Theme your GNOME experience like in the video - ruclips.net/video/1doqD4t7xVs/видео.html Will start posting here more often. More review videos coming soon! Don't forget to subscribe and leave a feedback what you think about this video. Sure I need to work on the audio levels - they aren't quite consistent. What else do you feel needs improvement?
1st time viewer and using Gnu-Linux with KDE Plasma, Budgie and LXqt Desktop environments, depending on the resources available. How about doing benchmark testing
@@uncoverplusgnome is now have consistency on design language due to some pushing on linux distro like elementary os, they finally found thier own way to define destop environment and I like it😊
macOS caters to voice control for people with disabilities, you can use the entire OS by only voice, and it can read any text to you. People who only use touch have trackpad gestures. Or you can use it only with keyboard shortcuts. Or you cajole use it with advanced devices for people who have limited mobility. macOS has all of this built in because they need to be prepared for any possible user, and they are one of the best for blind or disabled users. Whereas Linux lets you do whatever you want and be as minimal as you want. So people who use MacOS are generally using a fraction of the capabilities of the OS, and unfortunately the rest becomes bloat that they can’t uninstall. Linus has less accessibility built in, but you could add it. However obviously for a person with limitations having to learn how to add it, when you have trouble seeing or hearing or moving would be nearly impossible for some people. So Linux gives more flexibility, and a leaner system, but its also more limited out of the box for a huge number of people.
@@uncoverplus its quite appropriate term....GNOME has nicest UI and UX design much better workflow than windows and mac on other hand it still lacks good fractional scaling which is a deal breaker for using GNOME as daily driver. Fractional Scaling is a must have if you want to use hidpi screens
@@uncoverplus No one really uses oob systems. I think we're more insteresteted what is harder to change or takes more time to setup properly. I don't really use DE I use hyprland on my work laptop and on my old personal that I rarely use I have i3.
The most crucial difference between Linux and Mac or windows is, if you don’t like something, you can change it. The customization is almost unlimited. Different with the other two.
My problem with MacOS and Windows is that you NEED to learn to adapt to the devices you're running them on, as opposed to Linux, which feels thoughtfully put together, and if you don't like something on Gnome, you can just make tweaks better suited for yourself.
Or even just use a different desktop environment. While technically you can also do so on Windows and macOS, it isn't nearly as practical or supported as it is on Linux. I've jumped from Unity, GNOME, KDE, i3, XMonad, Hyprland, Labwc, LXDE and more just because. The amount of freedom Linux gives is unmatched, I'll never be able to own a Windows or macOS machine ever again.
For me, it feels like 99% of all Linux vs videos are against windows. If they are against macos, windows is nearly always included. Just look at the comments on this video. It feels like it's just trendy to hate windows and write comments against it. Windows is always in critique and never gets positive feedback. I think that's one reason why they always try so hard with UI changes and feature changes etc. Another bad thing is, that problems with MacOS are not well enough exposed. I bought myself a Mac Mini a year ago and since then I realized how crippled the OS is and how wrong certain statements in the windows vs apple debate are. I will never buy a macos product again, but I will use windows and linux in the future.
in my opinion, these days, the OS makes no difference and the only things which are relevant are whether your favourite app is available for your chosen OS.
The trackpad gestures in macOS is what eventually got me to stop using mice all together. I now prefer the trackpad, and even have one for desktop use. I have yet to use any non-Apple trackpad that even comes close to the quality and usability, so I can understand why people prefer not to use trackpads when they aren't a Mac user.
I use both mouse and trackpad, even more than 10 years in apple trackpad a good hi quality gaming mouse still more precisely and more productive if it's the jobs that focus on cursor movement. For my job most of the time I'm stay on keyboard so hand movement to trackpad are shorter than mouse and can be switched back to keyboard immediately so most of the time good trackpad is good enough with lower overhead on switching😊
@@uncoverpluswith many desktop in Mac os. I using the logitech mouse have logi option or G-hub if using G-series. That is the easy assign genius touch previous-next desktop on the mac.
A flash drive that you intend to use with multiple different operating systems should ideally be formatted in ExFAT, not FAT32. You can do that from MacOS, Linux, or Windows.
For the cut and paste: Copy the files as usual and right click to paste. Press the option key on your keyboard and the right click menu's 'paste' option will change to 'move'. This actually is an equally good implementation but in my eyes, is a better implementation as it discourages the use of cut and paste (while also removing two buttons/options in the right click menu). This is a good thing because if you're cutting and pasting files, and the transfer doesn't complete successfully for what-ever-reason, you could end up with corrupted files on both sides. So better practice is copy and paste the file. If successful, confirm the pasted file's integrity(open it to see if everything looks good) and then delete the previous files. This way you don't risk the chance of losing your data if something goes wrong (which happens often when transferring large files specially with external usb devices involved). But, if you still want to cut and paste because the file isn't so important and you're in the flow of moving something to a usb to test something for example, sure, right click as usual and just press the option key to replace the paste option with move.
Wtf dude! How does the rest of the world use cut paste? Did you ever hear someone corrupted a file trying to cut-paste? Cut-paste is nothing but copy-paste-delete. The OS should be able to do that. It knows whether a copy was successful or not. Dragging and dropping is way more stupid because you have to open two windows or tabs, then open the desired directories, then drag, wtf? Sure it works when you have both open. But it's not always convenient. You know what's convenient? Having both drag-n-drop and cut-paste, which Windows and Linux have. When you actually need to move something, you should not need to perform an extra step, whether it's going back to delete the source files after copy, or pressing the modifier key to bring the menu option. That menu already contains some stupid options, keeping the move by default wouldn't hurt. Some stupid will argue that cut behavior needs to be consistent with how cutting text works. Well, that's BS. Text sizes are insignificant, while files can be 100s GB. And cutting files does not create any possibility of corrupting files, because it will just copy first, verify the destination, then delete the source. That's how drag and drop works. Do you fear, OH MY FILES WILL BE CORRUPTED IF THIS DROP IS UNSUCCESSFUL! (Drag and drop failure can occur when the file size is too large, but that should not corrupt your files, just like cut paste. It's a binary operation, either failed or successful, no in between). (I wrote this essay in response to your essay)
@@mhosain if you copy a folder with thousands of tiny program files, it can get tricky finding out what got copied over from each folder and what didn't. The program overall won't be able to execute due to the missing files. I have had files corrupt even when this wasn't the case. With a simple cut and paste, next thing you know, the transfer box goes missing and the files are neither here nor there. They won't open on either side. I have experienced this multiple times personally. Unfortunately, that's not how the cut and paste function has functioned in real life for me. For whatever reason, I can testify that I have had this issue over a period of many years every now and then. I will say that it was always the case when dealing with usb 2.0 drives. But yeah. Theory is one thing. Reality is another.
@@ZeerakImran I have never lost files on linux in 24 years but I have lost files in MacOS in 4 years. MacOS handles the situation very poorly if the transfer gets interrupted and you need to restart.
honestly i'll never go mac because of a few things: 1. price 2. programs (there is that wine type thing for mac but linux just has a bigger gaming community) 3. customization
As a mobile developer, I must say mac >> windows, Mac ,windows, linux are just tools in the end . The amount of time mac saves me from the build time is not something you get from windows laptop
You do pay more for Mac hardware, but park the software/operating system differences aside, and I challenge you to find a non Apple laptop for the same price as a base level MacBook Pro, that has Speakers, Display, Trackpad and Keyboard anywhere close to those found on a MacBook Pro? Mac OS is nicer looking, but from a usability perspective, nothing touches vanilla Gnome for me. I just wish I could natively run any Linux distro on the new Apple Silicon macs, as that'd be my ideal set up, i.e. Apple Silicon MBP with Vanilla Gnome.
I switched from Windows to Linux Mint to Ubuntu and to Fedora. Now, I don't need anything, except a Lenovo Thinpad P variant with Fedora 40. WOW, can't wait.
This was more of a comparison Between Gnome DE and macOS But I understand it's hard to define, you could theoretically say that Wayland Pipewire systemd and GNU Utils are what makes a Linux Desktop. It's still a good video!
