dell Ubuntu laptop because of Odin. Never going back to Windows and I was a Microsoft Systems Engineer. If you are doing web development I cannot imagine why you would use Windows, it is a such a pain.
Thank you Bertram Gilfoyle!
Thats his name?
@@inuraedirisinghe9559 Nope, He looks like a fictional character "TV show called Silicon Valley" Gilfoyle Played by Martin Starr.
@@inuraedirisinghe9559 His name is Forrest Knight
@@alwinjohn I know, thats his socail media name!
LMAO I also thought that he looks like Gilfoyle
When the games become really stable on linux, or actually coded for it, then it will be a very very bad news for windows
Some games run faster on Wine because the translated linux API calls are faster than windows native API calls lol
I don't want to ruin it for you, but it wont happen... I also had the same idea about 15 years ago, and still here we are, not much changed
Even worse news for windows would be if Affinity would start working on Linux
@@czhunor Not much has changed? The hell are you talking about?
I wasn't around 15 years ago, so I can't say for sure - but if you don't think that Wine and Proton have made huge strides in even the past couple of years, you're crazy
@@magnusanderson6681 Huge strides, yes. Supposedly 30% of Steam games now I hear, but the first two I tried flat out wouldn't launch. Maybe I could get them to work with a few hours of troubleshooting... Or I could just boot into Windows where 100% of my games work without having to make a huge project out of it. So yes, things are getting better, but there's still a long long way to go. Maybe I'll be gaming on Linux when I'm in a retirement home.
"Why do you code on Linux?"
Me: why would i code on anything else?
@@karanvora2674 i am on dual boot macOS 11.2.3 and Arch, on my Dell laptop. I must say it i feel very confortable with brew and iterm2 + some oh-myzsh powerlevl9k customisation is very pleasant in macOS
@MΛX not really BSD. Apple took userland tools from Net and FreeBSD, that's about it. The kernel is a mix of Mach, stuff done at NeXT and several other places. It really is a mix bag of various different Unix and Unix-like systems
because there are other viable options that are successfully being used by millions of developers every day? Cringe.
@@jamesevans2507 The point of the post is that Linux is what works best for *me*, James.
I don't know man, VS is not available on Linux, and it's more comfy than VS Code.
I still prefer windows. Mainly because that's what i'm used to and it works well for me. I'm more concerned about being able to be productive quickly. I find that with linux/macos I get caught up in details all the time that lower my productivity. I guess if I gave it some time i'd get used to that and learn to work around it, but why bother when windows works fine.
With Linux you can do what you want, there is no productivity loss
@@juuamjskn2420 I can already do what I want with windows. But if I want to do the same thing on linux I first need to figure out how that works in linux. Which is a productivity loss, at least initially.
I'm slowly starting to realize the benefits of programming in Linux. Gcc and G++ come by default, they are a pain to install on Windows, and programming UART communication in an app is also much more straight forward, not to mention you can open a serial port on the command line with a simple command.
not to mention the ease of using clang, make, multithreading building & compiling in Linux and packages all at your disposal
For me it’s the tiling managers
You can’t switch between windows with keyboard and the mouse follow out the box with windows
Linux you can just use hyprland and you got a really nice smooth tiling manager and just learn the Firefox, terminal keyboard shortcuts and then you will start going fast
I use yabai on Mac OS and when you add another window I have to drag it into the workspace with the mouse then hit my hotkeys to automatically arrange the windows
In hyprland I just open the window and it automatically gets arranged into the workspace
Why use Gcc when you can use msvc
Just started using Linux, its kinda like Christmas as a child trying all the various distros you dont know which one to open next
Now I like the comparison! But rather just stay with one distro as distro hoppers tend to have a bad experience. Not saying it would be for your case! But in general you don't win anything if you move around too much. Try out couple and use the one you like most!
But I hope you stay on Linux side! It's great having people around rather than just not too many and have this closed circle of people with similar experience.
It is all about personal preference.
Please!
I repeat Please!
Stick with your distro
Do not distro hop
It'll ruin your experience with Linux and would just leave a bad taste in your mouth.
Also the main reason for hopping is just the different desktop environment.
But the thing is, you can get any desktop experience you want on your distro. Just dig a bit deeper and you can have anything.
@@muhammadnaqi1220 I disagree. Especially if you partition your home, boot, and root directories I think installing different distributions is a great way to learn linux and the different ways that linux can exist with different configuration philosophies.
Also, distributions are often much more than just a different desktop environment. Different distributions have different ways of installing programs, different ways of configuring your system, different methods of package managment (and obviously different software repositories). These are all decisions that are made by the design philosophies of distribution maintainers, and as a result you can learn a lot by experiencing the differences. Do you really think all these different distributions exist only because they want to distribute a different desktop environment? Of course not, that would be absurd. Its much more complicated than that.
For example, the largest difference between most distributions, is the software repositories. Sure, a lot of these repositories overlap among distributions (i.e. aptitude on Debian based distrubitions, such as ubuntu; yum on redhat distributions; and pacman on arch based distributions, such as manjaro)--but that's only because maintaining these repositories is an enormous endeavor. In fact, I'm not even sure how to go about installing a package manager from a different "family" of distributions even though I suspect it probably is possible (with a lot of work).
While I tend to agree that distributions "don't matter," I also don't think its bad at all to distro hop as you can learn a ton by do so, and you don't even have to lose all your customization by simply partitioning your /home directory on its on partition and mount it on every distribution you install.
The whole point of linux is that your computer is yours that you can do what you want with it. Part of being able to do what you want with it is learning the different ways linux can be put together, and distro hopping is a good way to dip your toe in that water without building Linux from scratch.
