These are the problems you're facing on Linux, and I'm baffled!

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июн 2024
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    Timecodes:
    00:00 Intro
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    02:41 Linux Skill Level
    03:39 Difficult things on Linux
    06:12 Hardware issues
    08:48 Software issues
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    It seems like the vast majority of people who answered aren't beginners with Linux: 39% said they knew their way around Linux, and 10% said Linux had no secrets for them. The "middle of the road" answer, being "I understand how things wok, but I'm no expert" gathered 40% of answers, and only 10% of answers in total described themselves as what I'd call beginners, with 9% saying they had a lot to learn, and 1% saying it was a brand new world.
    So, what is difficult to accomplish on Linux? What seems to be the most annoying thing to deal with is integrating Linux systems with other devices, 36% of people picked this as a pain point.
    The second big pain point is "using existing hardware", 28% of people picked this as a problem, and finding compatible hardware was a problem for 24% of people.
    Interestingly, installing Linux was not picked as a pain point, only 4% of people said it was a problem.
    Most people who answered have experiences hardware issues on Linux. 44% said they had a problem they could fix, and 36% said they had an issue they couldn't solve.
    In terms of the main problematic components, there were a few surprises here. First are GPUs: 34% of people said they had trouble with their GPU.
    Also a surprise: gaming controllers and peripherals: 9% of people who answered said they had troubles here. Wifi and Bluetooth at 17% each are sort of surprising to me as well, I thought this was a thing of the past, but apparently not.
    Now, as per software related problems, here again, Linux has issues. 48% of people who answered said they faced a software problem they could fix, and 35% said they faced one they couldn't solve. Only 14% said they didn't face any software related problems.
    As per the problematic categories, the biggest offender is sleep / wake and suspend, 30% of answers pointed that as a problem. App compatibility is also a big issue, 29% of people said Linux wasn't a supported platform for the software they needed to use.
    Gaming is a sore spot, with 27% of people answering they're facing problems there.
    So, 37% of people who answered said they could do most of what they wanted, but not everything. 33% said they could do everything, but some things were harder than on other platforms.
    26% said they could do everything they wanted on Linux, and only 4% in total said many or most things they needed to do weren't possible on Linux.
    As per the general experience of using Linux, most people seem to feel their system is very reliable: 56% said they have a few issues that don't impact their trust in their OS, 38% said they didn't worry about stability at all, and only 6% in total said they had frequent issues that make them lose trust in Linux as their OS.
    71% of people who answered also said their experience with Linux was very good, better than other operating systems, and 6% said it was perfect without issues.
    16% said it was good, and on par with other operating systems, and 6% in total said their experience was bad or very bad, as in worse than other OSes to downright unusable.
    Most people also felt they absolutely needed the command line to fix problems on their systems. 50% said they had to use it a bit, and 28% said it was mandatory to get a usable system. Only 23% said they didn't need to use the command line at all.
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Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @TheLinuxEXP
    @TheLinuxEXP  27 дней назад +31

    Go to ground.news/TLE to to know where your news is coming from. Subscribe through my link for 40% off unlimited access this month.

    • @trajectoryunown
      @trajectoryunown 27 дней назад +1

      I wonder if the crashes and bugs are related to trying to run Windows programs using WINE.

    • @andrive
      @andrive 27 дней назад

      Thumbnail change

    • @DavidJonSpem
      @DavidJonSpem 27 дней назад +3

      NVIDIA is only fine on wayland with the 555 drivers but a lot of distro's don't ship these drivers since they're in BETA. By the time you made the survey NVIDIA didn't have these drivers. Also the 555 drivers aren't perfect and we still have to hope the 560 drivers, which will ship everywhere, are better.