There seems to be a basic misunderstanding of how macOS works vis-a-vis apps and documents/windows. There are no multiple instances of an app as in Windows or Linux. The macOS has only ONE instance of a running app. For clarity, we're talking windowed (graphical) apps here, not background processes/tasks - macOS behind the scenes is a variant of Unix and supports multiple processes just like Linux, or SysV, or BSD. A single graphical app instances provide the app's MENU BAR, which must be present to provide the minimal set of menus: File, Edit, ... Help. If the app has several documents open, they are being managed within the ONE app instance. When you close all the documents of an app, it is up to the app developer as to whether the app quits or stays running. In most cases, apps that handle multiple documents stay running to coninue providing the menu bar which can then be used to open new document windows, edit app preferences, or display help info, or quit the app, if the user so chooses. Apps that only support a single window (e.g. Disk Utility) will quit when the window is closed because there are no other useful menu functions without the open window. In those cases re-launching the app will show the app's menu bar and re-open the single window. There are shorter short-cuts to show all the desktops or app windows. These are generally assigned to hot corners. For instance, I have the top-left corner assigned to reveal all the open windows ("Mission Control") and the top-right corner to engage the screen saver. The reviewer correctly mentions that Shift-Command-N creates a new folder in the Finder, but expected the Enter key to open that folder. What he wanted was Command-DownArrow, which opens the selected folder. Once in that folder, Command-UpArrow navigates up one folder level. The Shift-Command-G combo opens a dialog which allows any path to be arbitrarily typed, with a list of available sub-folders from whatever path you've typed, and of course, tab key auto-completion. It even supports Unix-style "~" for home folder starting point and slash path separators (e.g. "~/Downloads/My Folder/). You'll find that Finder folder navigation is quite easy and quick in macOS without ever touching the mouse or trackpad. There are many other examples of where, with a little extra time on macOS, he would have found everything he needed. He still might not have been happy with the available functions, but those are personal preferences. I use Linux Mint regularly as a second OS and constantly wish they did things more like macOS. Again... personal preference. IMO, the Mac is neither better nor worse than Linux or Windows, just different. When you spend a great deal of time with an OS you get used to the patterns of interaction. Personally I think Linux has many difficult paths to functions that are simple on macOS. It's just a matter of what you're used to.
macOS is like a polished version of linux. I can do everything a Linux computer can, but I have way more apps available and less crap to modify to make things work trough the command line.
With the exception of the Adobe Suite I’ve been able to get every app I needed to work fine on Linux without needing to touch the command line, and in fact I play most of my games on linux nowadays, which I wouldn’t do on mac. I think you’re perspective is a bit outdated and based on Linux 6 years ago, rather than Linux now. While I still use my MacBook for drawing apps and office work, I largely prefer Linux for everything else, whether that be dev, 3d modeling or video games.
Lovely video! May I kindly ask you what is the "theme" of your icons on your Linux installation? I am learning to use PopOS! and Fedora. Also, how do you get cloud storage in Linux? I use OneDrive on my Windows and Mac devices but can't find a version for Linux, so have you managed to make OneDrive to talk to Linux somehow? Thank you!!
Hi there, I used OneDriver for a long time (google jstaf onedriver), its the best onedrive solution I have found for Linux. However, the VERY BEST solution is to stop using OneDrive and move all your stash to Dropbox instead. I did that and Im very happy I did.
I'm a little late here, but there are a handful of tutorials to mount OneDrive as a network drive, which can be googled. It's not very fast, though, there is a bit of waiting when browsing folders and doing actions to files. It's not as good as a native client. I found that moving many small files was EXTREMELY slow using this method, sadly. If you can afford too use a different cloud provider, though, Mega has a native linux client that works well and works just like the Mac and Windows versions. I wound up switching after getting fed up with the 1D performance.
Yeah OneDrive are not supported officially. Neither does Google Drive. I tried using many unofficial method and found no satisfication with it, usually works really slow. If you can afford to change service, I would recommend two alternative: - Dropbox: Native Linux client since beginning, fast and support LAN sync if you have multiple devices. Pricing is weird, they only offer premium pricing, nothing under 2TB plan available unlike Google Drive and Onedrive. Free version will only gives you 2GB and maximum 3 simultaneous devices. - Mega: Now this is another recommendation after so many years struggle finding the one that suit my need. They provide 20 GB free storage (with limited download quota per 6 hours) and their lowest pro plan (pro lite) is only 5 EUR for 400GB. I works with source codes, even with Git and stuff I still need to find way to make synchronizing my work with PC and Laptop as seamless as possible and MEGA support SYNC IGNORE dictated by text file akind of .gitignore. Thank good I can finally exclude node_modules from syncing to the cloud.
1. You can open file/folder with Command+bottom arrow. 2. When you copy the file in MacOS you can paste with Option+Command+V, this does what Ctrl+X and Ctrl+V does.
The discovery of Option+Cmd+V is pretty low. I suffered from this “limitation”, and many people I talked to didn't know. Not so long ago, one of macOS users was kind enough to enlighten me, use Option+Cmd+V to move the files.
You can move files somewhere else. You need to press cmd + c to copy them and then you need to press option + cmd + v to move them into the destination directory.
@8:33 you should try the ExFat format. It is much better for USB flash drives than NTFS. You would be able to read and write to it from both Mac OS and Windows.
7:11 not sure exactly which delays you’re talking about, but there’s a good chance that, yes, you’re seeing a deliberate delay built into macOS. They’re all over macOS (and iOS) as human affordances. Apple adds visual cues and transitions so that the user doesn’t miss the computer’s response to their actions. But also, sometimes Finder lags, especially when dealing with spinning rust drives or networked storage. So I don’t know from your descriptions and screenshots which you’re referring to. The lags and slowness I’ve occasionally experienced on macOS are nothing like those I routinely encounter with MSWindows’ File Explorer. So IME if Finder is doing worse than File Explorer, something’s wrong. But worse than something like Dolphin? That’s probably just the combination of intentional user affordances, Finder doing a bunch of stuff in the background, and the occasional actual lag.
You can cut and paste a file from one place to another... it's just not obvious. You select the file, right-click and select 'copy', when you choose to place it somewhere else, right-click where you want it to be, and when you see the option to paste press the 'option key'. The paste will change to 'move item here'.
The thing with Linux that blows my mind is, if you have a mild idea of what you are doing (which doesn't take more than a month to acquire), you can absolutely wreck havoc on your OS, but then, by some unspoken magic, also realize that you have the power to unscrew it. For instance, if I wanted to a system variable in Linux, I could do so easily via vim ~/.bashrc and be done with it, but I also know that if I make any changes and save these changes (source this file) I could always revert it to original or do a echo-spree to add basic commands to add the tools required to re-edit the file and restore things without loosing my changes (which would be the case if you restored this). In windows, I would have to take a backup of the registry and pray to god that I don't encounter any errors. In my mind, Linux is the ideal OS and Windows Subsystem for Linux the ideal compromise if working in windows is a requirement.
“How is there this big of a gap…” There isn’t. Linux copied that feature from MacOS. I remember using it back in 2011 with OSX Lion. There is a single key keyboard shortcut that allows you to do that… it’s one of the function keys. Mac did it first. One thing to remember is that Linux is open source and depending on which Linux you have affects which packages are installed initially when you set up the OS. Additionally even that can be customized. macOS comes initially installed and set up a certain way. Almost everything you mentioned about Linux can also be done in MacOS. I utilize both Linux, windows and MacOS as part of my job for over 20 years. Single most difficult thing to do on my Mac is game. It’s not because the hardware and software cannot support it, it’s because of the rules and licensing cost that Apple places on potential game developers to maintain security of its OS.
You mean the costs for licensing it for the App Store? I think macOS is the smoothest operating system of the big 3. However I see signs of macOS becoming more locked down like IOS. I hate that as a power user. If they one day will not let you use software from outside of the App Store I will no longer use it.