Try different distros then pick one you comfortable the most.
5:10 Another good tip: if that pc was running Vista or older versions of Windows don't bother finding that activation code.
I like your channel. I'm an old person (31 lol) switching careers and have a year or so left on my CS degree. It's nice to get a perspective from someone who's reasonable and in the field. Thanks.
Damn I just turned 39 yesterday and I start school in a couple of days for Cyber Security. I have a good 25 years left. lol
@@jasonstorm5726 You're both young enough to legally be my sons. Thanks for reminding me but good luck with the cyber-security career. Next year, I celebrate 4 decades as a "techie" in telecoms, then IT, and for the past 12 years, cyber-security. I get to harden Linux servers and I get paid for it! Life is good.
Meh, u are still young. Am 40yrs I just started Information Technology degree.
you're not old.
I'm really, really old (76). Don't get overly attached to any one OS or programming language. Trust me, it will all change as you get older. Remember, a good programmer can program in any language/OS. I like to say, a good programmer can write FORTRAN in any language.
Watching on my Linux Mint 20 desktop right now. Also, bought a Raspberry Pi so I run the Raspberry version there too. As a regular desktop it has been my main OS for 5 years now. I have resurrected several older machines to make them useful again with some lighter distro's as well.
TL;DR he just likes Linux. Not that it offers more to developers than the other OS do
Great video, but I think you missed a couple big points!
1. You mentioned Linux is used on tons of web servers. The point you missed is this: naturally, if you're already working in a similar environment, getting a web server running is less of a server admin job and more of a job of understanding which distro and package manager is installed. If you're working in Windows, WSL fakes a Linux shell, but it's far from it. I'm a Ruby/Rails developer, and it's amazing the amount of issues people have getting the basics installed with WSL. It's just not right. And, unfortunately, people that want to experiment end up getting turned off by WSL. WSL is kind of the anti-Linux.
2. I know you might jest, but macOS is, IMO, the step between Windows and Linux. macOS runs a fully-featured zsh shell (used to be bash, which is what most Linux shells run, but you can always change it) out of the box. The addition of iTerm and the homebrew package manager makes the terminal every bit as powerful as Linux. No, you can't customize things anywhere near as much, and you can't do certain things on a system level, but I don't have time to mess around with how my UI looks, or tweak the performance on my Wifi card, let alone reinstall distros or window managers on a whim. I have a wife and a kid and a business. Sure, it's fun to mess around with, and my backup computer runs Linux since it's so old, and it's great. But I can get up and running with my dev environment every bit as fast on macOS as I could on Linux, and everything will (99% of the time) just work. Similar to Linux, a smaller user base results in less security issues, but, like Windows, you do have to wait for a security patches if necessary. Also, similar to Linux, privacy is a huge priority, but, similar to Windows, that doesn't stop you from installing Google Chrome with all its tracking stuff either.
I know some people are really anti-macOS. And that's fine. You use what works for you. If that's Linux, Windows, macOS, or, heck, running a virtual terminal on an iPad into a Linode server, good on you. I'm not here to argue the merits of one OS over the other - at the end of the day, they can all accomplish the same thing. Well... except WSL. That sucks.
It doesnt take much to know which distro you are on. If you know that then you should already know tha package manager or else you probably shouldnt be messing around on linux.
@@travisgoesthere or, they should mess around more. I learned a lot early on messing around in my systems. Just do it in a VM or have a good backup plan. Also +1 to OP because WSL is far from perfect
@@smokeyoak if you are so ignorant that you do not know your package manager then you have big problems
macOS is much better dev environment than linux. No fiddling around with hacks to fix common problems. Its consistent, doesnt break and has all the necessities to be a good dev environment.
@@MegaNerevar 100% agree, but also a year old post mate.
Another reason for Linux is if you're doing anything with Docker. Sure, you can run Docker on Mac or Windows, but it isn't a real native OS-based container, it uses a behind-the-scenes Linux VM. On Linux, you're getting a native, kernel-supported containerized environment.
I actually have had linux crash on me and take a whole day to fix. Every time though, it has been because of complications with the NVidia driver which is not open sourced. Each time I've learned more about backups and saving my files somewhere secure so that when I do need to roll back or start over from scratch, it is less catastrophic.
If you're running linux with an NVidia driver, especially if you're asking it to do CUDA programming and handle multiple displays at the same time, LEARN HOW TO USE BACKUPS!!!
As Linus Torvalds once said...
"Nvidia, fuck you!"
That's some real wise advice, hahaha
@@mrkansas Lol. Wish I'd take my own advise more often. I should have added that learning how to use backups is great, testing and validating backups is even better.
Bruh I been thru the same shit stuck on windows for now lol
Did you know you can re-install Linux and use the same "home" folder? I did that after I managed to crash my system playing around with stuff and retained all my files.
Just do a custom install and select the previous home partition as the new home partition and use the same username. (Works on Ubuntu at least)
Security by obscurity isn't security. Just because most people don't know how to comb pick a Master lock doesn't make the lock a good choice. They can be opened in seconds without the key.
Linux is arguably more secure because when problems are found they're fixed, quickly. Another issue is the feature set. Windows does everything, built in, on by default, cloud printing, remote desktop, work folders, etc. You can do that stuff with Linux of course but one has to choose to. If you don't do those things they're still sitting there operating with Windows. Among the first things I do with Windows is turn off all the stuff I don't use, remote assistance, WebDAV, etc.
PowerShell is indeed a power shell.
