I finally made the switch to gaming full time through Linux on PopOs!(between Steam Proton, Litrus, Bottles, and my Steam Deck). Even my Steam year in review was showed that over 72% of my gaming was through Linux. I haven't looked back, and don't miss Windows. Great video.
I'm getting close to the point of switching to Linux, now that it's much easier to run Windows games and apps through Linux, I'm seeing little need for Windows and honestly, Linux is much better under the hood than Windows is. As for games and apps that don't work through Linux, who cares lol, they don't get my money, it's as simply as that, after all, it wouldn't take much effort for the developers for most of the games that don't work, to get working, if they can't be bothered, I don't see why I should give them any money.
As a junior high school student who use Linux for entirely 2 years, I must say Linux is capable of doing anything I want. Also, using Linux makes me smarter: It teaches me how to use the internet; it teaches me how to solve a problem. Linux even changes my mindset when it comes to thinking. I am very appreciated.
Good for you. Those skills that you have learned and developed, will help you greatly in years ahead -- as you stay in school. And, especially, during the rest of your life. Honestly, I wished I learned (at your age) what you have learned, but years way back when, that type of "mindset" just was only available to the most successful people on the planet.
I also got into linux in my middle school years. I had a Pentium 133 notebook which had a 1GB hard drive. I saved up some pocket money and got a 10GB drive one day, only to find out Win98 only could use 8GB of that due to some limitations of the BIOS on this machine. Linux however had no such issues. So at first I had a 8GB Win98 SE install and a 2GB Debian Linux 2.2, then after some time 4 GB Windows and 6GB linux, then finally 9 GB linux, 1 GB Windows. Later on my first desktop an AMD Duron 900 I only installed linux. I skipped XP entirely and only started to use Windows again at the tail years of 7.
@@PoeLemic Thanks for such kind words. This is the best Christmas gift I've ever get this year. Merry Christmas and I wish you and your family have better life in the future! 🥹
I wish if i could switch back to Linux but Adobe product are holding me back, I use photoshop, illustrator on a daily basis so yeah... Before you jump in i tried many alternatives and no it did not workout i have to learn a whole new software ...
My switch to Linux was somewhat accidental. I kept a Windows 8 laptop for gaming, but then I put a GPU in my Linux machine, which caused a lot of stability issues, which I resolved by replacing the motherboard. Back then I could only play Linux compatible games on Steam such as Portal and Half-Life series. I accepted the limitations, and it wasn't too long I started seeing support for more and more games. My issue with Windows is the same as everyone else's. Demand for more RAM, bad performance, ads, proprietary, etc. The biggest reason I won't go back is because my Linux Mint OS performs the same every day and doesn't degrade even years later. Nothing breaks. Files don't go missing. I can come home to a reliable PC every time and not worry about it.
YES...I remember, back in the days when I used Windows, how files would mysteriously disappear from my system and I would have to go online to find the file and download it and reload it into the proper directory and file! But I have been using LINUX MINT for years now and here's why. Windows is bad, and getting worse with each new release! The reason it is so bad is because Microsoft is a Democratic machine that is employed by the government to spy and restrict the actions of its users. In the early years of Microsoft they developed a great product that was cutting edge, but since the inception of Windows 8, Microsoft has slowly succumbed to the radical left's agenda of spying, lying, and restriction. So today...you have an opportunity to vote LINUX and trash the Microspy in your machine!
I have been a Windows Power user since childhood. I had reinstalled Windows 3.11 as well as Windows 95 multiple times before even leaving the elementary school (no joke - I love IT and always have). But during my bachelors degree in computer science (shocking, I know!) I got so fed up that I dropped Windows and moved to Linux. Haven't missed it since. Every time I have to use Windows at work, it just reminds me of how insanely bad it actually is.
I just entered the Templates folder on Pop!_OS with Nautilus and it actually tells you at the top what the purpose of the folder it. It's crazy to me that I had never seen that before.
You described my feelings to Linux precisely: this year is the first year I can wholeheartedly recommend Linux to techy/gaming folks without great caveats
I made the switch to Linux a couple of months ago. Distro hopped a bit and found something I really love. Even throughout that process, I never once considered going back to Windows. Can’t see a situation where I ever WILL.
linux mint 21.2 64 bit has come along way since i last used it ... highly Re command it and stay in one distro ... mint has pretty much everything i need to run all my games via steam natively and the direction windows is headed dont need it my self
This is exactly why I tend to disconnect other drives before installing Windows (or any OS) especially if one exists that I wish to preserve and keep untouched.
Its annoying when you have nvmes under the graphics cards and so on (maybe disable in bios?), what I did last I installed windows a few years ago, was to install it in qemu passing through only one physical drive.
@@johanngambolputty5351 Yup. Know exactly what you mean. Got one there myself. I don't really dual boot anymore so it isn't an issue now but I used to.
I switched to pop after an incident where every single windows machine in my studio crashed, bluescreened, and became systemically unusable over the course of. 5. Minutes. It's been amazing, and outside of some trouble with navigating gaming with my friends, it's been excellent
When a simple wifi issue occured under windows that in the past was a simple right click in Win7 took multiple searches to diagnose and multiple windows to dig through to get to the screen I needed to fix... I was done with windows 11. It's a time wasting OS that has the power to drag down an entire Nations productivity - Gates is evil. F' that guy.
Ok, I think you just convinced me to switch my gaming PC over to Linux. I have switched nearly everything I have over to it, all my laptops and such. Now it's time for my desktop to get the same treatment.
@@STONE69_ Exactly. Every machine other than the aforementioned gaming rig runs Linux in one form or another. My personal laptop and my mother's laptop run Debian, my dad runs Mint, though I plan on getting him on Debian too, and the living room desktop runs Arch. Also have a multipurpose home server running Debian Big fan of debian obviously lol
@@Parritz 4 Computers, all are i7 CPU 6th Generation. They all run Windows at a fast pace. I can use work arounds, but then have to upgrade to the next build by reinstalling. These computers will last for many years using Linux.
I switched form Mac to Linux about a year ago, I it is soooo much better than Mac OS. Plus, I'm not in the Apple trap anymore (Trapple). I can buy my own computer, and scale it THE WAY I WANT IT.
I know it wasn't the purpose, but you helped me with the AMD issue on Windows 😅😂 Thank you!! It has been so annoying seeing Windows forcing the update on the AMD driver on another computer I have at home As to your issue, the simple trick is to always install Windows first if you're going to dual boot. I've been doing it for quite some time and I have no complains at all! Depending on the distro, you can also enable secure boot and it works fine (even with an Nvidia card, in my case) Merry xmas to you! Enjoy!!
The trick is....... Never Dual Boot and always use MBR partitions for Windows Of course this trick may not work for you, just as your trick will not work for me Everyone has their own trick! I have an external SATA + Power cable running out of the back of my computers and all Windows backups are MBR To run Linux, I simply plug in the Linux SSD and power on To run Windows 11, I simply plug in the Windows 11 SSD and power on To run Windows 10, I simply plug in the Windows 10 SSD and power on To run Windows 8.1, I simply plug in the Windows 8.1 SSD and power on To run Windows XP-SP2, I simply plug in the Windows XP-SP2 SSD and power on To run DOS 5.0 or 6.22, I simply insert the 8cm mini CD-R and boot directly to DOS There is no need to enter the BIOS to select a drive as the computer boots directly from whichever drive is attached There is no need to enter the BIOS to switch between MBR or EFI as all the Installs are MBR Any Windows version can be restored to any drive as all MBR backups are compatible with each other, but not with EFI I am the guy who has been banned from EVERY tech site on the Internet for saying that Windows XP "CAN" be securely used online I study malware online using XP-SP2 in a Full Admin account and without even one single MS security update I was banned for openly challenging Russian Ransomware Gangs, Iranian Wiper distributors, the Israeli Military, the Chinese Military, the NSA and anyone else on the Planet to WRECK MY XP BOX and to force me to wipe the drive and restore a clean backup I have been running this test system "ONLINE" for more than 9 and 1/2 years without a single malware problem In May 2024, it will be 10 YEARS! The last Bluescreen of Death on this system was 14 years ago As I've said, your tricks work for you but not for me MY tricks work for ME! Bullwinkle J Moose
I never used SATA except years ago with old HDs. So to get an external SSD m.2 Nvme 2280 to boot as soon as you turn on the computer you connect to an external SATA ssd adapter which has m.2 ssd? The USB to M.2 SSD will not work for booting corrrect? you need to use SATA since the BIOS can detect it? Just need to verify.... ya I am afraid to install Linux on my other SSDS worried it might write over my main SSD which has Win11. Like what happened to Mike Horn.... corrupts the UEFI partition... thanks anyways..@@bullwinklemoose7232
I still think it's shameful on Microsoft's part that they still don't have options to select drive configuration at install, like come on, basically every linux distro has had the option for years now...
Good for you! The main thing is to have a stable system that works for you and not some corporation. I hope someday, Windows won't be needed at work, but for now, I can relax with my Linux systems at home away from that mess.
0:30 The most interesting thing is that the BTRFS file system with a tool created by openSUSE called Snapper can make the system the cleanest using rollbacks for both / partition and /home. I have configured it this way on both Arch Linux and Debian 12, and when I create a snapshot for / and /home on a bare system, install, for example, the KDE environment, test it or tinker with it, I can return the state of the bare system and install GNOME
Does it work out of the box or does it need custom partitioning. Both Debian (if used with BTRFS) and Fedora don't support BTRFS backups in all solutions (e.g. Timeshift)
@@MichaelNROH If you are asking, then TLDR is not out of the box, but Debian itself supports everything if you produce a partition manually, I used the debootstrap package for this by downloading to the Debian Standard image or using the Arch Linux image (yes, you can install Debian from under the Arch ISO). Having made a bash script out of this process, you are ready
The base package is has a manual setup, and there are a handful of applications that allow you to configure it in a GUI. btrfs-assistant is the most common. There's also an application called snap-pac that automatically creates backups pre and post system updates on Arch-based systems. (I run Arch btw. :D) That way, if something breaks on update you can just roll back the OS immediately after. snap-sync allows you to backup to an external drive. And finally, grub-btrfs allows you to have your backups show up as boot options if you've got GRUB for your bootloader and use BTRFS. Garuda Linux does all of this automatically out of the box, so you don't even need to set up anything. Saved my butt a couple of times on my work laptop. Actually, Garuda is the only reason I even know snapper exists. Timeshift is a good alternative, based on what I've seen it do in Fedora, but it's not a hands-off solution.