You can cut and paste on mac actually but it isn't as intuitive as on other OS, let me explain... -> For copying a file you would do the intuitive: cmd+c and then cmd+v in the appropriate location. -> For moving a file you would do: cmd+c and then cmd+opt+v this will move the file in the appropriate location. And if you are in habit of using the terminal and ofcourse you have you handy dandy cp and mv commands same as Linux :)
About file managers, I don't like a lot of things about kde, but dolphin is great. Really love splitting the window and it's many useful resources, one complaint is I find the UI a but cluttered.
I think there are some aspects that should go into this comparison, which are not as immediately visible but actually at least as important. One is that you don't get macOS without buying Apple hardware or entering a legal grey zone (and subscribe to all kinds of annoyances). But once you have Apple hardware, you will basically have a big phone. After a couple of years, it will no longer receive updates. And there are many things you can't do, like exchange RAM or an SSD.The most frequently replaced part is not the battery, it's the "logic board". This usually means you throw away the computer. You basically rent a device for the price of buying it. It's never "your" device. Another huge difference is on the software side. On Linux, you will not be able to get commercial software, at least the choice is limited. That's a disadvantage, maybe even a huge one. But on the other hand, there is usually a free alternative for most of the missing software. For me, the change from mac to Linux means a couple of hundred dollars in yearly software purchase got freed and I personally have no issues with the free alternatives at all. It's typically much harder to set things up on Linux. But at the same time, being obliged and able to setup things yourself often makes many things possible that just won't work on mac. There are very few if any things you can't do on Linux that you can on mac but a lot of them vice versa. One of the few things is to develop native software for Apple products. It was the reason why I used Apple products for a while. I don't miss macOS now that the requirement is no longer there. On macOS, when things do not "just work" they won't work at all and the reason usually is that Apple pulled a plug and you need to buy new hardware, even if what you want to do does not require that new hardware at all. You're just being baited into donating to Apple cause. That happened over and over again during the 10+ years I was using macOS. The main difference between Linux on one and Apple and Microsoft on the other side is that the latter are controlled by corporate business while the former is not controlled at all. This did not matter so much in the past, but it looks like this is becoming more and more important. In the past, the strategy to compete with your peer and the strategy to milk your customers were alternatives that were in a balance. It's getting more cost effective for the likes of Apple to focus on optimizing their customers instead of optimizing their products. The conflict with the EU shows that all to obviously.
macOS has by far some of the best professional software out in many fields, other it lacks completely or has spotty compatibility. But for Ai applications it has a built in Neural Engine, which means you can do very advanced image generation and ai chat without any graphics cards or incompatibilities with Nvidia. You can run some of the best graphic design software like Affinity, or desktop publishing, video editing, and some light 3d modeling. It has Logic, and amazing compatibility with audio software and hardware for a music studio, and compatibility with advanced networking hardware for video editing. Linux has freedom, but it doesn’t have Scrivener for writing, or Adobe or Final Cut or Logic. macOS comes with a complete suite of industry leading software for “free”. The gaming situation on Linux is generally better than ever with the Steamdeck, and you can use most hardware to run Linux, so its very customizable as you say. But overall the “apple tax” is worth it to anyone who uses that professional software to make money. For basics, or specific software Linux is just fine. For programmers or very tech savvy people its very good. But MacOS overall just brings more to the table. You can run anything open source you can find on Linux on a Mac with zero issues, but the same can’t be said the other way around.
@@ghost-user559 You make good points there. However, when you say "macOS comes with [..] software for free", the Apple tax comes rolling in. I have 6 macs here, only one of which still receives updates. Each one is maxed out, because that's what you have to do with a mac. That's $15K of hardware. Of the 6, one runs macOS, 4 Linux and one I don't use because it draws more power than the rest together. For writing, I use org mode. I could run Emacs on a mac, but when I worked on macs I didn't. It's probably a mind set thing, Emacs doesn't look and feel maccedy and when you're on the Apple road, it's an alien thing to use. Since I started with org mode, I wouldn't want to use anything else ever again for that purpose. I don't know how much money I spend on software for macs. Certainly more than 5K, probably less than 10K. I don't miss any of that, now that the mac that still has macOS is not actually running but waiting for the next iOS project in storage. It certainly depends on what you are actually doing if macOS or Linux is the better choice for you. Independent of all that, I'm really happy not to have to listen to "even better than ever before" anymore while looking at an Apple pencil sticking out the bottom of an iPad or seeing "Operation failed" while I expected it to just work and there is nothing I can do either way. I'm using Linux since before it was delivered on floppy disks and BSD when it made a difference whether the 386 was put before or after the BSD. For me, macOS is a BSD with a lot of paywalls around it. That may be responsible for my view on Apple's business practices.
Cut and paste on a mac is there, it's just different. Use copy as normal, then after right clicking at the destination folder, simply hold the option key, to change the 'Paste Item' entry into 'Move Item Here'. That's just the mac way, the option key affect other context menus too.
edit - on the file manager i will hard disagree Nautilus is quite possibly the worst file manager i have ever used in linux world. Thunar and Dolphin(the kde one) is far far superior in every way shape and form. me a window manager(hyprland) user be like - peasants stuck on their desktop environment. the terminal is my environment. (but for better or for worse) its either you fix your issue in 2 minutes or you nuke your entire desktop nothing in between
Double clicking the window top bar on Mac is an app-specific feature. Default is to `fit space`, some devs do whatever they want though. There's a Gnome Extension btw for hiding the top bar.
LibreOffice is a very competent alternative to MS-Office. Yes, you can nit-pick minor differences all day long, but I’ve used LibreOffice since its OpenOffice days, and find it more than adequte (Ok, I intensely dislike MS, but hey, who’s counting 😂…and Full-Disclosure - I donate yearly to the LibreOffice Foundation, among a few other FOSS)
@@uncoverplus there's an easier way. Copy the files as usual and right click to paste. When pasting, press the option key on your keyboard and the right click menu's 'paste' option will change to 'move'. This actually is an equally good implementation but in my eyes, is a better implementation as it discourages the use of cut and paste. This is a good thing because if you're cutting and pasting files, if the transfer doesn't complete successfully for what-ever-reason, you could end up with corrupted files on both sides. So better practice is copy and paste the file. If successful, confirm the pasted file's integrity and then delete the previous files. This way you don't risk the chance of losing your data if something goes wrong. But, if you still want to cut and paste because the file isn't so important and you're in the flow of moving something to a usb to test something for example, sure, right click as usual and just press the option key to replace the paste option with move. I'll post this comment in the main comment section as well in case it helps someone.
In my mac taste I almost never cut/copy, On the same drive it always moves. On different drive always copy. I throw every file in to the air with yoink. then selective/whole drop it on target app, The target app just consume it like magic😊😊
@@facbedstudio That's BS. I stopped using anything except Linux on the desktop some 15 years ago. Haven't had any problems with applications ever. During this time, I had to use macOS at work for a year. I hated it. Even finding the right apps for somewhat less common uses was inconvenient at best, even compared to Windows. When you use macOS professionally, with tons of apps and multiple instances of the same app running at the same time, macOS is awful.
to cut and paste in MacOS, copy just like you do normally - cmd + c, but during pasting whether you are pasting using the mouse/trackpad right click or cmd+v use the option key as well...that does the move operation or cut and paste operation in MacOS.
You don't have to pay for linux as it can be installed in any pc whereas you have to pay for mac os as it is a apple based product and work only in macbook
2:33 the gesture is opening mission control, you can use F3 or ctrl + up as a keyboard shortcut or if your mission control app is on your dock you can just click on it.
For file transfer between Android and Mac you can use same old KDE connect that we had in GNOME (GS Connect), isn't as perfect as linux breaks a lot but when it works its still the best option we have Btw we're on same boat XD Macbook air m1 GNOME Flutter
Nice suggestion. Although I don't copy much stuff to or from my phone to my desktops. Haha noice and wow you're into flutter too. Do leave a sub if you find this video cool!