I too resist moving completely away from Windows for Adobe stuff. But alternatives are getting very good, gIMP, KDENLive, Libre office, this stuff is good enough now for casual users & runs perfectly on Linux. The *need* for Windows is going away. If all you do is browse the web & write a letter now & then there's no value in running Windows. PDF manipulation... There's no better than the stuff for Linux.
Now with Wine 7, Linux is a very functional replacement.
I somewhat agree with you on many points but... I've been using Linux (and Windows) almost 25 years and until recently couldn't find a Linux distro that was ever reliable for more than a few months until something flaked out on it and had to be reinstalled. I am currently doing all my development on MXlInux and it's going quite well. During that time I've found Windows to actually be more reliable. I may have gotten a BSOD once in a while but at least then you know what happened. In Linux if it crashes hard the whole machine just locks up and you don't even know why... I am running VS Code and JetBrains IDE's and they both run equally well on both systems. I only use Windows now on another machine for running DAW software and other audio related stuff.
Jetbrains IDEs are absurdly powerful. I use them too
My experience is almost word for word the same.
@吉田あぢべ tried Fedora many times since it first was called Fedora and Redhat before that too. I have the latest on a VM.
True, tried Ubuntu 22 against Windows 11, both are crap, but at least windows works with everything it promises it does and I never had to reinstall it or deal with a random crash without any feedback message, I even tried going back to Ubuntu 20, of course, the run was much better, but it just took +3 months to start having problems too, while my public beta-test (a.k.a. Windows 11) had a smoother experience all the time (I still hate that drag to taskbar was removed)
The only valid argument is, the package manager. Bash is available on Windows and works well -- coming from someone who's been using Linux since 0.99 release! Working in WSL2 is like working on Linux to be. And putty is brilliant, by far the best terminal program ever, and I coded a whole C++ socket server for a medication order picking robot in vi (not vim) through putty working on a SCO machine of our client.
The reason why I use linux to code, is ease of us. My compilers g++, gcc, clang-* are just there when I install the developer suite. And when I need Cmake or some obscure development library a single line will do. But when you do anything other than C/C++ it doesn't make a difference. Especially when you are on JAVA or JS or PYTHON which have their own package managers.
Winget (or scoop for more portability) also is pretty decent as a package manager. I personally also actually prefer Powershell to Bash and similar shells on Linux (I like that everything is an object and that I have the option to use explicit names following a common naming convention). Windows terminal is one of the best terminals on any OS. And powertoys in general has a lot of great features.
There's lots of stuff really annoying about Windows (like telemetry), but it is entirely possible to get rid of everything that annoys me. This requires some effort (often involving the registry), but so does setting up and customizing a Linux install to my liking.
I think if I had a Laptop with better Linux compatibility and if Gaming compatibility gets as good as on Windows (as might very well happen thanks to steam deck), I might in the future switch to something like NixOS (as it actually is different enough from Windows that entirely new stuff is possible that wasn't possible / as easy on Windows (or most other Linux distributions)).
I’m running Linux on a vm and already love the terminal, but now I think I’m sold!
Me too I got Bantu vm Linux. I really need to learn to code better
Please use wsl2 for gods sake.
I love linux and used to run ubuntu or arch as my main system. I switched back to Mac OS after running an update in Ubuntu and losing my WIFI for the first half of a day on a client's jobsite. Now I run the only good OS there is. Emacs
If you would have been using timeshift
, then you have reverted to a previous state of the system. Once said that, in like 10+ years Ubuntu LTS has never let me down.
I appreciate losing your wifi is a bit of a pain in the backside, but did you just give up with Ubuntu that easily? My wife has "all Apple" stuff and has been through three Macbook upgrades, even she has had two or three real "stinker" corruption problems that put her out of service for a day or two until Apple support fixed it. (Despite having built and fixed computers for over 30 years, I wasn't going anywhere near them to try to fix them for fear of voiding the warranties!) But even that hasn't deterred her from staying with Apple (poor woman!)
8:23 - "All of that dosen't feel right to me on windows" - exactly the same felling dude.
I had to reinstall Linux several times in the past - especially on hardware not fully open. It is not more reliable. But I run it on many platforms and it is reliable. It gives good performance. It is not automatically a better performer than Windows though. I run industrial control software, mathematical simulations, a bunch of design software etc on it. All these packages were created on Linux and they do perform better than the translated windows versions.
Bro, your beard isn't nearly long enough to be using Arch. 😂
DT?
I'm glad Privacy is getting their word out. Another RUclipsr I watch was sponsored by them, and it's one of the first times I've actually gone out and gotten what a RUclipsr sponsor promoted. Very useful. You got one of the best sponsors, man.
too bad privacy is only in the US.
@@noadevamshmanoj3618 Wait till you hear about our sponsor, NordVPN
@@noadevamshmanoj3618 the us is the worst country in regards to privacy.
The reason most of us don't have privacy is because of the NSA, and other huge information gathering conglomerates in the world.
@@PsycosisIncarnated It's no paradise elsewhere either. it's just not out and about as it is in the US.
@@noadevamshmanoj3618 i never said its a paradise, but the NSA are literally the biggest data gathering conglomerate.
[2nd!]
Also, Trying out The Open Source Computer Science
The first 2 Weeks with CS50 Been Awesome!
(Yes, I Saw Bill Gates With Linux PC ;) 4:09)
Regarding gaming on Windows: thanks to the steam deck, valve has been working hard on SteamOS, which is a linux distro customized for gaming. While you still might run into games which dont run well on SteamOS, the vast majority do. Furthermore, if you have amd hardware (especially gpu), it is very well supported on SteamOS since the steam deck utilizes an AMD APU. So don't let gaming, hold you back if you are thinking about giving Linux a try, because every year that passes SteamOS is in a better state (it is already in a good state mind you).