    • @TheSensationalMr.Science
      @TheSensationalMr.Science 27 дней назад

      so TL;DR the main troubling issues of Linux are:
      Application Issues [Installation, Bugs, Crashes, Gaming, etc. {office suites? huh? what about them?}]
      Graphical Issues [GPU, Wayland vs. Xwayland vs. Xorg, etc.]
      Sleep/Wake [basically issues with C-states and weird noises because of either lack of support or too new and thus not properly adapted for normal use.]
      yeah, with Xwayland I can see why [constant crashing until recent update]. same with gaming why that is an issue. one moment you are playing minecraft and the next you find out after an update you installed, that it has a background [red mojang logo background or black screen] stutter into and out of frame [in front of the actual gameplay]... BTW personal issue of mine due to Nvidia GPU drivers not working with minecraft possibly regarding OpenGL and framebuffers. [or it's another issue... don't know the exact issue right now... would be nice to have some sort of method to the madness of troubleshooting applications to make them work. maybe you could make that into a video series.]
      also some issues that rise specifically with WINE [and some other apps with dependencies] it seems is that once it updates that it no longer works with that specific config for a game that worked before... also Wayland and WINE seem to not have had connected as of yet... though that might be my ignorance getting in the way of my progress.
      though for install? nope, no issues [on Nobara Linux BTW, also calameres {the installer package for most Distro's} is why installing Linux isn't hard]. Gaming if not in steam, but in WINE? oh yeah... definitely some issues... mostly with performance... but also anti-cheat or other "Digital Rights Management" software [Corpo Malware like Uplay].
      Hope you have a great day & Safe Travels!

    • @TheSensationalMr.Science
      @TheSensationalMr.Science 27 дней назад +3

      @@DavidJonSpem that explains the minecraft stutter bug I have been having [two different frames taking turns to be displayed like a solid red background and the actual game itself]. didn't know that. thanks.
      Hope you have a great day & Safe Travels!

  • @bloxxer02
    @bloxxer02 27 дней назад +1110

    Please post a short video to alert me of these polls in the future. I don't use mastadon and youtube never shows me community posts I want to see.

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  27 дней назад +444

      Not a bad idea! This could definitely boost the number of answers!

    • @Lampe2020
      @Lampe2020 27 дней назад +106

      @@TheLinuxEXP
      I would have answered in that poll too if I had kniwn it was around :D

    • @revmaillet
      @revmaillet 27 дней назад +48

      I had no idea the poll was going on so I would have voted if I had known

    • @brawndottm
      @brawndottm 27 дней назад +21

      Genuinely could have done with this.

    • @praetorxyn
      @praetorxyn 27 дней назад +21

      Seconded. I didn’t know about this.

  • @Winnetou17
    @Winnetou17 27 дней назад +405

    15:46 The need of using the CLI question needs an extra answer "I actually like using the CLI, so I don't know if it works without it"

    • @carlosgois2097
      @carlosgois2097 27 дней назад +41

      Also Arch and other advanced distros would skew the data

    • @computerguymiguel
      @computerguymiguel 27 дней назад +53

      Absolutely, I have no idea if there is nice GUI app and I don't care

    • @Winnetou17
      @Winnetou17 27 дней назад

      @@carlosgois2097 Yeah, that's the thing, I'm on Gentoo and I actually wanted to have fewer programs in general, and fewer GUI ones or intermediary or "just management" ones.
      Like, before I struggled for 2 days to make the work VPN ... work, I was connecting to Wi-Fi using wpa_cli. Then I gave up and installed NetworkManager, which I'm using only from CLI (I don't even know if I can have something GUI from it, in dwm).
      So I absolutely have to use the CLI, but that's only because I set it up like that.

    • @MaryamMaqdisi
      @MaryamMaqdisi 27 дней назад +23

      This, the cli changed my life

    • @LoL-hx1fo
      @LoL-hx1fo 27 дней назад +18

      And then there are people like me who despise using CLI tools unless they are related to development

  • @temari2860
    @temari2860 27 дней назад +241

    Regarding your experience being better than the stats - I think it has to do with the fact that you're running modern hardware specifically compatible with Linux, while many people run hardware from manufacturers that don't care about Linux. Especially the devices from lesser known brands with most aggressive prices.

    • @Noyota2
      @Noyota2 27 дней назад +11

      I have used old and new; recently retired my 2005 laptop running MX Linux Xfce 32-bit, no problems as everything just worked. I can relate so many true stories of several Linux distros simply just working. It was my Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit that didn't have drivers for any of my array of peripherals. Anyone that loved that Win 7 crapware is certifiable insane. A lethargic, top-heavy, resource hungry beast incompatible with everything including itself.