@@MichaelNROH As for the manual partitioning of the disk separately / this is btrfs, /boot/efi is the bootloader. For btrfs subvolumes (I mark them with the @ symbol), it is recommended /mnt/@ => /mnt /mnt/@home => /mnt/home /mnt/@snapshots => /mnt/.snapshots/ /mnt/@home_snapshots => /mnt/home/.snapshots /mnt/@var_lib_AccountsService => /mnt/var/lib/AccountsService /mnt/@var_lib_gdm => /mnt/var/lib/gdm3 (for Arch its just /mnt/var/lib/gdm) The following is necessary for the snapper-rollback, which, when specifying the snapshot id, will throw the broken one into /.btrfsroot and sign it with the date, it must be deleted manually with the command `btrfs su de /.btrfsroot/@T` Mounting with only one option subvolid=5 => /mnt/.btrfsroot This action is necessary for the GNOME environment to be able to boot into the Read-only snapshot created by grub-btrfs chmod -v 775 /mnt/var/lib/AccountsService/ chmod -v 1770 /mnt/var/lib/gdm3/ Just make `genfstab -U /mnt >> /mnt/etc/fstab` (genfstab is in the arch-install-scripts package available in Debian and Arch Linux) and using such a disk layout it will write to fstab itself It is very important that you mount tmp as tmpfs with the rw (Read and Write) option, otherwise Debian will not be able to load Xorg and systemd services when logging into the snapshot
Plus more filesystem-related stuff, bcachefs is going to support automatic storage tiering soon - so you can just throw all your drives into the filesystem and it'll automatically put more used files on faster drives and less used files on slower drives
- AMD driver thing is an AMD issue. They mess up on their version numbering constantly, so Microsoft thinks the GPU driver is waaay out of date. This doesn't happen on NVIDIA. - Both Fedora and Ubuntu do the same EFI partition thing. ESPs are designed to be one single partition. Even if you dictate Windows, Fedora or Ubuntu to do otherwise, they still look up for an existing EFI partition. GRUB is partially in fault here, as their installation shell commands are also way too generic. I still cannot install Fedora to this day as it installs its boot files into itself instead of any EFI partition, and forgets to create its own GRUB entry to the actual EFI GRUB installation.
For me, the performance is the one that pushed me to use Linux because I only have 4 GB of ram and can't use most of them. Now, I'm on Endeavour OS and having so much fun.
This is one benefit of Linux that isn't mentioned too often. Even on a high end system, simple tasks just seem so much quicker on Linux compared to Windows. No matter how powerful your computer, it seems to take Windows File explorer 2 seconds to open. If you are running Linux on a potato, it seems to take a half second to open the file manager of your choice.
I also started using Linux this year. I am trying to get used to that system. I hope that as many people as possible will switch to Linux. It would make Linux a lot better and make it more compatible with things that only work on Windows.
I installed linux after watching a lot of memes, videos explaining linux vs windows and I really liked linux. After installing ubuntu I can say I really liked Linux as I was able to download and run a lot of applications which didn't even open in windows, like VScode, Arduino IDE, etc. You can imagine what was the condition of my windows with only 4 GB ram (Yes! Only 4 Gb which is only slightly better than 2 GB). Linux is really good, my laptop has really changed and become usable bevause of linux!
I'm coming up on two years on moving to Kubuntu as my OS of choice on my desktop. I've never been happier with this computer. Performance feels better and as I mostly play either solo (like Cities Skylines), or co-op games (like Satisfactory, American Truck Sim), I've never worried about the whole Anti-Cheat issue. It's amazing how reliable the system now is. I do not miss the bluescreen issues...
Me Too Back In The Windows 7 days! I Install Legacy Now! I left Windows After The Support For 7 Ended! Will Never Go back And Allow Our Government To ILLEGALLY Spy On me Or Those My PC Connects With!
for me what pushed me was the future of Windows to make me bail. the fact that "AI" and cloud computing were going to be major factors in releases such as Windows 12 disgusts me. it feels like microsoft isn't just trying to make them own your computer, but also its metal, not to mention the high potential for disinformation coming from language models.
Yeah, subscription models in whatever form will take over at some point. There is no way that Microsoft could keep it for free at the curren amount of power and storage requirements. Windows 12 will certainly include a lot of always online functionality and I'm curious how it all will play out
They Can Not Stand open debate Because Their Policies Are NONSENSE! Thus The Need To Censor And The Main reason I Use Rumble Mostly! When YT Forces Me to Disable Ad-Blocker I Will Be Gone! They Tried To For A Couple Of Hours but Let Up! That Being Said Windows OS Is SPYWARE/MALWARE If You Trust The Government With Your Data Then Windows Is For You!
Windows 11 is what concerned me. I held out on 10 and left just in time as I have been hearing MS has backported some of those 11 features I didn’t want to 10
@@classicrockonly They Did The Same thing With 7! They UPDATED The Telemetry! Simply put They Leave Holes In The Firewall For Our Government To Spy On Us! the Big Problem I Have Is If You Leave Holes In The Wall The RATS get In!!
Been using windows since win 98 but have disliked it's direction since win 10 and resolved this year to switch. After distro hopping a few times i settled on Garuda and have once more found I actually enjoy using a OS that is not trying to subvert my goals because they have their own agenda. Linux just is a breath of fresh air in today's tech environment. Also it runs 95%+ of my windows games thanks to steam's proton
One of things I really like about Linux OS is the easy plug-and-play for hardware peripherals. This is especially true when hooking up drawing tablets like Wacom. On Windows, finding the right driver can be nightmare. Even Wacom's own site doesn't even provide the correct driver in some cases, so it becomes an arduous task of reinstalling different versions until the correct one is found. In contrast, all I have to do on Ubuntu is plug in the hardware and the OS automatically finds the correct driver so the device is ready to go immediately.
ngl when I made the switch a few years ago there was the growing pain of learning the do's and dont's on linux just like using windows for the first time, but once I got passed that and get comfortable with my own setup, I just couldn't imagine switching back. Also, this year is definitely the biggest linux improvement that i've seen in a decade.
The improvements each year in the last 5 years have been insane. I first tried Linux in the oughts (maybe 2006?) and I just couldn't adjust. Every few years I tried it again until around 2021 when I found it had matured and even allowed me to game. Wouldn't even consider looking back now.
I switched to linux a month ago and I love it so much. Windows was very bloated and felt slow after some time but linux feels snappy and fast and I love how linux is so much more customizable then windows.
We installed Pop OS on my brothers laptop (I use linux as daily drive) because it was so slow that it was impossible to do anything on windows. After i showed him how easy it is to install applications in discovery, he said "And how do I install apps the normal way, through the browser?" "You don't, thats the neat part" I replied. "But thats boring" ????💀
Two EFI partitions are technically possible, but it's a "confusing" configuration, since one partition is not at the beginning of the drive, which can lead to some problems, while Windows also can erase one from time to time, given that it has access to the partition
It's nice that you saw the light. I started using Linux in 1998, when everything was very different than it is today (before it even support any kind of USB); I worked with it and endured tremendous frustration. By around 2001 - 2002, I was mostly done with M$ and aside from the occasional need for M$ for school (I was just finishing university), I was using Linux exclusively. I've been doing so ever since. It's nice that today, we access to any kind of server we want as well as have these in our own homes on our own networks; this is ALL thanks to Linux.
About the same path. I would say that Linux and the Linux Desktop could be a viewed as hobby up until about the time Canonical came out with Ubuntu around 2005. Before then, the incredible amount of work to install and maintain a stable system was just too much for the average user. Add to this that the quality of applications were no where close to the quality of Windows or Apple. Around 2015 everything seemed to gel with regard to ease of install, stability of the top distributions, the quality of applications and just over all quality of the day to day experience. Has been improving tremendously ever since. Gave up windows completely for my home around 2016.
Golden advice for any Linux user, don't use the custom installer of a distro with default settings (if you don't install from the tty which applies to most users) but make sure that your home-partition is on a separate partition. Advantage: any new clean install of the Linux-OS will only take around 3-4 minutes (on modern hardware) and you can just use the same home-partition every time and you don't have to set up anything, just install the destkop environment or windowmanager with whatever themse and icons and such you need and you are done immediately.
Im on Arch for about 3 years now and only time I had to use windows was to change mouse settings in its trash driver. never looked back and using terminal is completely natural to me now
I gave an attempt in daily-driving Linux last Oct. Needless to say, I stayed on till Feb this year before begrudgingly switching back to Windows due to some graphics driver issues on a new machine. Dipped my toes back in June and never looked back since. The experience is even better now because those issues are either fixed or have a workaround. And the newer power management in kernel 6.x works great on my system. I'm drawing quite a lot less power than I was in the battery-saving mode in Windows. Btw I use Arch(-based distro).
You have to understand that Windows is a kitchen sink OS. Everything gets shoved in. Bloatware is obscene. It's crazy. I used Windows for like 20 years and then tried macOS, it felt like what Windows "could have" been. But you also have to remember there are heaps of hardware OEMs who all want a piece of the Windows pie, it's impossible for them to make it run as well as macOS due to these constraints.
I do a lot of multiboot and use refind as bootmanager. Strongly recommended. When windows efi is deleted, install the windows bootloader by hand on a small separate fat partition with bcdboot. Refind will boot it. I also use a separate efi system partition for linux installs. For me its a 2nd efi partition of more than 2 gigs as Pop OS needs that space for kernels. Playing around, i found you can have a lot of efi partitions on the system. Windows tends to overwrite bootorder in the firmware sometimes, when a 2nd os is on same efi. Therefore the separate linux efi. Works on many machines since years for me.
Ever since I started using Silver blue, I've not had to reinstall my operating even once I believe. The OS is just ends up way more cleaner over time and all development is relegated to containers. It always feels fresh whereas when I use the standard sort of distro, I always feel like I've messed something up in the OS somewhere along the lines and reinstall or hop. So I guess for me personally, I stopped hopping at Fedora and stopped reinstalling at Silverblue.
Great video. As someone new to Linux, I'm surprised to realize how much simpler Linux is in many ways than Windows as you point out, specially in the OOBE and installation.
We actually share the same reason for dualbooting. I mainly use Fedora but because of Ubisoft i have to boot into Windows, to play with my friends. They simply just could enable the Anti Cheat for Linux (BattlEye is already Linux compatible. It was Devs Choice to Opt Out).
I've had issues with Ubisoft as well, and earlier this year I was unable to run The Crew, but now when I tried again this week I was actually able to play it, like I'm happy now. But yes, the fact that devs screw with users like this is actually disgusting, especially considering that there is a userbase for it, even tho we're not as many yet, but still. I'd rather not play or support anymore if that's the case, but I won't switch back to windows, don't have a need to, and just to play a specific game, I'm too lazy to jump though loops to just do it, already removed windows from all my devices, not planning on going back
That GNOME Template trick genuinely blew my mind! I wish it was properly implemented like on Windows, with icons and all that, but it's a step forward at least!