My personal reasons:
1) Productivity:
If I mess up my system (and yes it happens to the best), I can wipe and reinstall within minutes. That means I can be productive anywhere on any machine (even on a train or during a flight). It's really powerful if you think about it like that.
2) Freedom of distribution (really important):
I can install and wipe as many Linux OS as I want to (it's prob. so obvious that you didn't even mention). All this Docker hype wouldn't be possible. Imagine you had to ask you boss for permission to spin up a container because you need to buy a license. This is actually a big deal, but gets often overlooked.
3) Toolchain Management + Scripts:
I can go to my project's Readme, paste the quickstart commands into terminal and am good to go. It allows for dummy-proof setups.
As an Ubuntu (20.04) user, I approve Linux as the programmer's OS. And this video! 😁
And for all those who said that they were "first". I beat ya'll to it! 😜
On desktop, I never had issues with Linux, but on laptops I have always had some issue with function keys, and/or trackpad.
There is normally a configuration or workaround that can be got to work. IBM and Lenovo Thinkpads have specific hardware drivers in the kernel itself which usually means they can work okay - but, yes, it can be fiddly.
Would be cool to see a video about you building up your arch linux customization.
I don’t agree that with Linux terminal always lets you uninstall software 100% without residue, is just an illusion, same as with MacOS but worse there.
I think (sorry people) that package managers are overrated, but if you’re much into it Winget looks promising and well you also have Chocolatey package manager for Windows
As for the stability: Windows got a lot more stable in recent years, and Linux somewhat less so. And even if the OS trudges on it'll still disrupt your work if the X or wayland session hangs itself. The privacy issue is a real concern with Windows, and with Windows 11 Microsoft is now making a Microsoft account mandatory, even if you paid full price for "professional". Also after their push for SAAS with office, i wonder if they plan the same with the OS.
The main thing why *I* prefer Linux over Windows for work is, that it's tailored for working with the command line and gives you all kind of tools (basically the gnu stuff). Just doing a grep on a codebase and get all lines e.g. some variable was used or function was called in an instant is something I can't do in Windows as easily. There are likely ways in nowadays IDEs to get the same result, but the command line really gives far more flexibility and quicker access to a greater variety of tools than a menu system can. Also I can apply that grep to any text file, not just some source code I might have managed by an IDE on Windows.
would u compare it to Mac OS please in future video - or at least ur thoughts and experience
Despite what the haters say, dev on Mac OS is solid & pretty close to a Linux experience (despite the cost factor).
I would switch completely to Linux, if not for ease of use with iPhone (copy/paste, iMessage etc). Just so hard to give up those conveniences for me, but if I could get around that, it would be Linux all the way.
The funny thing is I do all my Dev on my Manjaro linux no dual boot for me...
i seriously need to get into linux and coding, something ive been putting off forever
Just moved to Linux for coding. I'd say don't waste more time with Windows
3:10 Have you never seen a black screen after updating and restarting Linux?! And Linux does not fix itself by simply rebooting.
I think major point is missing. Packets management and distribution. Usually if you want something - you have it in your distro repo, or community repos or flat pack. And you know what that it's reliable and secure. It's just like having steam for all the soft you have.
I replaced all the windows in my house with linuxes. Now no one can see in.
I’m assuming Linux is what you use on your PC. What about your laptop? I remember from your old videos that you used to have a MacBook Pro at one point.
Linux can also be installed on laptops and Macbooks.
@@dexternepo yeah I’m aware of that... my question is in reference to him previously using a MacBook with macOS on it (for iOS development, if I remember correctly)
@@RealArnavGupta That is kind of mandatory unless you use somekind of cloud Emulator and compiler server, but that is always a pain compared to having a Mac and a Iphone for that
While I prefer Linux for programming especially node.js environment, my full time job requires me to code on visual studio , sql server and .net hence Windows is necessary. As a programmer you have to to be open minded on this kind of this or that thing. You will get used to any environment , language, framework.
@Cad Bane WSL from microsoft was literally made for this.
Getting used to it is different than it being good or sufficient for your needs. Its not being open minded or closed minded. Its using what works
@Cad Bane the problem .net people scare to change . still a lot of winform developer . one interview i ask they want new project next year but using winform not wpf or winform core ? dont forget those webform which hardly confuse with angular , mvc some more .net core ? old ashx much easier then web api . hehehe
the worst part is . eeh old my report on crystal report ? .net core not work ? oooouch
These aren't the best of arguments to use Linux as a developer. I've done a ton of development on Windows, Linux, and Mac (I'll admit, lightest on Windows) and I still agree with the premise.
Environment: is the number one and two reasons you should prefer to develop on Linux instead of Windows.
1) The raw tools ecosystems for most languages are command line based which is a much more core and integrated experience in Linux. They will work in Windows, but it usually takes more effort setting up the PATH for you user (figuring out that is even the problem), and if those tools need to integrate with native tools like gcc, Windows quickly becomes almost shit out of luck. LLVM/clang has really saved Windows' hide in that department. LLVM is natively available in Windows.
2) Linux GUI environments are extremely customizable for your productivity style, and for many this will be a tiling Window manager like i3. i3 is blazing fast at window/workspace switching, very flexible in terms of Window movement, and very organized as a tiling(and tabbing) window manager, and all of this is manageable via keyboard. I wish I could use i3 as a window manager in Windows and I would pay for it. Other window managers exist in Linux as well and outside of i3 many people using Linux have radically different desktop areas.