@@uncoverplusAlso a solution to that minimise issue you can use cmd + h (Hide window) then window will show up while using cmd + tab. Plus, Karabiner elements is very good tool to customise the keybindings.
02:15 hey how'd you made the top bar round or floating? What extension is that ? ... Also top bar disappears when you full screen using Function key f11 .
When I have more time, I plan to transform a retro gaming Optiplex I have into a triple booted system, with Windows 7, Linux, and MacOS. Then I'll have the ultimate $100 PC!
Brother you presentation was so clean and crisp ofc like mrwtb... #one more suggestion , in animation keep showing the points or star, so audience can follow the completion..rather u describing the point everytime 👋🙂
This is the best comparaison i've seen so far. You really went deep and and provided useful insight. Thank you. Do you have a video comparaison on web browser?
The great strength of MacOS and the whole Apple environment is the integration between Mac, iPad, iPhone, iSwatch as well as the great innovation. I just installed Linux mint 21.3 on an old MacBook Air mid 2013 and it’s simply fabulous, but both the quality of the software and the integration don’t entice users to come closer. Another big problem is the enormity of distros that confuse and discourage those who decide to choose Linux and are not an advanced user, system engineer or programmer.
Keeep going... other than the soft hazy texture of the video... you did a nice job making the video and you did your homework on the topic... That was OG...
For daily use both macos and gnome on fedora, I'm not agree with you for comparing orange with apple but yes, I still get your point. For gnome it is good for speeder style everything is fast and very productive, but on macos you have to slowdown things and more thinking and more feeling. It give me more imagination more creativity on apple environment. Feeling is not someting we can get it right away. As a more than 12 years mac user the feeling and philosophy in design language on macos is very strong and consistency, I really like it. And for 6 years in linux I really like how productive how flexibility how customizability on my workflows on linux. Then I love both, but if I have to choose one, It will always be macos😊
These are some little thinga you ar talking about more important is if your system is supporting softwares that you are willing to use and if its fits for your usecase
Windows user converted to Mac user here. MacOS's default window management kind of sucks. It works pretty well for a small laptop screen, but if you use a dock to plug into bigger screens its really frustrating. I use something called RectangleApp or just Reactangle to solve it. Its been extremely helpful to make MacOS's window management usable on big screens. Also side note, I'm glad he pointed out the inconsistent maximizing behavior. As someone who stands by MacOS, that feature is just undefendable... what reason could you ever have to make an application that can scale hortionztally only scale vertically. If you really want to have a max text width for readability sake... put margins in the app or something... don't make it so windows can inconsistently maximize across your OS.
You can set the Dock on macOS to automaticly hide. Also for using exposé/mission control you press the F3. There is no snapping window on macOS, I use app called Rectangle. It is free and it has the same snapping feautre like Windows. Also I just laerned to close apps using Cmd + Q. You can cut things in macOS. You will use Cmd + C, but while pasting you will use Cmd + Option + V and this is how you will cut files and texts on macOS. For writing to NTFS you need 3rd party app for it. My dad who works for Microsoft here in Czechia says, that NTFS is the worst file system ever. Also I have all my disks formated to exFAT to use it on both macOS and Windows.
I use BetterTouchTool which adds snapping plus a ridiculous amount of customization. You can even use MIDI devices to trigger macros and shortcuts! It’s $22 for lifetime license but totally worth it.
Whoops forgot to add the link. www.patreon.com/posts/98779456? Available for free on Patreon. You can check the GitHub for a more recent version. Some bug fixes are there. github.com/arcnations-united/evolve
If you want to switch between multiple instances of the same app instead of trying to use cmd + tab, you can just use cmd + ` (just above the tab button), it will swtich between the multiple instances of the same app. Secondly, if you want to cut something, just copy it and while pasting it instead of using cmd + v, press Cmd + Option + V, it will cut it.
Theme your GNOME experience like in the video -
ruclips.net/video/1doqD4t7xVs/видео.html
Will start posting here more often. More review videos coming soon! Don't forget to subscribe and leave a feedback what you think about this video.
Sure I need to work on the audio levels - they aren't quite consistent. What else do you feel needs improvement?
1st time viewer and using Gnu-Linux with KDE Plasma, Budgie and LXqt Desktop environments, depending on the resources available.
How about doing benchmark testing
what linux disto are you using , and please also make the video how you customize your linux this beautifully
@@vaibhavtiwari6030 I linked it already in the pinned comment. The distro is mentioned in the thumbnail. 🥲
@@geraldcragg9313 Maybe on my Linux focused channel - Arc Technologies?
where can I download the application that you have for changing the theme and other aspects from linux presented at 12:11 ?
Linux is a glorious mess and I love it. Many times in comparison MacOS feels cumbersome, but it is very much not a complete mess in the same sense.
"Glorius mess" nice term haha. I don't feel GNOME is any big of a mess now though in terms of design.
@@uncoverplusgnome is now have consistency on design language due to some pushing on linux distro like elementary os, they finally found thier own way to define destop environment and I like it😊
I like vanilla gnome it was pretty good, i used it 2 years ago with fedora. Still it was good i dont know how good it is now
macOS caters to voice control for people with disabilities, you can use the entire OS by only voice, and it can read any text to you. People who only use touch have trackpad gestures. Or you can use it only with keyboard shortcuts. Or you cajole use it with advanced devices for people who have limited mobility. macOS has all of this built in because they need to be prepared for any possible user, and they are one of the best for blind or disabled users. Whereas Linux lets you do whatever you want and be as minimal as you want. So people who use MacOS are generally using a fraction of the capabilities of the OS, and unfortunately the rest becomes bloat that they can’t uninstall. Linus has less accessibility built in, but you could add it. However obviously for a person with limitations having to learn how to add it, when you have trouble seeing or hearing or moving would be nearly impossible for some people. So Linux gives more flexibility, and a leaner system, but its also more limited out of the box for a huge number of people.
@@uncoverplus its quite appropriate term....GNOME has nicest UI and UX design much better workflow than windows and mac on other hand it still lacks good fractional scaling which is a deal breaker for using GNOME as daily driver. Fractional Scaling is a must have if you want to use hidpi screens
There actually is a FULL screen mode on gnome, you just need to set a shortcut in settings
Yeah I just compared the OOB experiences. Sure we can do a lot of stuff as an extra in both the OS.
Tell me about this shortcut
Just go to settings and configure it yourself@@amitskr
@@amitskr press F11 or better go to settings > keyboard and set super + F11 for full-screen mode
@@uncoverplus No one really uses oob systems. I think we're more insteresteted what is harder to change or takes more time to setup properly. I don't really use DE I use hyprland on my work laptop and on my old personal that I rarely use I have i3.
The most crucial difference between Linux and Mac or windows is, if you don’t like something, you can change it. The customization is almost unlimited. Different with the other two.
if you don't like it, you don't buy it in the first place lol
@@mzr9710Linux is free and open source lol
@@mzr9710is it your defence 😂?
@mzr9710
How you gunna know whether you're going to like it or not if you never use it?
Yes,many distro gnu/linux. I love gnu/linux.
My problem with MacOS and Windows is that you NEED to learn to adapt to the devices you're running them on, as opposed to Linux, which feels thoughtfully put together, and if you don't like something on Gnome, you can just make tweaks better suited for yourself.
"Learn to adapt"
Aptly said!
Or even just use a different desktop environment. While technically you can also do so on Windows and macOS, it isn't nearly as practical or supported as it is on Linux.
I've jumped from Unity, GNOME, KDE, i3, XMonad, Hyprland, Labwc, LXDE and more just because. The amount of freedom Linux gives is unmatched, I'll never be able to own a Windows or macOS machine ever again.
I have used Windows ,Mac and Linux and to be honest I must prefer Linux over the other two,however I would use Mac over Windows any day.