I've moved to Linux too, to be specific kubuntu. Windows 11 is infuriating to use, to the brim full of infuriating bugs, ads and bloatware. Needs 5GB RAM to show the desktop. kubuntu needs 700MB RAM. The KDE desktop is amazing. There is no ads. Everything is more snappy. It doesn't reboot in the middle of the night to install updates. I love it.
That was me almost 3 years ago, when valve officially announced the steamdeck i went full linux. No more dual booting, no more windows forcing me to upgrade for their tpm shenanigans. The only online games i play are dota 2 and StarCraft 2. All my other steam library games have no anticheat so it works great for me
I gave up on Windows 10 after my laptop would get random BSOD, i couldn't figure it out and it worked fine on Linux. That was in 2016, and i haven't touched Windows since.
let's just hope that one day gaming will be fully compatible on linux, because actually a lot of games are unplayable and its a pain to sacrifice gaming, that's actually the only reason i'm still using windows as main os
I think it's inevitable. There are so many companies that could make Linux consoles. Especially in China where Linux is already utilized more heavily. It's pretty low effort in comparison to creating a console with a complete proprietaty third party OS which requires game ports
No. It's about more than gaming. why on earth do we still have to use Windows to manage critical systems in manufacturing chains? And that's just one ginormous example. There's more...
Nowaday most games work fine with performance on par with windows. The main, almost only issue remaining is related to anticheats, some are not compatible, some are and developers do or do not enable them allow to be ran through wine/proton. I dont know a single game that doesnt run on linux aside from anticheat compatibility issue.
I quit Windows less than a month ago. Sometimes my screen would freeze for a second and if I was unlucky some programs would get closed from an issue I was not able to even find for 4 months. It turns out that Windows replaced my integrated graphics driver with a faulty one and from there everything started being very unstable. I was either going to install Windows again and possibly face some other issue again or switch to Linux and never have to deal with my system breaking itself because of random updates.
I love how straight forward it is to install Linux on an old computer that had an old version of Windows. Brings it right up to date with no messing about.
Oh god.. thanks for the video! I was happy using Linux, I still decided to install Win11 again (also for games and idk.. I just want to keep a small Win partition) but goddamn, Windows is so agressiv with the Install and very outdated. Windows always messed up my Linux install, I had a mental breakdown, because I lost data.. but luckily, I got it back. I don't trust Windows anymore, I will disconnect every drive, before installing Windows. I also use a seperate drive, just to be safe. Let's just hope the more (game) devs will care for Linux and Steam will stay relevant and push Gaming on Linux!
@dreaper5813 90% of my games are playable on Linux. Idk why, but I just want to keep a small windows partition, just to see the progress, and for extremly rare cases, when I need it. I don't play Windows only games actively. I quit Valorant, but I would like to play Fortnite (shame on me), I can live without those, but I really hope, that riot games will release Project L for Linux ... or at least not actively fight against linux, this is the only game I'm hyped for.
I installed Windows 10 and 11 recently. 30 minutes to download the file. 2 hours to install. 30 minutes to run all the updates. 40 minutes to set up and turn of the Bloat. ... Linux Mint Xfce it took me just a little over 1 hour to complete everything. Installing Windows has become a nightmare with all the Bloat and Services and Spyware, the pop ups and prompts. 90% of my Computer time is now on Linux Mint Xfce.
It was on a Tuesday, when they download updates to everyone, but still LOL It was on a I7 Computer with plenty of juice. People with an older Celeron are saying it takes a full day. Give a try and let me know.
@@STONE69_ i installed win 11 to I3 processor with 4gb ram and it took no longer than 40 min to install windows. Not sure what you did there... Intel celeron is not suitable for win 11 and should be avoided. And im not sure what you all see in that linux, it's much more complicated and i see no benefits of using it.
I just bought a new PC with Windows 11 after two years I will be switching to Linux. Windows is so archaic, I can't believe we still have to check each program for updates, Linux has an update manager and when a program has an update you just click on the update manager to get it.
I tried linux for a bit. Ended up going back to windows. Just couldn't get it to work the way I wanted it to. Middle click pasting instead of scrolling was super annoying. Games that ran just fine on windows was stuttering all the time on linux even after getting all my drivers. Could never get it to look the way I wanted it too and on top of all that, couldn't get a virtual machine running. Trying to use linux and going through all those troubleshooting steps, guides, and tutorials was waaay more trouble then it was worth. I always feel like videos like this just skip over all of that stuff. I have a Steam Deck too, but I don't think I'll ever use linux on the desktop.
The Thing is the People making these Videos are AMD GPU users and the Difference on Linux when Using an AMD GPU instead of Nvidia is Night and Day, Vulkan Works Natively on an AMD GPU, Nvidia GPUs Emulate Vulkan(kinda like how AMD GPUs Emulate Ray Tracing past the 1.0 RT cores because the 1.0 Cores are now Public Domain since it's been 11 years since Ray tracing was Invented but Nvidia is on their 4.0 RT Cores now). Only new Nvidia GPUs have Hardware level a Vulkan Support. With an AMD GPU Linux just Works for the most Part Minus Adobe Software but new Young Creatives tend to look for Free Alternatives over the Proprietary Creative Software made by Adobe and Sony. If you have an AMD GPU most Linux Distros Auto-detect them and Install the Driver for it Automatically. If you're Using Nvidia on Linux you have to go and Find the Right Driver and that us Harder because you actually have to Manually look for the Exact right Number for you're Specific Model. The Best Advice for Someone looking to Switch to Linux on Old Hardware is to Tell them to buy a EVGA 500Watt PSU and RX580 GPU(not to be Confused with the RX5800) if they want to keep it Cheap and Stable. If not then the Next Option is the low end of Expensive RX6600 or 7600 with a 750watt Corsair PSU.
I never get why people think Linux is hard with install. Even ignoring the Software store, on Debs it is simple sudo apt-get install "package" and thats it, you're done
At this point, the only reason I'm stuck on Windows is also gaming-related: 1. I don't know what 20+ year old games I still play won't work on Linux. Not only that, many graphics effects don't show up the same on Linux as they do on Windows. 2. Many NVIDIA driver features are missing in Linux. 3. I have absolutely no clue what else I'm missing until I'm missing it. I'm sure I'll find a bunch of stuff like how windows resize and partition, Logitech keyboard and mouse software, Focusrite custom, etc. There are bound to be many things that simply won't work, and it's difficult to install Linux in another drive and find out just like you showed here. I'd LOVE to switch to Linux, but it's not a simple move. Also, what about touch support for things like my Surface Pro tablet? I get the impression it's not as simple as it seems.
@dreaper5813 then I don't think I can switch no matter how much I want to. Switching to AMD is not an option sadly. I already have a bunch of NVIDIA GPUs, and it's not affordable to buy 4 AMD downgrades. AMD's Radeon 7950XTX is a downgrade from my RTX 3090s. It's not just raytracing performance, but also DLSS. FSR just isn't comparable at the highest end. My next card has to be a 4090 or 5090 for me to get anywhere close to an upgrade. I also don't like AMD's video processing. NVenc is superior in my testing, and I do make RUclips videos on other accounts. Do Logitech mice and keyboards let you reassign keys? I reprogram my mouse buttons (back, forward, and thumb) as well as control the RGB on my keyboard to reduce battery usage on my wireless keyboard. Having to change out my hardware sounds like not using my PC as productively as I do today. That's an issue. Privacy is important, but if I can't use my PC, what good is Linux outside of my CLI servers?
Microdose a gamer Distro like Garuda or Nobara along Side Windows via Dual boot. Use ProtonDB to see What Games will Work and What will not. As off Last Week the Nvidia open Source Driver got Vulkan 1.3 Support. Nvidia finally started Supporting their Open Source team at the Start of this Year. Also as the Video Says Linux just got Simple enough for Average Home End Users this Year.
Imagine installing windows again because Destiny 2 got good again... Jokes aside, developers should start develop games like a linux immutable distro, that runs in its own containers, is aware that it is in a container, and refuse to run when there are strangers within the containers, what happen outside the container doesn't affect the game. Basically stopping cheats from ever be compatible with the games, live service competitive games to be exact, and developers might become more open to other platforms than just windows.
Let's see what happens when The Final Shape releases. I'm probably going to play it since I really like Destiny and have been playing since the D1 Beta. The question now is, how I will play it. Maybe even Cloud Gaming for like a month
Sadly that wouldn't do much against cheats as they could still do memory manipulations through a kernel space driver without the user space anti-cheat ever knowing about it. The linux world won't accept a proprietary kernel space anti-cheat as it compromises your system security so that's out of the window. The most effective solution would be server side anti-cheat, never trusting the client, but dev's aren't very motivated for that because it's much harder and there is little financial incentive seeing as cheaters also bring in revenue. Might be easier to fix society so people don't cheat in the first place.
Ya I'm at that point to where I'm done with Windows. Now that steam has steam link for the quest headsets I'm totally gonna switch to Pop OS soon as I get my AMD hardware next year. :)
Windows won't put an efi partition on another drive if the drive is formatted to something else already. So when reinstalling Windows you should always make sure only the drive you're installing isn't formatted. This'll basically bypass this stupid behavior.
The reason I imagine non-techy people are fine using Windows is they didn't have to install it themselves. Installing Windows is way more annoying than installing something like Fedora or Mint.
@@MichaelNROH Very cool! I thought it was some kind of lightly theme (but I kinda dislike how buggy/oxygen-looking-ish disk space indicator on dolphin when using lightly, idk maybe I'm not using it correctly), I'm going to watch the video! Thank you!! 😀
I've dabbled with linux over the past 17 years, usually switching back to windows after a few weeks. I've been unhappy running windows for a while especially since windows 11 (I've got many grievances) I recently decided to pop over and have another look so I loaded up Fedora 39 KDE and I'm really impressed. I''m running a Ryzen 7800x3d and a RX 7900XTX and games actually run better (and more stable) for me on Fedora with Steam Proton than they did running native on Windows 11 pro. Everything just seems to work a lot better, my dual monitor setup works very well also. I think I am also done with windows.