Security -- that's not specific to coding since you're referring to how secure the OS itself is and not something that transfers to your code. If you're writing code on Windows, you're tech saavy enough.
Reliability -- Windows has been quite stable since Windows 7? Yeah, they have some patches that come out and do some pretty dank things, but I imagine a server host would be configured not to take screeching new updates A.S.A.P -- or at least a sys admin is in control to balance if they need a patch for security, or if it's just an 'update' to fix things that aren't broken.
Performance -- there is some truth to how lightning fast Linux can be even on older hardware. This becomes even more ridiculously true if you're capable of operating without a GUI environment and do things via the shell. Even if you introduce a gui environment, Linux is still likely faster if you pick a more manually pieced together system over a distribution that tries to give you everything to make it as close to Windows as possible.
I agreed with most of this video except of the WSL2.0 part. I'm a very heavy terminal user and to be honest, Windows Terminal is a fucking Godsend to me. It IS linux, even allows me to install my choice of distro's, Ubuntu, Kali, it doesn't care. It's a terminal, and it saves my preferences in a JSON. This allows me to install shit on top of it such as StarShip, to make it look pretty, nice fonts because I'm not a fucking heathen working on terminal, I'm a human and I'd also like nice fonts thank you very much. Microsoft has gone to insane lengths with WSL and Windows Terminal to make all of that a reality, and for me it is, it really is. Sure, you need to do some work, but they do enable you to customise it to your likings, powerfont and glyps and the whole shit, you just need to take the time to do it, and then, in my professional opinion, there is no reason anymore to go for a macbook OR a full linux machine, Windows has it all built inside and on top of it, you can get a 100% functional linux terminal (even better if you go to town styling it) experience wihin windows using WSL2.0 and Windows Terminal.
My two cents.
i use arch, btw.
And full ego-trip here, that segue was one for the history books. I patted myself on the back on that one. You can give me a pat on the back, too. Just go to privacy.com/forrest to get $5. Actually $5 on whatever you want to buy. I bought a month WoW subscription for $10 instead of $15... it may or may not have been after a few drinks, wanting to relive my glory days and prepare for TBC. If you know you know.
Oh, and I don't want to pin _my own_ comment. Type something clever. Let me pin yours.
add that on windows, every development tool/framework (git, nodejs, etc) feels like something patched and forced into windows, while on linux everything is well integrated and feels smooth, all running natively instead of being its own CLI with its own annoyances, don't get me started with containers ...
It doesn't just feel that way, it _is_ that way. Windows support is an after-thought, if it was given any thought at all. If you look at Windows-first tools and frameworks, they're well integrated in Windows. Though as much as I wouldn't want to use anything other than git, git's CLI is ridiculous even on Linux. It's pretty clear it was never designed, it's just... grown. Because ultimately, it started as Linus' inhouse tool. Which is actually quite common in the open source world, for better and worse :)
@@LuaanTi agree about it being an in-house tool, but you have to agree that it's an amazing in-house tool none the less, and with all its caveats, it's just awesome if you know how to use it properly, more if you are in an automated environment, it's just mindblowing
@@mindblow7617 Yeah, as I said, I still prefer it to alternatives, for the most part. It would just be nice if the interface wasn't such a mess :)
I always get issued a MacBook at work and I will say I've found the programming experience on MacOS is a bit cleaner in terms of the community support. Maybe this is just a consequence of the way Linux works, but I've found whenever I try to work on coding projects on Linux I'm liable to get things into a weird state where I can't fix it.
Learn to code better. If you cant code then nothing is actually going to help you.
@@travisgoesthere dude I'm a senior engineer.
@@danieljohnkirby9412 Means nothing. I know plenty of senior this and that who know squat. Titles aren't necessarily knowledge. Coding projects really have nothing to do with your OS. If you are reliant on something very specific that your particular OS has then you already have an issue.
@@travisgoesthere lol that's what I'm saying, coding projects don't depend on your OS, but most firms use MacBooks, most of the ecosystem is set up for local development on Macs at this point. Like when I started Docker-for-Mac was a huge cludge (it relied on this cludgy way of setting up a VM running Ubuntu that would then run your docker instances), now it's seamless.
It's not that I can't use Linux, I use Linux on my personal machines all the time, if I was allowed to use Linux at work I probably would but most employers aren't so keen on that idea because as soon as you have some issue you have to Google no one else in the company has seen it.
@@travisgoesthere Lmao you sound like someone who has never worked on a large project in a professional environment.
I've been a programmer for 15 years. I find some of your claims untrue and I agree some of them:
Good of Windows:
1. Windows has been much more reliable than any Linux distro I tried. I always encountered unresponsive UI, driver failures on Linux. You can blame manufacturers for driver issues or application developers for unresponsive or crashing applications but this is my experience.
2. You can turn off the data collected by Microsoft during the installation, and I always do. And Linux doesn't inherently prevent application developers from using your data. Although I think Windows should provide a single UI to manage all kinds of privacy options and should not hide some options here and some there making it harder to manage etc.
3. I can play games on Windows. Most of the games I play don't run on Linux.
4. Sometimes the application you want to install doesn't provide a binary or a way to install. It requires you to download the source code and then make/compile it yourself. This is no cool for me, not always. On Windows, I always has installers for the applications that I need though the installation/uninstallation is not as clear as I want it to be.
Good of Linux:
1. Awesome standard tooling: GNU. Also the file paths and LF makes Linux so much better that Microsoft had to implement WSL.