Sure 🔥
For me, it feels like 99% of all Linux vs videos are against windows. If they are against macos, windows is nearly always included. Just look at the comments on this video. It feels like it's just trendy to hate windows and write comments against it. Windows is always in critique and never gets positive feedback. I think that's one reason why they always try so hard with UI changes and feature changes etc. Another bad thing is, that problems with MacOS are not well enough exposed. I bought myself a Mac Mini a year ago and since then I realized how crippled the OS is and how wrong certain statements in the windows vs apple debate are. I will never buy a macos product again, but I will use windows and linux in the future.
in my opinion, these days, the OS makes no difference and the only things which are relevant are whether your favourite app is available for your chosen OS.
People love linux but they use Mac
Who? You maybe
well macbooks got really good battery life but garbage at efficiency (like lack window tiling and lot of quality of life features)
@@narpwa simple rectangles gives you window tiling. Most Linux devs can appreciate a Mac. But no unix enthusiast likes windows
Nobody uses mac
@@atetraxxdoesn't matter as windows actually as the software library including games to actually be useful
The trackpad gestures in macOS is what eventually got me to stop using mice all together. I now prefer the trackpad, and even have one for desktop use. I have yet to use any non-Apple trackpad that even comes close to the quality and usability, so I can understand why people prefer not to use trackpads when they aren't a Mac user.
The trackpad is great but as I've mentioned I have two other desktops where I use the mouse so it becomes a problem.
I use both mouse and trackpad, even more than 10 years in apple trackpad a good hi quality gaming mouse still more precisely and more productive if it's the jobs that focus on cursor movement. For my job most of the time I'm stay on keyboard so hand movement to trackpad are shorter than mouse and can be switched back to keyboard immediately so most of the time good trackpad is good enough with lower overhead on switching😊
@@uncoverpluswith many desktop in Mac os. I using the logitech mouse have logi option or G-hub if using G-series. That is the easy assign genius touch previous-next desktop on the mac.
mx master 3 is a great mouse that allows you to use gestures ;) (Mac user who loves the track pad)
Just use a software for those other track pads on other oses
A flash drive that you intend to use with multiple different operating systems should ideally be formatted in ExFAT, not FAT32. You can do that from MacOS, Linux, or Windows.
Thanks for the tip. I now use ExFAT!
4:58, the default directory is customisable
5:21 You navigate in and out from files using cmd up-arrow/down-arrow
Hi, what icon pack and theme are you using? 4:06
For the cut and paste: Copy the files as usual and right click to paste. Press the option key on your keyboard and the right click menu's 'paste' option will change to 'move'. This actually is an equally good implementation but in my eyes, is a better implementation as it discourages the use of cut and paste (while also removing two buttons/options in the right click menu). This is a good thing because if you're cutting and pasting files, and the transfer doesn't complete successfully for what-ever-reason, you could end up with corrupted files on both sides. So better practice is copy and paste the file. If successful, confirm the pasted file's integrity(open it to see if everything looks good) and then delete the previous files. This way you don't risk the chance of losing your data if something goes wrong (which happens often when transferring large files specially with external usb devices involved). But, if you still want to cut and paste because the file isn't so important and you're in the flow of moving something to a usb to test something for example, sure, right click as usual and just press the option key to replace the paste option with move.
Wtf dude! How does the rest of the world use cut paste? Did you ever hear someone corrupted a file trying to cut-paste? Cut-paste is nothing but copy-paste-delete. The OS should be able to do that. It knows whether a copy was successful or not. Dragging and dropping is way more stupid because you have to open two windows or tabs, then open the desired directories, then drag, wtf? Sure it works when you have both open. But it's not always convenient. You know what's convenient? Having both drag-n-drop and cut-paste, which Windows and Linux have.
When you actually need to move something, you should not need to perform an extra step, whether it's going back to delete the source files after copy, or pressing the modifier key to bring the menu option. That menu already contains some stupid options, keeping the move by default wouldn't hurt.
Some stupid will argue that cut behavior needs to be consistent with how cutting text works. Well, that's BS. Text sizes are insignificant, while files can be 100s GB. And cutting files does not create any possibility of corrupting files, because it will just copy first, verify the destination, then delete the source. That's how drag and drop works. Do you fear, OH MY FILES WILL BE CORRUPTED IF THIS DROP IS UNSUCCESSFUL! (Drag and drop failure can occur when the file size is too large, but that should not corrupt your files, just like cut paste. It's a binary operation, either failed or successful, no in between).
(I wrote this essay in response to your essay)
Both deserve 16 marks
16/16
@@mhosain if you copy a folder with thousands of tiny program files, it can get tricky finding out what got copied over from each folder and what didn't. The program overall won't be able to execute due to the missing files. I have had files corrupt even when this wasn't the case. With a simple cut and paste, next thing you know, the transfer box goes missing and the files are neither here nor there. They won't open on either side. I have experienced this multiple times personally. Unfortunately, that's not how the cut and paste function has functioned in real life for me. For whatever reason, I can testify that I have had this issue over a period of many years every now and then. I will say that it was always the case when dealing with usb 2.0 drives. But yeah. Theory is one thing. Reality is another.
@@uncoverplus cmd + c -> cmd + option + v is the shortcut for copy -> paste -> delete :D tell your friend, its a lifechanger :D
@@ZeerakImran I have never lost files on linux in 24 years but I have lost files in MacOS in 4 years. MacOS handles the situation very poorly if the transfer gets interrupted and you need to restart.
honestly i'll never go mac because of a few things:
1. price
2. programs (there is that wine type thing for mac but linux just has a bigger gaming community)
3. customization
apple is for loosers 😎
@@six-bobcatsif you’re dumb and you use linux, you’re still dumb.
@tminhdn bro 💀
As a mobile developer, I must say mac >> windows,
Mac ,windows, linux are just tools in the end .
The amount of time mac saves me from the build time is not something you get from windows laptop
You do pay more for Mac hardware, but park the software/operating system differences aside, and I challenge you to find a non Apple laptop for the same price as a base level MacBook Pro, that has Speakers, Display, Trackpad and Keyboard anywhere close to those found on a MacBook Pro?
Mac OS is nicer looking, but from a usability perspective, nothing touches vanilla Gnome for me. I just wish I could natively run any Linux distro on the new Apple Silicon macs, as that'd be my ideal set up, i.e. Apple Silicon MBP with Vanilla Gnome.
I switched from Windows to Linux Mint to Ubuntu and to Fedora.
Now, I don't need anything, except a Lenovo Thinpad P variant with Fedora 40. WOW, can't wait.
This was more of a comparison Between Gnome DE and macOS
But I understand it's hard to define, you could theoretically say that Wayland Pipewire systemd and GNU Utils are what makes a Linux Desktop.
It's still a good video!
Thank you so much! Hope to improve my video quality in the future. Any feedback helps.
@@uncoverplus next time please compare xfce de and cutefish de
I have hyprland living in UTM on a Mac M3, but I haven’t been able to configure pipewire 😢
Yeah
which icon pack do you use for your linux distro?
There seems to be a basic misunderstanding of how macOS works vis-a-vis apps and documents/windows. There are no multiple instances of an app as in Windows or Linux. The macOS has only ONE instance of a running app. For clarity, we're talking windowed (graphical) apps here, not background processes/tasks - macOS behind the scenes is a variant of Unix and supports multiple processes just like Linux, or SysV, or BSD. A single graphical app instances provide the app's MENU BAR, which must be present to provide the minimal set of menus: File, Edit, ... Help. If the app has several documents open, they are being managed within the ONE app instance. When you close all the documents of an app, it is up to the app developer as to whether the app quits or stays running. In most cases, apps that handle multiple documents stay running to coninue providing the menu bar which can then be used to open new document windows, edit app preferences, or display help info, or quit the app, if the user so chooses. Apps that only support a single window (e.g. Disk Utility) will quit when the window is closed because there are no other useful menu functions without the open window. In those cases re-launching the app will show the app's menu bar and re-open the single window.
There are shorter short-cuts to show all the desktops or app windows. These are generally assigned to hot corners. For instance, I have the top-left corner assigned to reveal all the open windows ("Mission Control") and the top-right corner to engage the screen saver.