Why was it such a big deal for GNOME to include an "empty new file" option by default in its file explorer? I can't see any downside to including it by default.
i'll make the switch too when the softwares we use on windows are available on linux, as for now, let us congratulate the brothers for their successful jump :D
What a problem is with Windows 11 if you install it again for example here a USB then after installing you need install drivers But if I install Linux then it works better I have also problems with daulboot between Linux and windows But if I remove Windows completely and only stay on Linux and later I want to re-install I get error message if I install windows 11 and then I need to install Windows 10 and then later upgrade to windows 11 I'm done with installing Windows I'm staying right now at Linux and also if I have a new device
That boot loader thing hit me a while back and I sat there puzzled for ages why the boot loader was on literally a random data drive I had and not my system drive... I feel like that's something you should be able to specify.
It's been like this since EFI was introduced. Windows is nothing more than a decaying vision of an "operating system", which when you look deeper is just auto-generated spaghetti-code from hell held together with hundreds of thousand miles of duct tape and the tears of the Microsoft employees.
This is gonna sound real stupid, but what made me finally decide to make a real attempt at switching was reading about the pipe command a few days ago. Then spending a bunch of time reading about all sorts of commands and bash scripts and suddenly realizing all sorts of things I could do.
Certain tools that let you watch streamed content pipes audio/video streams to video players that supports it (i.e. mpv or VLC), AKA watching them without going to a browser.
I plan on moving to Linux in the following weeks but I still don't know much about it, so I was interested in knowing what are the "compromises" you are talking about ? (I ask this because I have an Oculus Rift S but I've got idea if I will still be able to use it or not). Thank you ^^
ALVR works on Linux with the Quest 2, Quest 3, Gear VR just every Meta VR head set. Wired and Wireless. And SteamVR works out of the box with the Valve Index, HTC Vive, and that OVR Headset.
@@nasimfaheemalquadir I have a Quest 3. ALVR is a huge 'compromise'. Also, my Oculus game library is much bigger than my Steam VR library. I'm still waiting for a no-compromise VR solution in Linux. I'm pretty sure it's not coming.
I'm done with windows too. Windows 10 is great OS, really great, but Linux seems more functional for me. I tried some distros, like Ubuntu, elementary, gnome os, solus and pop os. Now I have Linux mint cinnamon on my PC and zorin os on my old laptop with 4 gigs of ram, and it works perfectly
An important distinction: Microsoft did not "see that app stores were better"; the rapacious soulless ghouls (less-hateful, more charitable entities refer to them as "marketers") saw what was being gotten away with in the mobile space and saw an opportunity to squeeze more profit while holding up the shield of "for your safety".
That's another reason yes. Microsoft's motives are different, but they act as a trusted source repository which automatically brings all the advantages with them
@@MichaelNROH The trouble there is the implication they could be the *only* trusted source - just like in mobile, said ghouls would tell the development team to disallow installation from any source outside the Microsoft store. We all know it's coming.
Only Windows users "looking up why some driver isn't working right", that's not how Linux, ChromeOS and MAC's work. All supported hardware in Linux is plug and play ( apart from NVIDIA ), it'll either 'just work' or its not supported. Don't waste your time on something that won't 'fix' your problem. If your hardware isn't working then that's the end of it, you can't use it on Linux, its that simple.
Thinking about switching to Linux, probably PopOS, for years now. I will start dual booting next year, than work myself into do my work more with Linux. Thanks for the video
Try switching the applications you use first, many Linux programs (like Gimp, Libreoffice, ...) are compatible with Windows, so you can get used to them.
PCIe device by chance? I had an Elgato Camlink Pro for a short time and it also only worked on Windows. Luckily it broke after 2 weeks already and I got to return it 😅
My old mainboard that I bought over 10 years ago had the option to enable/disable individual SATA port (it had no NVME) in the BIOS. Last time I bought motherboards about 4 years ago, none of the two had such an option. This made dual booting hard because, as he said, disabling unrelated disks is the safest way, but without the option in the BIOS, one has to physically disconnect/re-connect the cables. With NVME, this is even more problematic, because now one has to remove the GPU (because it often obscures the NVME) and unscrew the screw that is holding the NVME drive. I absolutely have no idea why manufacturers don't add individual SATA/NVME port disable/enable feature in the BIOS.
>Bungie refuses to enable anti-cheat support No, they insisted on requiring Windows-only anti-cheat. There's a bit of a difference. They made a design decision that makes their software incompatible with Proton/Linux. If it was not doing work to make it compatible, that'd be one thing (and easily justified, given Linux market share). But they actually did do work which made it incompatible, which is harder to defend. Personally, this sort of thing just makes it easier to filter out games I shouldn't bother with. There's too many games worth playing already, so another way to filter is handy.
While its great that linux has come this far now I still haven't found anything that has made me want to switch to linux apart from my laptop for performance reasons.
On the subject of updates bloating the system, that's one thing I love about updating stuff on linux, it's completely optional, and most of the time, reduces the total space taken up overall.
@@MichaelNROH I agree with you on the security updates. Having the option though is so much nicer than a Windows machine booting up at night to update by itself.
I ditched windows with fear that i will be in total chaos.after 1year with my Ubuntu i can't believe it how easy to use open source almost for everything and to donate to real developers that deserve it
@@dreaper5813I am in a similar situation, let me show you my reasoning: - I like the way Windows handles security permissions (the DAC system) - I want to use NVIDIA Frame Gen and Gsync - Dual booting was taking too much space and I could use WSL2 - Wayland wasn't fully working with NVIDIA - Need NVIDIA for AI (unfortunately, can't change to AMD) Edit: - I use AppLocker on Windows, fapolicyd unfortunately doesn't support signature rules
@@dreaper5813 1. I can't keep it offline, because I need to use it lol 2. Yeah, it would be nice to have a different system... if I had the money. Dude, Linux is not a religion
@@dreaper5813 Dude, why do you push Linux so much? I like Linux as well (like a lot), but I also understand some people have different requirements than me. And what I meant about offline usage is that some apps that I use on Windows require internet, so I can't use it offline.
@@dreaper5813 But, I didn't disagree with you, having Windows on a different machine is a good idea. I just said that I don't have money to do so. Besides, I was asking why are you so agressive in pushing Linux? I actually want a reply from you, I am curious (I am not arguing back, just legit curious)
The only reason I actively use windows is lack of software. Linux does not run Radeon VPN, and alternatives are kind of disappointing, it also does not support some steam games (you can’t run them even with proton). My friend will probably never quit windows and that’s a problem too. We need to run the same software and we cant. So I switched back to windows.
That is why the safest way to dual boot is to install Windows on a different drive which has its own UEFI partition. Still, I boot into Windows once or twice per year, so basically I don't need it.
It was on a dedicated drive, but it still installs the EFI partd on a different drive if it finds an existing one. Manual partitioning or just disconnecting the other drives would fix that
safer way would be to just install windows in a VM if you really need it for some apps. virtualization is pretty good nowadays, even for games. But for games i would use a SteamOS VM.
@@ChrisWijtmans This is a possibility only in newer, stronger PCs/Laptops. Most people don't have such strong hardware to afford Windows virtualization.
As a Linux user and contributor since ~1996 all I can say is; Welcome 🙂
@@memorysticky7581 I started Linux with magazines! openSUSE actually still uses them, or at least used them but I got Leap 15.4 on CD
Same, and im not a super user either, just a regular dummy and and its been fantastic since the very beginning.
@@memorysticky7581 Yeah, I remember. The first kernel I booted on a personal system was (I believe) version 0.98 or thereabout.
i am planning to use linux since the ai integration in windows.
I salute you sir o7
I finally made the switch to gaming full time through Linux on PopOs!(between Steam Proton, Litrus, Bottles, and my Steam Deck). Even my Steam year in review was showed that over 72% of my gaming was through Linux. I haven't looked back, and don't miss Windows. Great video.
I'm getting close to the point of switching to Linux, now that it's much easier to run Windows games and apps through Linux, I'm seeing little need for Windows and honestly, Linux is much better under the hood than Windows is.
As for games and apps that don't work through Linux, who cares lol, they don't get my money, it's as simply as that, after all, it wouldn't take much effort for the developers for most of the games that don't work, to get working, if they can't be bothered, I don't see why I should give them any money.
As a junior high school student who use Linux for entirely 2 years, I must say Linux is capable of doing anything I want. Also, using Linux makes me smarter: It teaches me how to use the internet; it teaches me how to solve a problem. Linux even changes my mindset when it comes to thinking. I am very appreciated.
Good for you. Those skills that you have learned and developed, will help you greatly in years ahead -- as you stay in school. And, especially, during the rest of your life.
Honestly, I wished I learned (at your age) what you have learned, but years way back when, that type of "mindset" just was only available to the most successful people on the planet.
I also got into linux in my middle school years. I had a Pentium 133 notebook which had a 1GB hard drive. I saved up some pocket money and got a 10GB drive one day, only to find out Win98 only could use 8GB of that due to some limitations of the BIOS on this machine. Linux however had no such issues. So at first I had a 8GB Win98 SE install and a 2GB Debian Linux 2.2, then after some time 4 GB Windows and 6GB linux, then finally 9 GB linux, 1 GB Windows. Later on my first desktop an AMD Duron 900 I only installed linux. I skipped XP entirely and only started to use Windows again at the tail years of 7.
@@PoeLemic Thanks for such kind words. This is the best Christmas gift I've ever get this year. Merry Christmas and I wish you and your family have better life in the future! 🥹
I wish if i could switch back to Linux but Adobe product are holding me back, I use photoshop, illustrator on a daily basis so yeah...
Before you jump in i tried many alternatives and no it did not workout i have to learn a whole new software ...
@@GeekMed1 You can run them under WINE.
My switch to Linux was somewhat accidental. I kept a Windows 8 laptop for gaming, but then I put a GPU in my Linux machine, which caused a lot of stability issues, which I resolved by replacing the motherboard. Back then I could only play Linux compatible games on Steam such as Portal and Half-Life series. I accepted the limitations, and it wasn't too long I started seeing support for more and more games.
My issue with Windows is the same as everyone else's. Demand for more RAM, bad performance, ads, proprietary, etc. The biggest reason I won't go back is because my Linux Mint OS performs the same every day and doesn't degrade even years later. Nothing breaks. Files don't go missing. I can come home to a reliable PC every time and not worry about it.
Now you have more RAM
to run great nothings
YES...I remember, back in the days when I used Windows, how files would mysteriously disappear from my system and I would have to go online to find the file and download it and reload it into the proper directory and file! But I have been using LINUX MINT for years now and here's why. Windows is bad, and getting worse with each new release! The reason it is so bad is because Microsoft is a Democratic machine that is employed by the government to spy and restrict the actions of its users. In the early years of Microsoft they developed a great product that was cutting edge, but since the inception of Windows 8, Microsoft has slowly succumbed to the radical left's agenda of spying, lying, and restriction. So today...you have an opportunity to vote LINUX and trash the Microspy in your machine!