    • @Jeycht
      @Jeycht 27 дней назад +6

      @@Noyota2 I must be the lucky one then (as the guy repeat in vid). W7 was pretty stable for me, resources wise it was fine (not like a lite linux but compare to actual windows it was nothing) but I didn''t use a laptop and I could even still use really old stuff without up to date drivers for W7 that I had to dl by myself but still works. (not the case anymore for some of them on W10-11)

    • @lumeronswift
      @lumeronswift 27 дней назад +4

      I don't buy any hardware specifically intended for Linux. I occasionally double check if other people have TRIED it, but it's fairly rare for hardware to be incompatible - especially if you use something Arch-based like EndeavourOS or Manjaro, as they have the latest hardware covered. Manjaro probably the better option for complete newbies.

    • @RadikAlice
      @RadikAlice 27 дней назад

      @@lumeronswift I would suggest Endeavour over Manjaro if we have to stick to rolling releases

    • @0hN0es203
      @0hN0es203 26 дней назад +2

      Yes. I installed Linux on an HP AMD laptop recently. Its a few years old and everything worked, except for the backlight controls. It took me an hour to find the solution online (a kernel module that needed to be disabled in GRUB) and I've been using Linux for literally 30 years.

  • @lilBugger35
    @lilBugger35 27 дней назад +59

    I've been using Linux for a long time now but I remember when I started I never once was able to ask a question without being told it was a stupid question. So I stopped asking questions and figure stuff out the hard way. To this day I will never ask anything on a Linux Forum. I might read them but I will never add anything.

    • @AM-yk5yd
      @AM-yk5yd 27 дней назад +16

      And when they answer, when they answer, it's often a nonsense. I had difficulties with wifi from intel not working and was told to install broadcom drivers

    • @kevinsteinman8967
      @kevinsteinman8967 27 дней назад

      @@AM-yk5yd I've found the best way to get the right answer on toxic forums is to use well in windows we can do this or do that to fix this or that. Been working for me a long time instead of RTFM answers all the time.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад +3

      You know what the Duke said, don't you? Life is hard. Life is harder if you're stupid.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад +1

      @@AM-yk5yd I'd have told you to plug in an ethernet cable. Screw wireless. Twisted pair gang!

    • @AM-yk5yd
      @AM-yk5yd 27 дней назад +5

      @@1pcfred I want to use laptop on the go. Can't exactly bring ethernet to the restaurant. (Can bring usb cable and attach phone and USB modem though)

  • @ismaproton
    @ismaproton 27 дней назад +248

    Another important point regarding Linux users is to ask if they are developers or not, Linux experience is often linked to people being devs

    • @fakecubed
      @fakecubed 27 дней назад +16

      Yes, this is an essential question to ask, and would really skew things.

    • @SvenHeidemann-uo2yl
      @SvenHeidemann-uo2yl 27 дней назад +17

      I automatically assume that more than a quarter here are at least dabble in dev.

    • @SvenHeidemann-uo2yl
      @SvenHeidemann-uo2yl 27 дней назад +5

      I am a dev myself, but I am still on windows.
      I require Linux compatibility and use cygwin as of now.
      Got a new pc arriving soon and I will try mint on it.

    • @nifftbatuff676
      @nifftbatuff676 27 дней назад +3

      Computers make sense only if they can be programmed.

    • @SegNode
      @SegNode 27 дней назад

      @@SvenHeidemann-uo2yl I highly recommend WSL, very useful.

  • @CookiLover311
    @CookiLover311 27 дней назад +80

    I feel like it's important to note that some of these issues might have been getting a lower amount of votes because it's not something everyone does in general. Of course not a lot of people have problems with scientific work, not everyone is a scientist

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  27 дней назад +9

      Of course !

    • @definitlynotbenlente7671
      @definitlynotbenlente7671 27 дней назад

      There are no almost no professional CAD programs avaliable on linux and if you have a nice usecase like medical imaging or using scientific equipment there is almost no suport on linux at all ​@@TheLinuxEXP

    • @Capiosus
      @Capiosus 27 дней назад +2

      this is such great feedback

    • @Guishan_Lingyou
      @Guishan_Lingyou 26 дней назад +1

      @@TheLinuxEXP Yeah, if you wanted to gauge how much of an issue doing scientific work is, you'd have to have a question asking if people do it, and then follow up how many of them have problems. But it's unlikely you would get enough data for a significant result.