The reviewer correctly mentions that Shift-Command-N creates a new folder in the Finder, but expected the Enter key to open that folder. What he wanted was Command-DownArrow, which opens the selected folder. Once in that folder, Command-UpArrow navigates up one folder level. The Shift-Command-G combo opens a dialog which allows any path to be arbitrarily typed, with a list of available sub-folders from whatever path you've typed, and of course, tab key auto-completion. It even supports Unix-style "~" for home folder starting point and slash path separators (e.g. "~/Downloads/My Folder/). You'll find that Finder folder navigation is quite easy and quick in macOS without ever touching the mouse or trackpad.
There are many other examples of where, with a little extra time on macOS, he would have found everything he needed. He still might not have been happy with the available functions, but those are personal preferences. I use Linux Mint regularly as a second OS and constantly wish they did things more like macOS. Again... personal preference.
IMO, the Mac is neither better nor worse than Linux or Windows, just different. When you spend a great deal of time with an OS you get used to the patterns of interaction. Personally I think Linux has many difficult paths to functions that are simple on macOS. It's just a matter of what you're used to.
macOS is like a polished version of linux. I can do everything a Linux computer can, but I have way more apps available and less crap to modify to make things work trough the command line.
@@Rocketman0407 yeah, it's like Stock Android vs Open Source Android
With the exception of the Adobe Suite I’ve been able to get every app I needed to work fine on Linux without needing to touch the command line, and in fact I play most of my games on linux nowadays, which I wouldn’t do on mac. I think you’re perspective is a bit outdated and based on Linux 6 years ago, rather than Linux now. While I still use my MacBook for drawing apps and office work, I largely prefer Linux for everything else, whether that be dev, 3d modeling or video games.
Lovely video! May I kindly ask you what is the "theme" of your icons on your Linux installation? I am learning to use PopOS! and Fedora. Also, how do you get cloud storage in Linux? I use OneDrive on my Windows and Mac devices but can't find a version for Linux, so have you managed to make OneDrive to talk to Linux somehow? Thank you!!
Sure check the pinned comment for the Customization video. I have put it there since many of y'all are asking.
Thank you!
Hi there, I used OneDriver for a long time (google jstaf onedriver), its the best onedrive solution I have found for Linux. However, the VERY BEST solution is to stop using OneDrive and move all your stash to Dropbox instead. I did that and Im very happy I did.
there's Dropbox, Mega, and Cozy to name a few of the more popular ones
I'm a little late here, but there are a handful of tutorials to mount OneDrive as a network drive, which can be googled. It's not very fast, though, there is a bit of waiting when browsing folders and doing actions to files. It's not as good as a native client. I found that moving many small files was EXTREMELY slow using this method, sadly.
If you can afford too use a different cloud provider, though, Mega has a native linux client that works well and works just like the Mac and Windows versions. I wound up switching after getting fed up with the 1D performance.
Yeah OneDrive are not supported officially. Neither does Google Drive. I tried using many unofficial method and found no satisfication with it, usually works really slow.
If you can afford to change service, I would recommend two alternative:
- Dropbox: Native Linux client since beginning, fast and support LAN sync if you have multiple devices. Pricing is weird, they only offer premium pricing, nothing under 2TB plan available unlike Google Drive and Onedrive. Free version will only gives you 2GB and maximum 3 simultaneous devices.
- Mega: Now this is another recommendation after so many years struggle finding the one that suit my need. They provide 20 GB free storage (with limited download quota per 6 hours) and their lowest pro plan (pro lite) is only 5 EUR for 400GB. I works with source codes, even with Git and stuff I still need to find way to make synchronizing my work with PC and Laptop as seamless as possible and MEGA support SYNC IGNORE dictated by text file akind of .gitignore. Thank good I can finally exclude node_modules from syncing to the cloud.
1. You can open file/folder with Command+bottom arrow.
2. When you copy the file in MacOS you can paste with Option+Command+V, this does what Ctrl+X and Ctrl+V does.
The discovery of Option+Cmd+V is pretty low. I suffered from this “limitation”, and many people I talked to didn't know. Not so long ago, one of macOS users was kind enough to enlighten me, use Option+Cmd+V to move the files.
You don’t need to hit the option key. Just command c / v
Which distro are you using? Or is it custom build distro?
I think it is fedora with gnome
Very cool, what video editor did you use to make this video? I am just amazed of the AR texts
Thanks! DaVinci Resolve
Dude your videos are so high quality how do you only have 2k subs
Where can I find that gnome tweek alternative app?
Here's the GitHub link
(Latest release)
github.com/arcnations-united/evolve
Get it for free on Patreon
www.patreon.com/posts/98779456?
Which linux version is it?
And Linux is really customizable. Such as, you can transform KDE to MacOS.
Absolutely!
You can move files somewhere else. You need to press cmd + c to copy them and then you need to press option + cmd + v to move them into the destination directory.
@8:33 you should try the ExFat format. It is much better for USB flash drives than NTFS. You would be able to read and write to it from both Mac OS and Windows.
4:17 Dolphin: Are you sure about that?
Thunar: Are you sure about that?
@@narpwa PCManFM: Are you sure about that?
Any Linux file manager: Are you sure about that?
You missed important things like package manager comparison. For installing/updating apps.
Which Linux distro is it?
@@saniatahmed-pu4is fedora
7:11 not sure exactly which delays you’re talking about, but there’s a good chance that, yes, you’re seeing a deliberate delay built into macOS. They’re all over macOS (and iOS) as human affordances. Apple adds visual cues and transitions so that the user doesn’t miss the computer’s response to their actions. But also, sometimes Finder lags, especially when dealing with spinning rust drives or networked storage. So I don’t know from your descriptions and screenshots which you’re referring to.
The lags and slowness I’ve occasionally experienced on macOS are nothing like those I routinely encounter with MSWindows’ File Explorer. So IME if Finder is doing worse than File Explorer, something’s wrong. But worse than something like Dolphin? That’s probably just the combination of intentional user affordances, Finder doing a bunch of stuff in the background, and the occasional actual lag.
What really fascinates me is the quality of your jumper!
You can cut and paste a file from one place to another... it's just not obvious. You select the file, right-click and select 'copy', when you choose to place it somewhere else, right-click where you want it to be, and when you see the option to paste press the 'option key'. The paste will change to 'move item here'.
Can also use option+cmd+v to insert. The initial copying is the same.
The thing with Linux that blows my mind is, if you have a mild idea of what you are doing (which doesn't take more than a month to acquire), you can absolutely wreck havoc on your OS, but then, by some unspoken magic, also realize that you have the power to unscrew it. For instance, if I wanted to a system variable in Linux, I could do so easily via vim ~/.bashrc and be done with it, but I also know that if I make any changes and save these changes (source this file) I could always revert it to original or do a echo-spree to add basic commands to add the tools required to re-edit the file and restore things without loosing my changes (which would be the case if you restored this). In windows, I would have to take a backup of the registry and pray to god that I don't encounter any errors. In my mind, Linux is the ideal OS and Windows Subsystem for Linux the ideal compromise if working in windows is a requirement.
Kids use Kindows
Men use Mac
Legends use Linux
@@matei9k You can get KDE to look and work like Gnome, if you want to. But that would be sort of a downgrade.
What theme is this at 10:42? I like the border
“How is there this big of a gap…”
There isn’t. Linux copied that feature from MacOS. I remember using it back in 2011 with OSX Lion. There is a single key keyboard shortcut that allows you to do that… it’s one of the function keys.
Mac did it first.
One thing to remember is that Linux is open source and depending on which Linux you have affects which packages are installed initially when you set up the OS. Additionally even that can be customized.
macOS comes initially installed and set up a certain way. Almost everything you mentioned about Linux can also be done in MacOS.
I utilize both Linux, windows and MacOS as part of my job for over 20 years.
Single most difficult thing to do on my Mac is game.
It’s not because the hardware and software cannot support it, it’s because of the rules and licensing cost that Apple places on potential game developers to maintain security of its OS.
You mean the costs for licensing it for the App Store?
I think macOS is the smoothest operating system of the big 3.
However I see signs of macOS becoming more locked down like IOS. I hate that as a power user. If they one day will not let you use software from outside of the App Store I will no longer use it.