I have been a Windows Power user since childhood. I had reinstalled Windows 3.11 as well as Windows 95 multiple times before even leaving the elementary school (no joke - I love IT and always have). But during my bachelors degree in computer science (shocking, I know!) I got so fed up that I dropped Windows and moved to Linux. Haven't missed it since. Every time I have to use Windows at work, it just reminds me of how insanely bad it actually is.
Totally feel you. I have to keep using Windows at work. It's pure pain these days.
Hey, me too
@@dreaper5813 I can deal with it in the office. But for any job, I am actively going to avoid anything that requires Linux.
Today I learned what the Templates folder does... interesting!
same :)
I just entered the Templates folder on Pop!_OS with Nautilus and it actually tells you at the top what the purpose of the folder it. It's crazy to me that I had never seen that before.
Lol, had no idea what that was for. Can't think of a use for it at the moment, but I'm glad its there.
You described my feelings to Linux precisely: this year is the first year I can wholeheartedly recommend Linux to techy/gaming folks without great caveats
I made the switch to Linux a couple of months ago. Distro hopped a bit and found something I really love. Even throughout that process, I never once considered going back to Windows. Can’t see a situation where I ever WILL.
Same here. Don't see any benefit for Windows anymore. Linux nowadays runs much better.
Same
which distros did u try?
linux mint 21.2 64 bit has come along way since i last used it ... highly Re command it and stay in one distro ... mint has pretty much everything i need to run all my games via steam natively and the direction windows is headed dont need it my self
Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC is pure heaven for me
This is exactly why I tend to disconnect other drives before installing Windows (or any OS) especially if one exists that I wish to preserve and keep untouched.
Its annoying when you have nvmes under the graphics cards and so on (maybe disable in bios?), what I did last I installed windows a few years ago, was to install it in qemu passing through only one physical drive.
@@johanngambolputty5351 Yup. Know exactly what you mean. Got one there myself. I don't really dual boot anymore so it isn't an issue now but I used to.
Exactly, just to be sure
I switched to pop after an incident where every single windows machine in my studio crashed, bluescreened, and became systemically unusable over the course of. 5. Minutes.
It's been amazing, and outside of some trouble with navigating gaming with my friends, it's been excellent
When a simple wifi issue occured under windows that in the past was a simple right click in Win7 took multiple searches to diagnose and multiple windows to dig through to get to the screen I needed to fix... I was done with windows 11. It's a time wasting OS that has the power to drag down an entire Nations productivity - Gates is evil. F' that guy.
What was the incident??
@@coreyw427"where every single windows machine in my studio crashed, bluescreened, and became systemically unusable over the course of. 5. Minutes."
I appreciate this channel. I’m looking to switch from Windows to Linux later this year.
Ok, I think you just convinced me to switch my gaming PC over to Linux. I have switched nearly everything I have over to it, all my laptops and such. Now it's time for my desktop to get the same treatment.
I switched my whole family to Linux Mint. I'm not spending over 4000 dollars on new Computers to make Microsoft happy. They can go take a hike.
@@STONE69_ Exactly. Every machine other than the aforementioned gaming rig runs Linux in one form or another. My personal laptop and my mother's laptop run Debian, my dad runs Mint, though I plan on getting him on Debian too, and the living room desktop runs Arch. Also have a multipurpose home server running Debian
Big fan of debian obviously lol
You have the soul of an emperor
@@nothanks5531 An emperor penguin 🐧 perhaps? ;)
@@Parritz 4 Computers, all are i7 CPU 6th Generation. They all run Windows at a fast pace. I can use work arounds, but then have to upgrade to the next build by reinstalling. These computers will last for many years using Linux.
I switched form Mac to Linux about a year ago, I it is soooo much better than Mac OS. Plus, I'm not in the Apple trap anymore (Trapple). I can buy my own computer, and scale it THE WAY I WANT IT.
@prima6170 - Good on you! Great to see a Mac user making the switch!
I know it wasn't the purpose, but you helped me with the AMD issue on Windows 😅😂 Thank you!! It has been so annoying seeing Windows forcing the update on the AMD driver on another computer I have at home
As to your issue, the simple trick is to always install Windows first if you're going to dual boot. I've been doing it for quite some time and I have no complains at all! Depending on the distro, you can also enable secure boot and it works fine (even with an Nvidia card, in my case)
Merry xmas to you! Enjoy!!
Yeah, you're right that it wasn't completely intentional but I like showing things like that.
Thanks and a Merry Christmas to you too
Yup, Windows first, with that disk isolated. That trick has kept me out of trouble as well.
The trick is.......
Never Dual Boot and always use MBR partitions for Windows
Of course this trick may not work for you, just as your trick will not work for me
Everyone has their own trick!
I have an external SATA + Power cable running out of the back of my computers and all Windows backups are MBR
To run Linux, I simply plug in the Linux SSD and power on
To run Windows 11, I simply plug in the Windows 11 SSD and power on
To run Windows 10, I simply plug in the Windows 10 SSD and power on
To run Windows 8.1, I simply plug in the Windows 8.1 SSD and power on
To run Windows XP-SP2, I simply plug in the Windows XP-SP2 SSD and power on
To run DOS 5.0 or 6.22, I simply insert the 8cm mini CD-R and boot directly to DOS
There is no need to enter the BIOS to select a drive as the computer boots directly from whichever drive is attached
There is no need to enter the BIOS to switch between MBR or EFI as all the Installs are MBR
Any Windows version can be restored to any drive as all MBR backups are compatible with each other, but not with EFI
I am the guy who has been banned from EVERY tech site on the Internet for saying that Windows XP "CAN" be securely used online
I study malware online using XP-SP2 in a Full Admin account and without even one single MS security update
I was banned for openly challenging Russian Ransomware Gangs, Iranian Wiper distributors, the Israeli Military, the Chinese Military, the NSA and anyone else on the Planet to WRECK MY XP BOX and to force me to wipe the drive and restore a clean backup
I have been running this test system "ONLINE" for more than 9 and 1/2 years without a single malware problem
In May 2024, it will be 10 YEARS!
The last Bluescreen of Death on this system was 14 years ago
As I've said, your tricks work for you but not for me
MY tricks work for ME!
Bullwinkle J Moose
I never used SATA except years ago with old HDs. So to get an external SSD m.2 Nvme 2280 to boot as soon as you turn on the computer you connect to an external SATA ssd adapter which has m.2 ssd? The USB to M.2 SSD will not work for booting corrrect? you need to use SATA since the BIOS can detect it? Just need to verify.... ya I am afraid to install Linux on my other SSDS worried it might write over my main SSD which has Win11. Like what happened to Mike Horn.... corrupts the UEFI partition... thanks anyways..@@bullwinklemoose7232
I still think it's shameful on Microsoft's part that they still don't have options to select drive configuration at install, like come on, basically every linux distro has had the option for years now...
Good for you! The main thing is to have a stable system that works for you and not some corporation. I hope someday, Windows won't be needed at work, but for now, I can relax with my Linux systems at home away from that mess.
0:30 The most interesting thing is that the BTRFS file system with a tool created by openSUSE called Snapper can make the system the cleanest using rollbacks for both / partition and /home. I have configured it this way on both Arch Linux and Debian 12, and when I create a snapshot for / and /home on a bare system, install, for example, the KDE environment, test it or tinker with it, I can return the state of the bare system and install GNOME
Does it work out of the box or does it need custom partitioning.
Both Debian (if used with BTRFS) and Fedora don't support BTRFS backups in all solutions (e.g. Timeshift)
@@MichaelNROH If you are asking, then TLDR is not out of the box, but Debian itself supports everything if you produce a partition manually, I used the debootstrap package for this by downloading to the Debian Standard image or using the Arch Linux image (yes, you can install Debian from under the Arch ISO). Having made a bash script out of this process, you are ready
The base package is has a manual setup, and there are a handful of applications that allow you to configure it in a GUI. btrfs-assistant is the most common.
There's also an application called snap-pac that automatically creates backups pre and post system updates on Arch-based systems. (I run Arch btw. :D) That way, if something breaks on update you can just roll back the OS immediately after. snap-sync allows you to backup to an external drive. And finally, grub-btrfs allows you to have your backups show up as boot options if you've got GRUB for your bootloader and use BTRFS.
Garuda Linux does all of this automatically out of the box, so you don't even need to set up anything. Saved my butt a couple of times on my work laptop. Actually, Garuda is the only reason I even know snapper exists. Timeshift is a good alternative, based on what I've seen it do in Fedora, but it's not a hands-off solution.
@@MichaelNROH As for the manual partitioning of the disk separately / this is btrfs, /boot/efi is the bootloader. For btrfs subvolumes (I mark them with the @ symbol), it is recommended
/mnt/@ => /mnt
/mnt/@home => /mnt/home
/mnt/@snapshots => /mnt/.snapshots/
/mnt/@home_snapshots => /mnt/home/.snapshots
/mnt/@var_lib_AccountsService => /mnt/var/lib/AccountsService
/mnt/@var_lib_gdm => /mnt/var/lib/gdm3 (for Arch its just /mnt/var/lib/gdm)
The following is necessary for the snapper-rollback, which, when specifying the snapshot id, will throw the broken one into /.btrfsroot and sign it with the date, it must be deleted manually with the command `btrfs su de /.btrfsroot/@T`
Mounting with only one option subvolid=5 => /mnt/.btrfsroot
This action is necessary for the GNOME environment to be able to boot into the Read-only snapshot created by grub-btrfs
chmod -v 775 /mnt/var/lib/AccountsService/
chmod -v 1770 /mnt/var/lib/gdm3/
Just make `genfstab -U /mnt >> /mnt/etc/fstab` (genfstab is in the arch-install-scripts package available in Debian and Arch Linux) and using such a disk layout it will write to fstab itself
It is very important that you mount tmp as tmpfs with the rw (Read and Write) option, otherwise Debian will not be able to load Xorg and systemd services when logging into the snapshot
Plus more filesystem-related stuff, bcachefs is going to support automatic storage tiering soon - so you can just throw all your drives into the filesystem and it'll automatically put more used files on faster drives and less used files on slower drives
- AMD driver thing is an AMD issue. They mess up on their version numbering constantly, so Microsoft thinks the GPU driver is waaay out of date. This doesn't happen on NVIDIA.