2. Free as in free speech: You can study it, you can change it.
3. Free as in free beer: You can install it on any number of devices and you don't have to pay.
4. Lightweight: Linux is lightweight compared to Windows and you can choose what to install. This is so much better to avoid installing apps/services you don't want to use. The apps/services use your computer's resources, they increase the risk of bugs and security issues and also increase the need for updates.
So thank you Microsoft for serving enterprises and gamers. Thank you Linux for serving power users, freedom users and all kind of server applications / supercomputers / embedded devices.
I love how this was a huge ad for that " privacy " app or whatever...
Linux is really good. I'm serious. I'm an artist, I can do art on hd canvas without much lag. In Windows, it lags like crazy.
Thanks Linux.
I had to go through some crazy learning curve to use linux efficiently the way I wanted. Gone through Ubuntu to Arch to MX to what not. And finally settled on bare bone Debian ( the wifi is broken 😁 due to something I did ). It is vey stable and uses like 250 mb of ram on idle. It's just crazy worth it. I am doing client work on 1st gen intel i5 with no graphics card, 4 gb ram, and a milky screen.
I'm grateful though. It works 👍. Thanks to Linux and it's community.
Linux beats Windows in almost all categories for me. The only place where Windows is ahead is software availability, and that's something that's in the control of developers. If every software available to Windows were also available on Linux, I'd never use Windows again, it's basically gone from an operating system into a malware system
@@DrewSkyDew That's not a silver bullet, sometimes there is a program that you really want, but it's almost impossible to get it working in wine.
@@kushalarora1019 honestly thats the type of setup im thinking of changing to, just Full Daily drive arch linux and setup like a VM with XP to play some old games.
And also gaming!
Tried linux multiple times over the years. Always felt like a full time job and just want things to work. Windows 7 and 10 have just worked out of the box and I never had an issue for over 10 years. When I use linux, it's through a virtual machine.
same. linux sounds good in theory, but for me personally, theres always something that doesnt work, so I got back to windows
@@CoachVicTheLandInvestor Like what exactly?
you can use the command in powershell to disable the data collecter "Set-ItemProperty -Path "HKLM:\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\DataCollection" -Name "AllowTelemetry" -Type DWord -Value 0
"
Oh man....I can't get Ubuntu to recognize the front phono jack on the computer. These quirks are what puts a kink on the Linux experience.
I recently made a switch to Linux Mint because I found a “bug” with Windows OS when it comes to Emacs and how it handles I/O buffers and flushing it. Best decision I ever made.
I do feel that windows has had a great deal of optimization in the recent years. My current laptop was a low spec laptop which took 10 minutes to open a web browser of windows back in 2019. I installed Ubuntu, and just as he said, it made my laptop usable. But linux being open source, inevitably has it's bugginess. My laptop would randomly crash on zoom, or the settings for thunderbird would mysteriously be deleted, or mailspring would suddenly take up an incredible amount of diskspace. On a working pace, it is just too disruptive to deal with such breaking issues. I switched back to windows, though it has it's little pauses, it is absolutely usable. Kudos to the microsoft team!
In my opinion, linux being used on servers should not be a big factor in OS decision on a client desktop. Much of the problems I have faced with linux has been on the front end.
The fact that it's open source doesn't imply "bugginess", it imply that more people around the world are working on it, than just Microsoft team.
Your problems could be solved by debugging, but as a Microsoft user which i think you are,i think you just rely that thinks will sort out eventually in an update or something like that. So linux possibly is not for ya
@@vladmusteata4250 I do believe there is better source control when working in a corporate environment. There are more eyes on the software’s performance, and there is a more unified mindset in the software architecture. Documentation and support are also important factors. Sometimes it’s just a matter of more rigorous testing and scaling up to find such bugs. Both of which might not be as available in an open source community, at least not in on a quick pace.
I am definitely not a competitive developer, but I have nothing against Linux, I used it at my previous workplace, and advocated it’s simplicity and performance. Just that with the daily rigor of work, it’s not possible to set aside time to search and repair a bug, which could put work on hold for months.
That being said, I have respect for people who fix their own systems. Kudos to you!
@@tianli8172 What makes you think that GNU/Linux isn't developed in "corporate environments"? Why do you think that free software projects are incapable of finding bugs? Your claims make no sense.
Your complaints smack of someone who's never actually used a GNU/Linux system, certainly not one of the major distros, and is just imagining things.
You brought up a good point (albeit a little uncourteously), that if you utilise GNU tools for your entire workflow, you’re unlikely to face these mainstream distro application bugs. Because GNU is awesome, and really stable.
I myself am trying to switch to a full GNU environment using GUIX and Emacs.
Idk why I’m receiving so many personal blows for siding with windows 😂 it’s not a binary thing you know, these days with docker, you can run Linux on any host. I run above said Emacs through a container for my current workflow.
That being said, it’s been a couple of years now that I’ve been running on windows, I have faced my frustrations with it, mainly due to the limitations of X servers. I’m intending to switch OS, I’m gonna out once I get guix sorted. But I don’t think I’ll go to a mainstream distro, perhaps rde? I would recommend you try it
It'd be nice to see a video once you're done with your customized Arch Linux, a bit of how to build it and stuff :) Thanks for the great work again :D
I permanently moved to Linux after my Windows PC decided to run updates during an important presentation. I lost control of my PC for 20 minutes. The CEO I was presenting to walked away after 5.
Windows had downloaded stuff in the background, then decided to pop-up a "please install" box that took the focus away from my presentation, just as I was pressing Enter to go to the next slide.