You can cut and paste on mac actually but it isn't as intuitive as on other OS, let me explain...
-> For copying a file you would do the intuitive: cmd+c and then cmd+v in the appropriate location.
-> For moving a file you would do: cmd+c and then cmd+opt+v this will move the file in the appropriate location.
And if you are in habit of using the terminal and ofcourse you have you handy dandy cp and mv commands same as Linux :)
About file managers, I don't like a lot of things about kde, but dolphin is great. Really love splitting the window and it's many useful resources, one complaint is I find the UI a but cluttered.
Yeah and the Plasma 6 update got a split view too.
To cut paste file in mac, command + c and then Goto the folder where you want to move the file command + option + v.
I think there are some aspects that should go into this comparison, which are not as immediately visible but actually at least as important.
One is that you don't get macOS without buying Apple hardware or entering a legal grey zone (and subscribe to all kinds of annoyances). But once you have Apple hardware, you will basically have a big phone. After a couple of years, it will no longer receive updates. And there are many things you can't do, like exchange RAM or an SSD.The most frequently replaced part is not the battery, it's the "logic board". This usually means you throw away the computer. You basically rent a device for the price of buying it. It's never "your" device.
Another huge difference is on the software side. On Linux, you will not be able to get commercial software, at least the choice is limited. That's a disadvantage, maybe even a huge one. But on the other hand, there is usually a free alternative for most of the missing software. For me, the change from mac to Linux means a couple of hundred dollars in yearly software purchase got freed and I personally have no issues with the free alternatives at all.
It's typically much harder to set things up on Linux. But at the same time, being obliged and able to setup things yourself often makes many things possible that just won't work on mac. There are very few if any things you can't do on Linux that you can on mac but a lot of them vice versa. One of the few things is to develop native software for Apple products. It was the reason why I used Apple products for a while. I don't miss macOS now that the requirement is no longer there.
On macOS, when things do not "just work" they won't work at all and the reason usually is that Apple pulled a plug and you need to buy new hardware, even if what you want to do does not require that new hardware at all. You're just being baited into donating to Apple cause. That happened over and over again during the 10+ years I was using macOS.
The main difference between Linux on one and Apple and Microsoft on the other side is that the latter are controlled by corporate business while the former is not controlled at all. This did not matter so much in the past, but it looks like this is becoming more and more important. In the past, the strategy to compete with your peer and the strategy to milk your customers were alternatives that were in a balance. It's getting more cost effective for the likes of Apple to focus on optimizing their customers instead of optimizing their products. The conflict with the EU shows that all to obviously.
macOS has by far some of the best professional software out in many fields, other it lacks completely or has spotty compatibility. But for Ai applications it has a built in Neural Engine, which means you can do very advanced image generation and ai chat without any graphics cards or incompatibilities with Nvidia. You can run some of the best graphic design software like Affinity, or desktop publishing, video editing, and some light 3d modeling. It has Logic, and amazing compatibility with audio software and hardware for a music studio, and compatibility with advanced networking hardware for video editing. Linux has freedom, but it doesn’t have Scrivener for writing, or Adobe or Final Cut or Logic. macOS comes with a complete suite of industry leading software for “free”. The gaming situation on Linux is generally better than ever with the Steamdeck, and you can use most hardware to run Linux, so its very customizable as you say. But overall the “apple tax” is worth it to anyone who uses that professional software to make money. For basics, or specific software Linux is just fine. For programmers or very tech savvy people its very good. But MacOS overall just brings more to the table. You can run anything open source you can find on Linux on a Mac with zero issues, but the same can’t be said the other way around.
@@ghost-user559 You make good points there. However, when you say "macOS comes with [..] software for free", the Apple tax comes rolling in. I have 6 macs here, only one of which still receives updates. Each one is maxed out, because that's what you have to do with a mac. That's $15K of hardware. Of the 6, one runs macOS, 4 Linux and one I don't use because it draws more power than the rest together.
For writing, I use org mode. I could run Emacs on a mac, but when I worked on macs I didn't. It's probably a mind set thing, Emacs doesn't look and feel maccedy and when you're on the Apple road, it's an alien thing to use. Since I started with org mode, I wouldn't want to use anything else ever again for that purpose.
I don't know how much money I spend on software for macs. Certainly more than 5K, probably less than 10K. I don't miss any of that, now that the mac that still has macOS is not actually running but waiting for the next iOS project in storage.
It certainly depends on what you are actually doing if macOS or Linux is the better choice for you. Independent of all that, I'm really happy not to have to listen to "even better than ever before" anymore while looking at an Apple pencil sticking out the bottom of an iPad or seeing "Operation failed" while I expected it to just work and there is nothing I can do either way.
I'm using Linux since before it was delivered on floppy disks and BSD when it made a difference whether the 386 was put before or after the BSD. For me, macOS is a BSD with a lot of paywalls around it. That may be responsible for my view on Apple's business practices.
Can you please create a comparison video between all 6 GNOME 46 Linux distributions.
Cut and paste on a mac is there, it's just different. Use copy as normal, then after right clicking at the destination folder, simply hold the option key, to change the 'Paste Item' entry into 'Move Item Here'.
That's just the mac way, the option key affect other context menus too.
To cut and paste on mac, copy the folder, then in the new folder you want to paste to, press option key and right click then choose "Move item here"
Which theme are you using in fedora?
Which Linux distribution is this?
what theme are you using for gnome shell? Very nice setup you go there
3:00 that's a true fact. Window Management is bad on Mac. You have to use apps like Rectangle to solve the problem
How about running MS office apps on Linux ?
Which Linux distribution are you using?
Fedora 39/40
edit - on the file manager i will hard disagree Nautilus is quite possibly the worst file manager i have ever used in linux world. Thunar and Dolphin(the kde one) is far far superior in every way shape and form.
me a window manager(hyprland) user be like - peasants stuck on their desktop environment. the terminal is my environment.
(but for better or for worse) its either you fix your issue in 2 minutes or you nuke your entire desktop nothing in between
not apple to apple, these not macOS vs linux, thats macOS vs Gnome,,, how about macOS vs i3 or XFCE? who is the fastest ??
Double clicking the window top bar on Mac is an app-specific feature. Default is to `fit space`, some devs do whatever they want though. There's a Gnome Extension btw for hiding the top bar.
WHICH DISTRO IS IT?
Distributions didn't matter in this comparison
If ms office and adobe creative cloud came to linux the scene would change completely
LibreOffice is a very competent alternative to MS-Office.
Yes, you can nit-pick minor differences all day long, but I’ve used LibreOffice since its OpenOffice days, and find it more than adequte (Ok, I intensely dislike MS, but hey, who’s counting 😂…and Full-Disclosure - I donate yearly to the LibreOffice Foundation, among a few other FOSS)
when you minimise or close the window, select app using command + tab, release tab, hold command + option key to open minimised window.
5:25 , cut and copy shortcuts are merged, it will move the file if you paste using cmd+option/alt+v and copy the file if you paste using cmd+v only.
Thanks mate
@@uncoverplus there's an easier way. Copy the files as usual and right click to paste. When pasting, press the option key on your keyboard and the right click menu's 'paste' option will change to 'move'. This actually is an equally good implementation but in my eyes, is a better implementation as it discourages the use of cut and paste. This is a good thing because if you're cutting and pasting files, if the transfer doesn't complete successfully for what-ever-reason, you could end up with corrupted files on both sides. So better practice is copy and paste the file. If successful, confirm the pasted file's integrity and then delete the previous files. This way you don't risk the chance of losing your data if something goes wrong. But, if you still want to cut and paste because the file isn't so important and you're in the flow of moving something to a usb to test something for example, sure, right click as usual and just press the option key to replace the paste option with move. I'll post this comment in the main comment section as well in case it helps someone.
In my mac taste I almost never cut/copy, On the same drive it always moves. On different drive always copy. I throw every file in to the air with yoink. then selective/whole drop it on target app, The target app just consume it like magic😊😊
The main problem is, quality software are not available in linux/ubuntu. The rest doesn't matter.