  • @justinmalcolm6287
    @justinmalcolm6287 27 дней назад +166

    A lot of the “surprises” here feel like they simply follow from the fact that Nick buys hardware designed to run Linux. He also uses the distribution designed to work with that HW I believe. So, of course he is not going to experience the problems NVIDIA users run into in general including what will appear to be bugs in the DE. On the office suite side, he may be right about Only Office. Again though, he is not trying to interact with people heavily leveraging MS Office. Just failing to install the MS fonts can totally screw-up PowerPoint and Word. It does not take a very complicated spreadsheet to uncover missing features. I have used Linux exclusively for years but I get what people are saying. In LibreOffice, I just had a problem where spellcheck was not working ( due to a dictionary issue apparently ) and I sent out a resume with a bunch of errors. It may have cost me a job. For office environments, Outlook is also still a big problem. I use Outlook on the web but that does not work for everyone.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад +1

      I use Nvidia on Linux and I don't have any problems. But I started using Nvidia on Linux with a MX 200 board. That was the second board they ever made. I was using Nvidia on Linux before Nvidia released their binary driver for Linux. So the good old nv driver. Which really wasn't all that good. Then I ran the binary driver within the first hour it was ever released. I was on that like flies on honey. Nvidia devs personally got me up and running in fact. It wasn't like you could Google how to do it back then. Google didn't even exist. Asking Jeeves wouldn't have helped either.

    • @joeschmoe7324
      @joeschmoe7324 27 дней назад

      Wine tricks can get you those core font just fine. Finding upto date Lutris install scripts can automate installing the font required for your application.

    • @dutchbachelor
      @dutchbachelor 27 дней назад +4

      I use a Lenovo Gaming Desktop with an Nvidia RTX2080, running PopOS without any issues whatsoever, no config needed. That PC was definitely not made for Linux.
      I hear you on Office applications though. Most documents I send out are converted to PDF however, so the formatting is not that much of an issue. As for sending out the resume with errors: I would never just rely on the computer for that anyway and always have a friend or someone you trust read it over. There are errors that no spellcheck will ever catch. ;-)

    • @Daniel_VolumeDown
      @Daniel_VolumeDown 27 дней назад

      yeah spreedsheets in libre office and only office are missing features.
      BUT I have heard that google docs spreedsheets are very matured now and also it is possible to use them offline. BUT at the same time I guess people who answered the survey are not using google docs, either because they don't want to use google stuff or because they didn't even thought about it or don't know taht they can use them offline.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад

      @@dutchbachelor PDF export is smart. That gives you more control over document formatting.

  • @TurntableTV
    @TurntableTV 27 дней назад +43

    I have a friend that plays competitive CounterStrike and he wanted to switch to Linux, due to Microsoft crapifying the Windows 11 operating system. I guided him to use a distro like Fedora or Ubuntu and what he struggled with was setting up a custom resolution. He plays with 1440x1080 stretched on a 1080p monitor. I did help him set that up but it involved making bash scripts with nvidia command line that are executed via CounterStrike's launch options. That's messy. You could argue that this is an edge case.... well it's not. Even non-pro players play with these wacky resolutions (it helps them see the player model better as it is stretched). In Windows you can just go to nvidia control panel and add that custom res. You'll never touch the command line. In Linux, that can be a headache for a normal user.

    • @lumeronswift
      @lumeronswift 27 дней назад

      You can't make the adjustments in the NVIDIA X Server Settings app? It's essentially NVIDIA Control Panel but in Linux. Showed up in my EndeavourOS install without any manual adjustments at all... can't speak for Fedora.

    • @weab
      @weab 27 дней назад +2

      I'm pretty sure gamescope could accomplish this but might introduce latency when running in a full desktop environment. CS is my forever game but thankfully I've always preferred a correct aspect ratio and haven't had to deal with this issue.

    • @mmstick
      @mmstick 24 дня назад +2

      > it helps them see the player model better as it is stretched
      This is a myth that does not actually work in practice. I say this as someone who used to play a lot of Counter-Strike, DOD, TF2, etc. back in the day.
      In reality, this is narrowing your field of view and significantly hampering precision. Tweak mouse DPI instead of display resolution.

    • @twiistedpanda4781
      @twiistedpanda4781 24 дня назад +1

      ​@@mmstickwell why in the flying fuck most pros use a 4:3 res stretched
      Like you know, the fucking cream of the crop of cs players

    • @mmstick
      @mmstick 24 дня назад +1

      @@twiistedpanda4781 They don't. Higher resolutions make it much easier to aim precisely at a distance. Ultrawides give you the advantage of seeing what's around you.