- Both Fedora and Ubuntu do the same EFI partition thing. ESPs are designed to be one single partition. Even if you dictate Windows, Fedora or Ubuntu to do otherwise, they still look up for an existing EFI partition. GRUB is partially in fault here, as their installation shell commands are also way too generic. I still cannot install Fedora to this day as it installs its boot files into itself instead of any EFI partition, and forgets to create its own GRUB entry to the actual EFI GRUB installation.
I made the switch to Linux as my full time desktop OS 10 years ago, and it never fails me. Welcome to the Linux family!
You've taken an important step forward in your journey, young Jedi.
For me, the performance is the one that pushed me to use Linux because I only have 4 GB of ram and can't use most of them. Now, I'm on Endeavour OS and having so much fun.
This is one benefit of Linux that isn't mentioned too often. Even on a high end system, simple tasks just seem so much quicker on Linux compared to Windows. No matter how powerful your computer, it seems to take Windows File explorer 2 seconds to open. If you are running Linux on a potato, it seems to take a half second to open the file manager of your choice.
@@reekinronald6776 im sorry but if it takes 2 seconds to open file explorer on windows then you don't have a good computer.
I also started using Linux this year. I am trying to get used to that system. I hope that as many people as possible will switch to Linux. It would make Linux a lot better and make it more compatible with things that only work on Windows.
I installed linux after watching a lot of memes, videos explaining linux vs windows and I really liked linux. After installing ubuntu I can say I really liked Linux as I was able to download and run a lot of applications which didn't even open in windows, like VScode, Arduino IDE, etc. You can imagine what was the condition of my windows with only 4 GB ram (Yes! Only 4 Gb which is only slightly better than 2 GB). Linux is really good, my laptop has really changed and become usable bevause of linux!
Imagine what you could do with a good distro.
@@svcross-do what distros you consider as good?
@@whzysywuxhhs I'm going with Debian and KDE
I feel like it's the same story every year. "I only had to sacrifice a couple things" and the silent part "oh, I don't use those things"
I'm coming up on two years on moving to Kubuntu as my OS of choice on my desktop. I've never been happier with this computer. Performance feels better and as I mostly play either solo (like Cities Skylines), or co-op games (like Satisfactory, American Truck Sim), I've never worried about the whole Anti-Cheat issue.
It's amazing how reliable the system now is. I do not miss the bluescreen issues...
7:01 oh shit I had no idea about that, thanks!
I learned the hard way about that windows EFI folder thing. After that always just disable the other drives from bios before install windows.
Me Too Back In The Windows 7 days! I Install Legacy Now! I left Windows After The Support For 7 Ended! Will Never Go back And Allow Our Government To ILLEGALLY Spy On me Or Those My PC Connects With!
for me what pushed me was the future of Windows to make me bail. the fact that "AI" and cloud computing were going to be major factors in releases such as Windows 12 disgusts me. it feels like microsoft isn't just trying to make them own your computer, but also its metal, not to mention the high potential for disinformation coming from language models.
Yeah, subscription models in whatever form will take over at some point. There is no way that Microsoft could keep it for free at the curren amount of power and storage requirements.
Windows 12 will certainly include a lot of always online functionality and I'm curious how it all will play out
They Can Not Stand open debate Because Their Policies Are NONSENSE! Thus The Need To Censor And The Main reason I Use Rumble Mostly! When YT Forces Me to Disable Ad-Blocker I Will Be Gone! They Tried To For A Couple Of Hours but Let Up! That Being Said Windows OS Is SPYWARE/MALWARE If You Trust The Government With Your Data Then Windows Is For You!
Windows 11 is what concerned me. I held out on 10 and left just in time as I have been hearing MS has backported some of those 11 features I didn’t want to 10
@@classicrockonly They Did The Same thing With 7! They UPDATED The Telemetry! Simply put They Leave Holes In The Firewall For Our Government To Spy On Us! the Big Problem I Have Is If You Leave Holes In The Wall The RATS get In!!
@@MichaelNROH They are also apparently looking into offline AI support with NPU support.
Windows is a POS OS, switch to LINUX
Been using windows since win 98 but have disliked it's direction since win 10 and resolved this year to switch. After distro hopping a few times i settled on Garuda and have once more found I actually enjoy using a OS that is not trying to subvert my goals because they have their own agenda. Linux just is a breath of fresh air in today's tech environment. Also it runs 95%+ of my windows games thanks to steam's proton
One of things I really like about Linux OS is the easy plug-and-play for hardware peripherals. This is especially true when hooking up drawing tablets like Wacom. On Windows, finding the right driver can be nightmare. Even Wacom's own site doesn't even provide the correct driver in some cases, so it becomes an arduous task of reinstalling different versions until the correct one is found.
In contrast, all I have to do on Ubuntu is plug in the hardware and the OS automatically finds the correct driver so the device is ready to go immediately.
Also I think Windows only supports one tablet driver at once because of system files that get replaced. That has never happened to me on Linux
True of many things but some stuff is unsupported entirely or it's a nightmare to set up. Ever try to get an Xbox one controller working under Arch?
ngl when I made the switch a few years ago there was the growing pain of learning the do's and dont's on linux just like using windows for the first time, but once I got passed that and get comfortable with my own setup, I just couldn't imagine switching back. Also, this year is definitely the biggest linux improvement that i've seen in a decade.
The improvements each year in the last 5 years have been insane. I first tried Linux in the oughts (maybe 2006?) and I just couldn't adjust. Every few years I tried it again until around 2021 when I found it had matured and even allowed me to game. Wouldn't even consider looking back now.
I switched to linux a month ago and I love it so much. Windows was very bloated and felt slow after some time but linux feels snappy and fast and I love how linux is so much more customizable then windows.
Now you can write your own DESTINY ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
We installed Pop OS on my brothers laptop (I use linux as daily drive) because it was so slow that it was impossible to do anything on windows. After i showed him how easy it is to install applications in discovery, he said "And how do I install apps the normal way, through the browser?" "You don't, thats the neat part" I replied. "But thats boring" ????💀
teach him terminal LMAO
1:01 what? Since when? I always leave windows EFI parition for it's own, and always create another EFI parition for Linux grub on the same, one drive
Two EFI partitions are technically possible, but it's a "confusing" configuration, since one partition is not at the beginning of the drive, which can lead to some problems, while Windows also can erase one from time to time, given that it has access to the partition
It's nice that you saw the light. I started using Linux in 1998, when everything was very different than it is today (before it even support any kind of USB); I worked with it and endured tremendous frustration. By around 2001 - 2002, I was mostly done with M$ and aside from the occasional need for M$ for school (I was just finishing university), I was using Linux exclusively. I've been doing so ever since. It's nice that today, we access to any kind of server we want as well as have these in our own homes on our own networks; this is ALL thanks to Linux.
About the same path. I would say that Linux and the Linux Desktop could be a viewed as hobby up until about the time Canonical came out with Ubuntu around 2005. Before then, the incredible amount of work to install and maintain a stable system was just too much for the average user. Add to this that the quality of applications were no where close to the quality of Windows or Apple.
Around 2015 everything seemed to gel with regard to ease of install, stability of the top distributions, the quality of applications and just over all quality of the day to day experience. Has been improving tremendously ever since. Gave up windows completely for my home around 2016.
Golden advice for any Linux user, don't use the custom installer of a distro with default settings (if you don't install from the tty which applies to most users) but make sure that your home-partition is on a separate partition. Advantage: any new clean install of the Linux-OS will only take around 3-4 minutes (on modern hardware) and you can just use the same home-partition every time and you don't have to set up anything, just install the destkop environment or windowmanager with whatever themse and icons and such you need and you are done immediately.
Wait the home directory can be used by other distros?
@@FantomMisfit It absoluteley can. I have a bad habbit of forgetting this during the installation process regularly, though.
@vercetti2100 That's really good to know. Thanks
Im on Arch for about 3 years now and only time I had to use windows was to change mouse settings in its trash driver. never looked back and using terminal is completely natural to me now
I gave an attempt in daily-driving Linux last Oct. Needless to say, I stayed on till Feb this year before begrudgingly switching back to Windows due to some graphics driver issues on a new machine. Dipped my toes back in June and never looked back since. The experience is even better now because those issues are either fixed or have a workaround. And the newer power management in kernel 6.x works great on my system. I'm drawing quite a lot less power than I was in the battery-saving mode in Windows. Btw I use Arch(-based distro).
you madet he full switch already. btw. ;)
You have to understand that Windows is a kitchen sink OS. Everything gets shoved in. Bloatware is obscene. It's crazy. I used Windows for like 20 years and then tried macOS, it felt like what Windows "could have" been. But you also have to remember there are heaps of hardware OEMs who all want a piece of the Windows pie, it's impossible for them to make it run as well as macOS due to these constraints.
Whoa, thank you so much for Template thing, didn't know about it
I do a lot of multiboot and use refind as bootmanager. Strongly recommended. When windows efi is deleted, install the windows bootloader by hand on a small separate fat partition with bcdboot. Refind will boot it. I also use a separate efi system partition for linux installs. For me its a 2nd efi partition of more than 2 gigs as Pop OS needs that space for kernels. Playing around, i found you can have a lot of efi partitions on the system. Windows tends to overwrite bootorder in the firmware sometimes, when a 2nd os is on same efi. Therefore the separate linux efi. Works on many machines since years for me.
Yeah, manual partitioning would be even better. Shoul've went with that, but man I'm lazy when it comes to installing 😅
@@MichaelNROH If you want a job done fast, just give it to a lazy man or woman and they will find the easiest/fastest way to do it.
Ever since I started using Silver blue, I've not had to reinstall my operating even once I believe. The OS is just ends up way more cleaner over time and all development is relegated to containers. It always feels fresh whereas when I use the standard sort of distro, I always feel like I've messed something up in the OS somewhere along the lines and reinstall or hop. So I guess for me personally, I stopped hopping at Fedora and stopped reinstalling at Silverblue.
Same exact story for me.
Great video. As someone new to Linux, I'm surprised to realize how much simpler Linux is in many ways than Windows as you point out, specially in the OOBE and installation.
I just found out that the template-feature in the GNOME file manager even exists. Fells like changing my whole life 😂
Yeah, why does seemingly no one know what it does?
Seems like a usability oversight almost
We actually share the same reason for dualbooting. I mainly use Fedora but because of Ubisoft i have to boot into Windows, to play with my friends. They simply just could enable the Anti Cheat for Linux (BattlEye is already Linux compatible. It was Devs Choice to Opt Out).
A couple of ubisoft games support proton as well, which makes it doubly annoying. ( The Division 1 and 2 for example).