@@facbedstudio what quality software?!
@@facbedstudio That's BS. I stopped using anything except Linux on the desktop some 15 years ago. Haven't had any problems with applications ever. During this time, I had to use macOS at work for a year. I hated it. Even finding the right apps for somewhat less common uses was inconvenient at best, even compared to Windows. When you use macOS professionally, with tons of apps and multiple instances of the same app running at the same time, macOS is awful.
It's not a comparison video, it's essentially a rant about mac.
It IS a comparison video.
to cut and paste in MacOS, copy just like you do normally - cmd + c, but during pasting whether you are pasting using the mouse/trackpad right click or cmd+v use the option key as well...that does the move operation or cut and paste operation in MacOS.
Can you add Windows and ChromeOS to the mix as well?
Ewwwww
You don't have to pay for linux as it can be installed in any pc whereas you have to pay for mac os as it is a apple based product and work only in macbook
I don't know but on Linux, I am more productive and focused to my work but when i switch to windows I got distracted easily. I don't know why??
2:33 the gesture is opening mission control, you can use F3 or ctrl + up as a keyboard shortcut or if your mission control app is on your dock you can just click on it.
For file transfer between Android and Mac you can use same old KDE connect that we had in GNOME (GS Connect), isn't as perfect as linux breaks a lot but when it works its still the best option we have
Btw we're on same boat XD
Macbook air m1
GNOME
Flutter
Nice suggestion. Although I don't copy much stuff to or from my phone to my desktops.
Haha noice and wow you're into flutter too.
Do leave a sub if you find this video cool!
@@uncoverplus already subbed following you since arc technologies!
@@uncoverplusAlso a solution to that minimise issue you can use cmd + h (Hide window) then window will show up while using cmd + tab.
Plus, Karabiner elements is very good tool to customise the keybindings.
Oh wow thanks a tonnnn!
And thanks for the tips too. The command tab problem was so very frustrating. 😕
I would rather suggest openmtp
02:15 hey how'd you made the top bar round or floating? What extension is that ? ... Also top bar disappears when you full screen using Function key f11 .
Yes yes I know that f11 key
Should have mentioned it.
It's not an extension. It's a shell theme. I'm using a slightly modified version of Everforest.
There's also a Hide Top Bar extension available, which hides it, and only makes it visible when your mouse goes near the top.
(1) install Hide Top Bar extention to auto hide top bar
(2). Libre office is compatible with Microsoft Word if you install MSFonts.
When I have more time, I plan to transform a retro gaming Optiplex I have into a triple booted system, with Windows 7, Linux, and MacOS. Then I'll have the ultimate $100 PC!
what is this linux distro u used in the video?
not sure but I think it is fedora, tho the wm is 100% gnome
He uses Fedora 40 with the Gnome Desktop Environment
Brother you presentation was so clean and crisp ofc like mrwtb... #one more suggestion , in animation keep showing the points or star, so audience can follow the completion..rather u describing the point everytime 👋🙂
This is the best comparaison i've seen so far. You really went deep and and provided useful insight. Thank you. Do you have a video comparaison on web browser?
The great strength of MacOS and the whole Apple environment is the integration between Mac, iPad, iPhone, iSwatch as well as the great innovation. I just installed Linux mint 21.3 on an old MacBook Air mid 2013 and it’s simply fabulous, but both the quality of the software and the integration don’t entice users to come closer. Another big problem is the enormity of distros that confuse and discourage those who decide to choose Linux and are not an advanced user, system engineer or programmer.
You should try comparing KDE plasma ui with windows ui.
Keeep going... other than the soft hazy texture of the video... you did a nice job making the video and you did your homework on the topic... That was OG...
Thank you so much 😄
Bro to cut paste in Mac do
Select copy and then go to destination and press option+cmd+v
For daily use both macos and gnome on fedora, I'm not agree with you for comparing orange with apple but yes, I still get your point. For gnome it is good for speeder style everything is fast and very productive, but on macos you have to slowdown things and more thinking and more feeling. It give me more imagination more creativity on apple environment. Feeling is not someting we can get it right away. As a more than 12 years mac user the feeling and philosophy in design language on macos is very strong and consistency, I really like it. And for 6 years in linux I really like how productive how flexibility how customizability on my workflows on linux. Then I love both, but if I have to choose one, It will always be macos😊
2:28 bar won’t make much difference but turning on dark mode by holding brightness button is annoying. How biased are you😒
Wnna install linux, not sure if Fedora or PopOS! Which one would you suggest me?
Fedora
Been using fedora ever since. I freaking love it
These are some little thinga you ar talking about more important is if your system is supporting softwares that you are willing to use and if its fits for your usecase
Please share your GNOME setup
You are biased bro, mac is really simple for daily use
@@paneervaibhav that’s what I’m saying lol
5:30 you can use the shortcut Option + Command + V to move a file or folder to a new location
Windows user converted to Mac user here. MacOS's default window management kind of sucks. It works pretty well for a small laptop screen, but if you use a dock to plug into bigger screens its really frustrating. I use something called RectangleApp or just Reactangle to solve it. Its been extremely helpful to make MacOS's window management usable on big screens.
Also side note, I'm glad he pointed out the inconsistent maximizing behavior. As someone who stands by MacOS, that feature is just undefendable... what reason could you ever have to make an application that can scale hortionztally only scale vertically. If you really want to have a max text width for readability sake... put margins in the app or something... don't make it so windows can inconsistently maximize across your OS.
did you tired yabai? it's a tiling window manager for macos.
2:52 you can switch between instance of same app using Cmd + Bactik
is it good if i dual boot fedora and windows 11 ? what is minimum requirement for install latest fedora ?
Shortcut to open a folder on MacOS:
CMD+DownArrow
CMD+UpArrow to go one folder up
Works on MacOS and Linux (I think Windows as well)
I personally prefer Sway, it may not be a full desktop but its ultra lightweight (only 30MB of ram usage) and has tiling.
how can i install your linux version or can u give me the link to download it pls 😊
it's fedora I think
Is there any dedicated linux brand such as dell, hp etc. to use Linux on.
slimbook
linux works with everything, tho it works better on some laptop because of drivers compatibility
You can set the Dock on macOS to automaticly hide. Also for using exposé/mission control you press the F3. There is no snapping window on macOS, I use app called Rectangle. It is free and it has the same snapping feautre like Windows. Also I just laerned to close apps using Cmd + Q. You can cut things in macOS. You will use Cmd + C, but while pasting you will use Cmd + Option + V and this is how you will cut files and texts on macOS. For writing to NTFS you need 3rd party app for it. My dad who works for Microsoft here in Czechia says, that NTFS is the worst file system ever. Also I have all my disks formated to exFAT to use it on both macOS and Windows.
I use BetterTouchTool which adds snapping plus a ridiculous amount of customization. You can even use MIDI devices to trigger macros and shortcuts! It’s $22 for lifetime license but totally worth it.
I really liked your video and things that you tell us about. But i think video needs some soft background music.
Linux is a place where learning is endless but if you are excited the journey would be of a rollercoaster and enjoyable at the same time.
Well said!
Using Linux since 2008, in all my laptops, desktops never looked back .
If you don't like something in Linux, you can customize to be as close as possible to other OSes. Differently from Windows or MacOS.
Is that mint? The majority of what I have used/done now has always been in a RHEL derivative.
no it's ferdora I think but mint is good too
10:44 Where I can find your app...
Whoops forgot to add the link.
www.patreon.com/posts/98779456?
Available for free on Patreon. You can check the GitHub for a more recent version. Some bug fixes are there.
github.com/arcnations-united/evolve
If you want to switch between multiple instances of the same app instead of trying to use cmd + tab, you can just use cmd + ` (just above the tab button), it will swtich between the multiple instances of the same app.
Secondly, if you want to cut something, just copy it and while pasting it instead of using cmd + v, press Cmd + Option + V, it will cut it.
shift+cmd+v actually move the file from source to destination, which works like cut and paste