  • @josegarita2718
    @josegarita2718 27 дней назад +118

    Linux admin here, and I'm facing issues with the WiFi adapter that came soldered in my motherboard, it's working relatively fine, but the signal is not as stable as in windows (disconnected often in the middle of a game and download speeds were bad), I managed to have an overkill workaround with a full networking redesign in my house and connecting everything via cable, but I can see how people are still facing small issues like this.
    Also I had an issue with the speakers in a HP Laptop that I had to patch and recompile the kernel to get it working, not a very newbie friendly process, this is fixed now in mainline though but still not as easy as just install and forget.

    • @eivis13
      @eivis13 27 дней назад +3

      Having similar issues with an old Qualcomm chipset (killer N1202) on an even older laptop (inspiron 1520(yes, the 8600mgt is still original and fully functional)). I'm guessing my issues are more related to the 5ghz bandwidth and original antenna not being meant for 5ghz connections (even ye old PocoF1 is getting a better signal).
      Having tried Linux on an infamous Miix 2 10 all in one back in 2015 i can attest that there needs to be a better way to diagnose audio drivers/codecs not working. Also touch pad gesture support OBE is something to be desired.

    • @esphilee
      @esphilee 27 дней назад +1

      I am having issue with the speakers. I am using Linux mint on my Lenovo slim 7i the current model. It works with Headphone, just not the built-in speakers.
      It doesn’t bother me much as i use Headphone most of the time anyway.
      I am waiting for the new Kernel update that might solve it. I think they have the problem sorted in version 6.5

    • @josegarita2718
      @josegarita2718 27 дней назад

      @@esphilee we are actually at 6.9.3 kernel, you can update your kernel manually and get it solved, 6.5 is already end of life

    • @mrfuzzy2954
      @mrfuzzy2954 27 дней назад +1

      I had that issue 4 years ago with wifi on ubuntu and mint. Worked fine on fedora. I'm too much of a layman to even begin to look for a solution so i just stuck with fedora

    • @Corporatizm
      @Corporatizm 27 дней назад +1

      Same, Linux admin too, and just couldn't make my Wifi work well. That being said, have you tried tweaking the power management settings of your Wifi card ? I think it solved 90% of the performance issues I had, try to Google it, it's a config file tweak I can't remember rn.

  • @alexk4894
    @alexk4894 27 дней назад +366

    Today we have way higher expectations than a few years ago.
    2015-2020: "Look! My favorite game now works on Linux. That's amazing!"
    2020-Now: "Ohh, this game with anti-cheat and two very specific apps don't work on Linux at all. Linux is not so good."
    Same with hardware. Almost everything works just fine and people feel disappointed when something does not work out of the box.

    • @jorge86rodriguez
      @jorge86rodriguez 27 дней назад +50

      I feel we are at a stage that linux is good enough that I wish the community could focus on selling pre installed hardware with linux like the orange pi neo, steam deck, system 76, etc...
      Instead of creating new distros and desktop enviroments XD

    • @RealFlicke
      @RealFlicke 27 дней назад +31

      Between your comment and the top were already two commentors saying that WIFI didn't work correctly for them. And on my old ThinkPad were I recently installed NixOS (stable) it's always like a 50% chance that the trackpad will not work after booting. Also on another computer the new printer was not supported and I was forced to switch the distro. Not everything is fine just because it works for you.

    • @DePhoegonIsle
      @DePhoegonIsle 27 дней назад +37

      Look, I get what your going at, but here is the fact of the matter.... should your everyday user need to worry about if 'X' system will work or if it's not mainstream enough? Should the end user feel stress over 'well I bought more of an exotic solution compared to what the developers usually buy'.
      The fact is, the largest linux problem is ... 'drivers' and HW support. you just can't assume your system is everyone elses, and ... for an operating system all about user freedom and choice.... there is sure a hell of alot of limitatins and landmines laying around for those whom either don't want to buy the same thing, can't buy it because their used market is garbage or those models of pcs just never existed in their market or can never stay in stock.
      Windows has it's issues, for sure... .but when it comes down to it, I never go part shopping for my computer (for w/e reason) and think 'oh, I found a good deal.... now to see if my OS will play nicely with it.

    • @FireFoxDestroyer
      @FireFoxDestroyer 27 дней назад +5

      Fortnite actually worked for me once on Linux

    • @ignaciocampos8435
      @ignaciocampos8435 27 дней назад +9

      You're exactly right but it doesn't mean it's not an important problem, the mentality of "It just works" means that we now have higher standards for how an OS experience should be, and in that regard desktop Linux, though improved, it's still an inferior option for the common person.