I've had issues with Ubisoft as well, and earlier this year I was unable to run The Crew, but now when I tried again this week I was actually able to play it, like I'm happy now. But yes, the fact that devs screw with users like this is actually disgusting, especially considering that there is a userbase for it, even tho we're not as many yet, but still. I'd rather not play or support anymore if that's the case, but I won't switch back to windows, don't have a need to, and just to play a specific game, I'm too lazy to jump though loops to just do it, already removed windows from all my devices, not planning on going back
That GNOME Template trick genuinely blew my mind! I wish it was properly implemented like on Windows, with icons and all that, but it's a step forward at least!
wow, same with me, i havent booted into windows because i couldnt be bothered to figure out how to add it as a boot option lol
Also an approach I guess
I've moved to Linux too, to be specific kubuntu.
Windows 11 is infuriating to use, to the brim full of infuriating bugs, ads and bloatware. Needs 5GB RAM to show the desktop.
kubuntu needs 700MB RAM. The KDE desktop is amazing. There is no ads. Everything is more snappy. It doesn't reboot in the middle of the night to install updates. I love it.
Abandoned Windows 11 for Ubuntu 23.10 and now it's set up as a near 1:1 replacement for it. Took some work but I'll never go back
That was me almost 3 years ago, when valve officially announced the steamdeck i went full linux. No more dual booting, no more windows forcing me to upgrade for their tpm shenanigans. The only online games i play are dota 2 and StarCraft 2. All my other steam library games have no anticheat so it works great for me
Yet another EXCELLENT video! Keep up the great work!
Thanks you
I gave up on Windows 10 after my laptop would get random BSOD, i couldn't figure it out and it worked fine on Linux.
That was in 2016, and i haven't touched Windows since.
let's just hope that one day gaming will be fully compatible on linux, because actually a lot of games are unplayable and its a pain to sacrifice gaming, that's actually the only reason i'm still using windows as main os
I think it's inevitable.
There are so many companies that could make Linux consoles. Especially in China where Linux is already utilized more heavily.
It's pretty low effort in comparison to creating a console with a complete proprietaty third party OS which requires game ports
No. It's about more than gaming.
why on earth do we still have to use Windows to manage critical systems in manufacturing chains?
And that's just one ginormous example.
There's more...
Nowaday most games work fine with performance on par with windows.
The main, almost only issue remaining is related to anticheats, some are not compatible, some are and developers do or do not enable them allow to be ran through wine/proton. I dont know a single game that doesnt run on linux aside from anticheat compatibility issue.
@@garyn1780 Yes, when I'm talking about gaming and linux compatilibity the main issue is anticheat.
I feel like I can't live without a gnome workspace workflow will all the custom keyboard shortcuts I've set.
I quit Windows less than a month ago. Sometimes my screen would freeze for a second and if I was unlucky some programs would get closed from an issue I was not able to even find for 4 months. It turns out that Windows replaced my integrated graphics driver with a faulty one and from there everything started being very unstable.
I was either going to install Windows again and possibly face some other issue again or switch to Linux and never have to deal with my system breaking itself because of random updates.
Updates can break things in Linux also. But all the other benefits of switching to Linux are totally worth it.
I've been checking out your videos on and off. Absolutely love your accent.
I love how straight forward it is to install Linux on an old computer that had an old version of Windows. Brings it right up to date with no messing about.
Oh god.. thanks for the video!
I was happy using Linux, I still decided to install Win11 again (also for games and idk.. I just want to keep a small Win partition) but goddamn, Windows is so agressiv with the Install and very outdated. Windows always messed up my Linux install, I had a mental breakdown, because I lost data.. but luckily, I got it back.
I don't trust Windows anymore, I will disconnect every drive, before installing Windows. I also use a seperate drive, just to be safe. Let's just hope the more (game) devs will care for Linux and Steam will stay relevant and push Gaming on Linux!
@dreaper5813 90% of my games are playable on Linux. Idk why, but I just want to keep a small windows partition, just to see the progress, and for extremly rare cases, when I need it.
I don't play Windows only games actively. I quit Valorant, but I would like to play Fortnite (shame on me), I can live without those, but I really hope, that riot games will release Project L for Linux ... or at least not actively fight against linux, this is the only game I'm hyped for.
I installed Windows 10 and 11 recently. 30 minutes to download the file. 2 hours to install. 30 minutes to run all the updates. 40 minutes to set up and turn of the Bloat. ... Linux Mint Xfce it took me just a little over 1 hour to complete everything. Installing Windows has become a nightmare with all the Bloat and Services and Spyware, the pop ups and prompts. 90% of my Computer time is now on Linux Mint Xfce.
2 hours to install windows?Are you kidding me? What are you installing? An fit girl repack:D?
It was on a Tuesday, when they download updates to everyone, but still LOL It was on a I7 Computer with plenty of juice. People with an older Celeron are saying it takes a full day. Give a try and let me know.
@@STONE69_ i installed win 11 to I3 processor with 4gb ram and it took no longer than 40 min to install windows. Not sure what you did there...
Intel celeron is not suitable for win 11 and should be avoided.
And im not sure what you all see in that linux, it's much more complicated and i see no benefits of using it.
@@tomasrazgus7331 even if it took you 40 minutes, it still took you over 2 hours to complete everything. The download, install, updates and set up.
@@tomasrazgus7331 it is actually a lot less complicated and significantly faster especially on low spec computers.
I just bought a new PC with Windows 11 after two years I will be switching to Linux. Windows is so archaic, I can't believe we still have to check each program for updates, Linux has an update manager and when a program has an update you just click on the update manager to get it.
I love seeing Linux get more visibility and positive comments!
I tried linux for a bit. Ended up going back to windows. Just couldn't get it to work the way I wanted it to. Middle click pasting instead of scrolling was super annoying. Games that ran just fine on windows was stuttering all the time on linux even after getting all my drivers. Could never get it to look the way I wanted it too and on top of all that, couldn't get a virtual machine running. Trying to use linux and going through all those troubleshooting steps, guides, and tutorials was waaay more trouble then it was worth.
I always feel like videos like this just skip over all of that stuff.
I have a Steam Deck too, but I don't think I'll ever use linux on the desktop.
The Thing is the People making these Videos are AMD GPU users and the Difference on Linux when Using an AMD GPU instead of Nvidia is Night and Day, Vulkan Works Natively on an AMD GPU, Nvidia GPUs Emulate Vulkan(kinda like how AMD GPUs Emulate Ray Tracing past the 1.0 RT cores because the 1.0 Cores are now Public Domain since it's been 11 years since Ray tracing was Invented but Nvidia is on their 4.0 RT Cores now). Only new Nvidia GPUs have Hardware level a Vulkan Support. With an AMD GPU Linux just Works for the most Part Minus Adobe Software but new Young Creatives tend to look for Free Alternatives over the Proprietary Creative Software made by Adobe and Sony.
If you have an AMD GPU most Linux Distros Auto-detect them and Install the Driver for it Automatically. If you're Using Nvidia on Linux you have to go and Find the Right Driver and that us Harder because you actually have to Manually look for the Exact right Number for you're Specific Model. The Best Advice for Someone looking to Switch to Linux on Old Hardware is to Tell them to buy a EVGA 500Watt PSU and RX580 GPU(not to be Confused with the RX5800) if they want to keep it Cheap and Stable. If not then the Next Option is the low end of Expensive RX6600 or 7600 with a 750watt Corsair PSU.
I never get why people think Linux is hard with install. Even ignoring the Software store, on Debs it is simple sudo apt-get install "package" and thats it, you're done
At this point, the only reason I'm stuck on Windows is also gaming-related:
1. I don't know what 20+ year old games I still play won't work on Linux. Not only that, many graphics effects don't show up the same on Linux as they do on Windows.
2. Many NVIDIA driver features are missing in Linux.
3. I have absolutely no clue what else I'm missing until I'm missing it. I'm sure I'll find a bunch of stuff like how windows resize and partition, Logitech keyboard and mouse software, Focusrite custom, etc. There are bound to be many things that simply won't work, and it's difficult to install Linux in another drive and find out just like you showed here.
I'd LOVE to switch to Linux, but it's not a simple move. Also, what about touch support for things like my Surface Pro tablet? I get the impression it's not as simple as it seems.
@dreaper5813 then I don't think I can switch no matter how much I want to.
Switching to AMD is not an option sadly. I already have a bunch of NVIDIA GPUs, and it's not affordable to buy 4 AMD downgrades. AMD's Radeon 7950XTX is a downgrade from my RTX 3090s.
It's not just raytracing performance, but also DLSS. FSR just isn't comparable at the highest end. My next card has to be a 4090 or 5090 for me to get anywhere close to an upgrade.
I also don't like AMD's video processing. NVenc is superior in my testing, and I do make RUclips videos on other accounts.
Do Logitech mice and keyboards let you reassign keys? I reprogram my mouse buttons (back, forward, and thumb) as well as control the RGB on my keyboard to reduce battery usage on my wireless keyboard.
Having to change out my hardware sounds like not using my PC as productively as I do today. That's an issue. Privacy is important, but if I can't use my PC, what good is Linux outside of my CLI servers?
Microdose a gamer Distro like Garuda or Nobara along Side Windows via Dual boot. Use ProtonDB to see What Games will Work and What will not.
As off Last Week the Nvidia open Source Driver got Vulkan 1.3 Support. Nvidia finally started Supporting their Open Source team at the Start of this Year.
Also as the Video Says Linux just got Simple enough for Average Home End Users this Year.
Imagine installing windows again because Destiny 2 got good again...
Jokes aside, developers should start develop games like a linux immutable distro, that runs in its own containers, is aware that it is in a container, and refuse to run when there are strangers within the containers, what happen outside the container doesn't affect the game. Basically stopping cheats from ever be compatible with the games, live service competitive games to be exact, and developers might become more open to other platforms than just windows.
Let's see what happens when The Final Shape releases.
I'm probably going to play it since I really like Destiny and have been playing since the D1 Beta.
The question now is, how I will play it. Maybe even Cloud Gaming for like a month
Sadly that wouldn't do much against cheats as they could still do memory manipulations through a kernel space driver without the user space anti-cheat ever knowing about it. The linux world won't accept a proprietary kernel space anti-cheat as it compromises your system security so that's out of the window. The most effective solution would be server side anti-cheat, never trusting the client, but dev's aren't very motivated for that because it's much harder and there is little financial incentive seeing as cheaters also bring in revenue. Might be easier to fix society so people don't cheat in the first place.
Ya I'm at that point to where I'm done with Windows. Now that steam has steam link for the quest headsets I'm totally gonna switch to Pop OS soon as I get my AMD hardware next year. :)
Windows won't put an efi partition on another drive if the drive is formatted to something else already. So when reinstalling Windows you should always make sure only the drive you're installing isn't formatted. This'll basically bypass this stupid behavior.