I threw Windows off my computer a few days later.
your sponsor segue was so good that sponsorblock doesn't block it (yet, as I write this)
I just found this gem of a RUclips channel and I'm already enthralled. Leaving a random comment for the RUclips algorithm :)
i've always felt you must earn the respect of linux to use it .
@@toomanycharacter
You must use respect to Linux it
You must LInux to respect it too.
Developing on Linux is great. Things just work without wrangling OS and Tool of choice discrepancies for 1/2 your project timeline.
DotNet works awesome on Linux too, docker actually works as intended, etc. Nix shell is an awesome tool as well. Saves to much time.
You can setup a dev environment a lot easier on Linux. Everything is available. Want a dotnet IDE. Sure. VSCode works, but you can also use rider. Want to setup some services? Docker is dead easy on Linux and doesn’t make your system crumble.
I still use windows and MacOS. But nothing compares to what Linux gives for development.
Been using Linux as my daily driver since the 90s. Now Manjaro i3 is my main. I also use void for some things and slax as a rescue boot. Oh. And ventoy… a miracle utility.
Just works out of the box was something touted to me since the 90s and I've never had that experience with Linux, there is always something bugged or not working as expected.
@No_Name I’d say: any distro that you feel comfortable with.
My take on “beginner friendly” distros is that all distros are “beginner friendly”, but some are configured better for a better experience, iykwim.
I’ve installed Linux Mint (KDE) and Manjaro (XFCE) on friends computers and they are happily using img their PC without much hiccup
@@manticore4952 I hear you. It definitely requires a level of tinkering when things need attention. IMO, Linux doesn’t get in the way for configuring your workstation with a myriad of developer tools that you may need to get your work done.
I feel on windows and MacOS, things like Java, python, containers and automation tools (Ansible, terraform, etc) can be painful to make work effectively and not get in the way
Unfortunately i'm still stuck on Windows because of Windows Forms Apps and whatnot 😩, but .NET itself has made crazy advances towards being multiplatform.
Fun fact, I use WSL 2 and I ran geekbench on wls ubuntu and on windows, wsl was faster by ~6%
WSL2 Ubuntu vs Windows
Single core: 825 / 788
Multicore: 3126 / 2907
CPU: Intel Xeon E3-1230V2 4 Cores, 8 Threads
And also when I install npm packages it's A LOT faster on wsl, because windows defender slows down everything.
benchmarks aren't actual performance on differend platforms
I tried linux for a while, I really liked the terminal but had a major issue with device drivers and the fact that I have to dual boot it since I need windows too for things like gaming.
There was always some kind of error everytime I booted linux, and although they were temporarily fixable, it would take 15-20 minutes everyday or sometimes even hours.
I tried clean installing and had the same problems, and that coupled with the fact that visual studio for windows had everything that forced me to use linux, I no longer use it.
Sounds like you didn't read the documentation and never disabled secure boot in your PC
I normally use a Mac and have a spare compute that dual boots to Windows 10 and Ubuntu. See that you prefer Arch Linux, probably have to take a look at that as well. Would love your take on Windows vs Linux vs OSX 😆
I actually really like macOS. It's Unix-based so solves the problems I have with Windows - and it's just well put together. Only take a look at Arch Linux if you have the time to spare haha people spends days, weeks, months, and even years getting it to fit just right. And even after that you'll still tinker with it all the time.
@@fknight Right, thought I saw a MacBookPro lying around in one of your videos. I particularly like the big touchpad on the Mac which comes in handy when editing videos in Premiere Pro. Wow Arch Linux sounds like a mega side project 😆
@@DataProfessor you got pop os, as bioinformatics person too it just works out of the box, even with CUDA and Nvidia stuff. ( It's Ubuntu based ) and really refined.
@@Tasksoldier121 Thanks, Pop OS looks dope, it has bioinformatics, ML and creative stack, sold on the features! Thanks for this recommendation.
I'm not gonna use Arch for programming. But, Arch-based distros are stable enough. I use Manjaro
tbh i dont have problems with Arch for gaming.
I use arch and it has been stable enough that it has never broken (other than the one time there was a power outage while a linux image was being generated while installing a new kernel. But still i didnt have to reinstall arch, it was a simple fix).
But yeah there are things like Ubuntu or Fedora which people would prefer but usually anything i need that is made for ubuntu is already ported to Arch and i can just straight up install it using AUR.
I thought the reason the companies use linux is cuz it would cost them too much money to code their own os and they would rather just use something that does what they want it to do
I'm so tempted to start the arch journey just to be able to say the thing. But I'll stay with mint until i'm better at coding and have real use cases for an advanced linux distro. Thx for the insight!
Me too sir. I code in Linux... Because there are so many things to learn as well as speedily fast and secure...
I used Linux for a couple of years for the duration of my Computer Science classes that worked on the coding aspect of the degree. Ever since I moved away from those classes, though, I haven't had much need to use it. As a gamer, unfortunately Windows still reigns supreme.
I love Linux, though. Very enjoyable operating system, with a vast suite of flavors to choose from.
Have you checked out Proton on Steam? Linux has a huge game library now, though not quite on par with Windows yet.
gaymer*
@@owainharris "Not on par with windows" that's the key. I will never switch fully to linux because of that.
@@owainharris "not quite on par with Windows yet"
Not NEARLY. Be honest.
I was using arch linux installed from scratch, but I didn't like having zero-configuration there instead of just the default one. That's why I prefer other distros like fedora for example.
Yeah Fedora is good. DNF is awesome. Running it on my PS4 lol
Why not use a Arch based distro like Manjaro or Garuda or EndeavourOS?