Yep.
I usually do this, but I relied on the partitioner this time. My own wrongdoing
Ah fair enough. It's a very random thing to have to remember.@@MichaelNROH
I appreciate the effort you put into this video! Thank you for sharing! 💐
The reason I imagine non-techy people are fine using Windows is they didn't have to install it themselves. Installing Windows is way more annoying than installing something like Fedora or Mint.
85% of all people in the World that own a computer, don't have a clue to what Linux even is, and have no clue to how to install an OS from scratch.
Very good video!! May I ask? What's the plasma theme shown in the video? Looks cool!
Lavanda Sea.
I made a whole video about how exactly I set it up
@@MichaelNROH Very cool! I thought it was some kind of lightly theme (but I kinda dislike how buggy/oxygen-looking-ish disk space indicator on dolphin when using lightly, idk maybe I'm not using it correctly), I'm going to watch the video! Thank you!! 😀
I've dabbled with linux over the past 17 years, usually switching back to windows after a few weeks. I've been unhappy running windows for a while especially since windows 11 (I've got many grievances)
I recently decided to pop over and have another look so I loaded up Fedora 39 KDE and I'm really impressed.
I''m running a Ryzen 7800x3d and a RX 7900XTX and games actually run better (and more stable) for me on Fedora with Steam Proton than they did running native on Windows 11 pro.
Everything just seems to work a lot better, my dual monitor setup works very well also.
I think I am also done with windows.
At 7:24 to 7:29, how the heck did you do that? What launcher thing is that in the centre of the screen? It looks amazing!
Why was it such a big deal for GNOME to include an "empty new file" option by default in its file explorer? I can't see any downside to including it by default.
i'll make the switch too when the softwares we use on windows are available on linux, as for now, let us congratulate the brothers for their successful jump :D
What a problem is with Windows 11 if you install it again for example here a USB then after installing you need install drivers
But if I install Linux then it works better
I have also problems with daulboot between Linux and windows But if I remove Windows completely and only stay on Linux and later I want to re-install I get error message if I install windows 11 and then I need to install Windows 10 and then later upgrade to windows 11 I'm done with installing Windows I'm staying right now at Linux and also if I have a new device
That boot loader thing hit me a while back and I sat there puzzled for ages why the boot loader was on literally a random data drive I had and not my system drive... I feel like that's something you should be able to specify.
Theoretically you can.
Just not via the GUI
It's been like this since EFI was introduced. Windows is nothing more than a decaying vision of an "operating system", which when you look deeper is just auto-generated spaghetti-code from hell held together with hundreds of thousand miles of duct tape and the tears of the Microsoft employees.
This is gonna sound real stupid, but what made me finally decide to make a real attempt at switching was reading about the pipe command a few days ago. Then spending a bunch of time reading about all sorts of commands and bash scripts and suddenly realizing all sorts of things I could do.
could you give some examples? for everyday use? also do you have a programming background?
Certain tools that let you watch streamed content pipes audio/video streams to video players that supports it (i.e. mpv or VLC), AKA watching them without going to a browser.
I switched to linux in early 2022 on both my gaming pc and my thin-and-light laptop and it's been just blissful.
Games that don't work get refunded.
That's actually a good way to handle it. It's surprising how many people don't know that you can refund a game on Steam at all.
I need Windows for VR, that's it. I hope I live to see the day that VR works, without compromise, on Linux.
Steam has your back!
@@TheWebstaff When?
I plan on moving to Linux in the following weeks but I still don't know much about it, so I was interested in knowing what are the "compromises" you are talking about ? (I ask this because I have an Oculus Rift S but I've got idea if I will still be able to use it or not). Thank you ^^
ALVR works on Linux with the Quest 2, Quest 3, Gear VR just every Meta VR head set. Wired and Wireless. And SteamVR works out of the box with the Valve Index, HTC Vive, and that OVR Headset.
@@nasimfaheemalquadir I have a Quest 3. ALVR is a huge 'compromise'. Also, my Oculus game library is much bigger than my Steam VR library.
I'm still waiting for a no-compromise VR solution in Linux. I'm pretty sure it's not coming.
I'm done with windows too. Windows 10 is great OS, really great, but Linux seems more functional for me. I tried some distros, like Ubuntu, elementary, gnome os, solus and pop os. Now I have Linux mint cinnamon on my PC and zorin os on my old laptop with 4 gigs of ram, and it works perfectly
An important distinction: Microsoft did not "see that app stores were better"; the rapacious soulless ghouls (less-hateful, more charitable entities refer to them as "marketers") saw what was being gotten away with in the mobile space and saw an opportunity to squeeze more profit while holding up the shield of "for your safety".
That's another reason yes.
Microsoft's motives are different, but they act as a trusted source repository which automatically brings all the advantages with them
@@MichaelNROH The trouble there is the implication they could be the *only* trusted source - just like in mobile, said ghouls would tell the development team to disallow installation from any source outside the Microsoft store. We all know it's coming.
*say
I'm done with windows also but the extra work to get everything working is a pain hours looking up why some driver isn't working right.
Only Windows users "looking up why some driver isn't working right", that's not how Linux, ChromeOS and MAC's work. All supported hardware in Linux is plug and play ( apart from NVIDIA ), it'll either 'just work' or its not supported. Don't waste your time on something that won't 'fix' your problem. If your hardware isn't working then that's the end of it, you can't use it on Linux, its that simple.
Thinking about switching to Linux, probably PopOS, for years now. I will start dual booting next year, than work myself into do my work more with Linux. Thanks for the video
Try switching the applications you use first, many Linux programs (like Gimp, Libreoffice, ...) are compatible with Windows, so you can get used to them.
Congratulations, love your videos so much info and great tools.
Thank you very much
The only reason I use Windows is my capture card and work. I wish I could hammer home how easy it is to install stuff on Linux most of the time.
PCIe device by chance?
I had an Elgato Camlink Pro for a short time and it also only worked on Windows.
Luckily it broke after 2 weeks already and I got to return it 😅
Elgato I bought one right before the next one had Linux support. @@MichaelNROH
My old mainboard that I bought over 10 years ago had the option to enable/disable individual SATA port (it had no NVME) in the BIOS. Last time I bought motherboards about 4 years ago, none of the two had such an option. This made dual booting hard because, as he said, disabling unrelated disks is the safest way, but without the option in the BIOS, one has to physically disconnect/re-connect the cables. With NVME, this is even more problematic, because now one has to remove the GPU (because it often obscures the NVME) and unscrew the screw that is holding the NVME drive.
I absolutely have no idea why manufacturers don't add individual SATA/NVME port disable/enable feature in the BIOS.
>Bungie refuses to enable anti-cheat support
No, they insisted on requiring Windows-only anti-cheat. There's a bit of a difference. They made a design decision that makes their software incompatible with Proton/Linux.
If it was not doing work to make it compatible, that'd be one thing (and easily justified, given Linux market share). But they actually did do work which made it incompatible, which is harder to defend. Personally, this sort of thing just makes it easier to filter out games I shouldn't bother with. There's too many games worth playing already, so another way to filter is handy.
The anti cheat they use actually supports proton. But bungie just refused to enable the patch
That's only sorta true. Bungie uses a customized kernel level AC from Battleye, but it's not something that Battleye themselves couldn't fix
today I learned about how to use the template folder. thank you Mr. Horn.
It's good for something, yeah
While its great that linux has come this far now I still haven't found anything that has made me want to switch to linux apart from my laptop for performance reasons.
I ditched Windows in 2013 and since then,i have never looked back
On the subject of updates bloating the system, that's one thing I love about updating stuff on linux, it's completely optional, and most of the time, reduces the total space taken up overall.
Yeah, I only agree somewhat on this.
Yes, you have a choice not to update, but it's not recommdable, especially if we talk about security patches.
@@MichaelNROH I agree with you on the security updates. Having the option though is so much nicer than a Windows machine booting up at night to update by itself.
@@GlobBlubbwhat? windows booting up by itself? it really does that when you don't cut all power? that is friggin scary as hell.
I ditched windows with fear that i will be in total chaos.after 1year with my Ubuntu i can't believe it how easy to use open source almost for everything and to donate to real developers that deserve it
I find it hilarious that for an operating system that is designed to be user friendly, Windows is so hard to install.
The way that you have to put in work to not use an online Microsoft account is highly anti-user
You've done the right thing; finding the perfect os for you.
I went back to Windows after 3 years on Linux, sorry guys
No worries. Everyone is entitled to a choice 🙃
@@dreaper5813I am in a similar situation, let me show you my reasoning:
- I like the way Windows handles security permissions (the DAC system)
- I want to use NVIDIA Frame Gen and Gsync
- Dual booting was taking too much space and I could use WSL2
- Wayland wasn't fully working with NVIDIA
- Need NVIDIA for AI (unfortunately, can't change to AMD)
Edit:
- I use AppLocker on Windows, fapolicyd unfortunately doesn't support signature rules
@@dreaper5813 1. I can't keep it offline, because I need to use it lol
2. Yeah, it would be nice to have a different system... if I had the money.
Dude, Linux is not a religion
@@dreaper5813 Dude, why do you push Linux so much? I like Linux as well (like a lot), but I also understand some people have different requirements than me.
And what I meant about offline usage is that some apps that I use on Windows require internet, so I can't use it offline.
@@dreaper5813 But, I didn't disagree with you, having Windows on a different machine is a good idea. I just said that I don't have money to do so.
Besides, I was asking why are you so agressive in pushing Linux? I actually want a reply from you, I am curious (I am not arguing back, just legit curious)
The only reason I actively use windows is lack of software. Linux does not run Radeon VPN, and alternatives are kind of disappointing, it also does not support some steam games (you can’t run them even with proton). My friend will probably never quit windows and that’s a problem too. We need to run the same software and we cant. So I switched back to windows.
That is why the safest way to dual boot is to install Windows on a different drive which has its own UEFI partition. Still, I boot into Windows once or twice per year, so basically I don't need it.
It was on a dedicated drive, but it still installs the EFI partd on a different drive if it finds an existing one.
Manual partitioning or just disconnecting the other drives would fix that
safer way would be to just install windows in a VM if you really need it for some apps. virtualization is pretty good nowadays, even for games. But for games i would use a SteamOS VM.
@@ChrisWijtmans This is a possibility only in newer, stronger PCs/Laptops. Most people don't have such strong hardware to afford Windows virtualization.
I had the exact problem 2-3 weeks ago. Windows had installed its bootloader into the EFI on my Linux @ another drive. I didn't know...