I used to really like Vim
But then I got spoiled by Visual code, so convenient to see all my files on the side and being able to switch between them. Especially on projects with a lot of files
The terminal is cool and all but the visual studio code is so convenient
for the files on the left there is a plugin for that, also auto complete? a plugin for that... there is nothing vim can't do buddy
@@someonehere4380 Vim is useful for quick editing of files but for complex projects VScode is superior (as it's more of a IDE than a text editor)
@@ripp102 why not use jetbrains then? Much better IDE
@@ripp102 VSC is superior for those who want their data sold to Microsoft and loves their telemetry (albeit Codium tries to prevent that quite a bit) and are happy with a pre-configured code editor. VSC is a mixture of an IDE and a code editor, a blend that may attract people.
*VIM is for those who want complete control over what they want in their IDE and what not to even be in the codebase. It is DIY and potentially powerful IDE. Anybody comparing this level of configuration that *VIM provides with some other code editor is stupid. *VIM is its own league.
I do think that the lack of available hacks is not due to Linux having less users, since as you said, almost all online servers are Linux, making exploits very usable for hackers. I think the security comes from being an open source kernel, with an open source os on top of it, with most of it‘s usage being in high security scenarios, like using it as a web server. Point is still valid though, good video, and I think the same
Compiling anything on Windows outside of my own Visual Studio projects has been a nightmare every single time
You mentioning the Linux terminal reminds me of the time my CS teacher gave us instructions to set up C/C++ in our dev environments.
Windows - A page and a half showing where to get the right compiler/SDK, how to set env paths, permissions to run, getting the shell/IDE and configuring that.
Linux/Mac - Open terminal. apt-get install gcc
Mac does not come preinstalled with a package manager.
@@rabdpnguin apt is Debian GNU/Linux (and derivatives of Debian like Ubuntu), not Macs running OSX.
Thanks brother for showing authentic content, and also I think windows has become more open minded and is focusing on making windows look more light weight.
well, only look
I reinstalled Windows 10 from a flash drive recently. Now I have a concerningly large amount of free hard drive space 🤨🧐 Idk why, but that's cool...
6 months ago I started learned programming language c++ :) I like watching you :) thank you for your YT work 👏👏👏
C++ is harder than it should be :-)
I hope you really need that speed and memory management
@@igorthelight some people do actual programming work and they really do need it
I share your sentiment. My old Linux server runs on Slackware from 2006 and only updated Clamav antivirus software and PHP. And for the entire 17 years nobody managed to hack it or Linux OS misbehaved. I only powered it down once or twice a year for cleaning, backing up the HDD and hardware upgrades. Otherwise, it just worked all by itself. Linux is amazing in this respect. I installed Linux on my mother's PC back in 2017 and recently I upgraded the OS, but for 6 years it just worked. The only thing I upgraded once a year was the Firefox browser. Otherwise, it just worked unattended without any issues. Imagine leaving Windows to an end user for 6 years without any attention. I am sure the updates would fill the up HDD and OS would stop working or someone would hack it (like in case of my father's laptop, which due to the hacking had to be wiped and I reinstalled Linux on it and solved the problem). I also use Windows 10 and 11 due to business software and my private PC has Windows due to my game running Windows only, but all my business laptops run primarly Linux since year 2000.
I like these points. I’ll add that the terminal is much more powerful than anything in the gui
I liked and Commented for the RUclips Algorithm , because you deserve it... I learn alot from you
More engagement right here!
4:08 imagine me trying to screenshot that meme but actually got that picture that only occupies like 5 frames.
I'm fully expecting more and more people switching to CLI systems in the future. However, the command line *interface* they'll be using will be more like writing commands to ChatGPT.
Video starts. Ad first, sorry.
One minute in in the video, two minutes of trying to sell privacy sponsor things.
Another minute further in, an ad plays.
After ad, trying to sell screen protectors.
Almost half the video is a commercial.
I don't think you mentioned it, but the availability of languages from day one is good with Linux - e.g. you can run code. When I was on Windows, it took a bit of messing around to work with some languages, especially Web development - it is not built into Windows (or at least was not) and Windows server is quite different to Windows desktop editions and most people will not have it either.
oh yeah, this point too. and related to this is preincluded GNU coreutils. they are a lot of help as well
I tried days to get certain Visual Studio Tools working, 6 hours to download, then fail with something like "Error code: 41", thanks for that. After about 3-4 days of trying, I just moved away from Windows. Windows is a toy OS, it's for your regular browsing and games, that's all.
Holy cow, Guilfoyle is real !
3:09 But I've wasted a day fixing a borked GRUB2 reinstall (which it shouldn't have done, but okay LOL), but when I did fix it, I felt _like a boss_
I use Artix BTW
Artix gang to feel superior to normie arch users BTW
You can avoid installing GRUB on Artix. Use EFI stub boot instead. So much simpler, faster, whatever.
More reliable? With fedora and al the other distros I tried the last 4-5 weeks I had more issues to sort out than even with win10 in like 6-12 months.
Nice video! Greetings from Brazil and Brazilian developers!
Please make tutorial how to customize Arch Linux to looks like 6:55.
With Mint or any Ubuntu distro you can easily make the desktop look like Windows 95, NT, XP or even Win 7 or 10 to anyone walking by or sitting down to it for the first time.
Search for "Luke Smith". I think you'll be happy with the amount of customization he does on Arch.
@@hiddingclover Thx I will check it
I couldn't find how to make the title bar/close minimise maximise buttons on the side. How did you do it?