  • @Beryesa.
    @Beryesa. 27 дней назад +54

    Nick: has the most optimal hardware vendors and software picks
    Also Nick: I'm really lucky, I guess
    :D

  • @thekidneystoner6183
    @thekidneystoner6183 27 дней назад +77

    Hardware absolutely does not work out of the box on linux. GPU issues are very common. Take a laptop with a hybrid GPU setup (Intel plus Nvidia) - a very common setup. Just does not work in most cases, and every update breaks something. Bluetooth is hit or miss. Device connections break on reboot often. Tons of specialised devices like audio interfaces have problems. Try using multiple monitors with different refresh rates on Linux, neither Gnome or KDE work with it. Operating systems that do not support fractional display scaling are very hard to use for me. I am a developer, and servers I work on run Linux, they work really well, but hardware support on desktop Linux has to get better if people want it to gain marketshare. Is the responsibility on the hardware device manufacturers? Sure, but they don’t care because linux users aren’t numerous enough. If you are using a computer to run Linux, then things are fine. If you are using Linux to get something done, like gaming, audio work, video work etc, you will have issues with the hardware often used for these things.

    • @AlucardNoir
      @AlucardNoir 27 дней назад +1

      true.

    • @Ash_18037
      @Ash_18037 27 дней назад

      Yeah hardware is still a complete lottery on linux. If you have an existing system running windows with important internal hardware and external peripherals (for getting your work done or gaming) then you have no option but to create a few USB live distros and actually try them out to see which is looking the most compatible (or even works) on your setup. There is no other way. Even this is not perfect. I wish it was a simple process to create a proper (not just readonly) USB distro as often driver installs need a reboot which is obviously pointless on a readonly install.

    • @ancalagonyt
      @ancalagonyt 27 дней назад

      @@Ash_18037 You can install Linux to a USB drive.
      I had a hard drive crash, so I used a random Linux boot DVD (Mageia, which I hadn't ever used or even heard of prior to this), and once I had the live system up, I pressed the install button and it installed on the thumb drive as if it were a hard drive.
      There has been one drawback; sometimes things take significantly longer to respond than you'd expect, especially using firefox with multiple open tabs loading a lot in the background. This is because the USB drive is slower than a regular hard drive; I've used Linux on this exact machine on the hard drive before it crashed, without that problem.
      So, with the caveat that installing on a thumb drive is definitely not ideal and you can get lag issues you wouldn't otherwise get, it is an installation of Linux, so you should be able to test and/or troubleshoot drivers on this kind of setup, without putting it on a hard drive.

    • @AzureSoukyuu
      @AzureSoukyuu 26 дней назад +3

      Different refresh rates (or scaling) with multiple monitors not working is an X11 thing, not a DE thing.

    • @jfolz
      @jfolz 26 дней назад +8

      Hard disagree on hardware compatibility. Would it be nice for everything to work perfectly with Linux? Yes. Is that realistic? No. That's not even realistic with Windows or MacOS. Why do people blame Linux in these situations? Mac people don't blame MacOS if some Windows peripherals don't work. They buy the stuff that says MacOS on them so they know it works. That's the real problem I'm facing before purchase: Finding out if a piece of kit will work or not can be really difficult. That's what we need to work on. And we need to buy from manufacturers that do support Linux.

  • @ChristopherNyberg-iz6qv
    @ChristopherNyberg-iz6qv 27 дней назад +31

    This video was rough to watch. The last thing the Linux community needs if it wants wider adoption is "don't know what your problem is. Works fine on my machine" which this video stated as the summary _to every section_ . You run a poll and then talk down and dismiss people's observations? How is this helpful to anyone?

    • @whoeverofhowevermany
      @whoeverofhowevermany 22 дня назад +8

      If, for whatever reason, a person who is a software developer watches RUclips videos, this video could be useful to learn about user problems to address 😶

    • @DaleDix
      @DaleDix День назад

      This guy is all over the place. He has decided he doesn't like samsung phones because of loose sim cards.

  • @BYROXI5000
    @BYROXI5000 27 дней назад +47

    Just a little bit of critic about the interpretations of results (i'm working on statistics analytics)
    5:52 Here i see maybe the survivor bias. It's not because there is 7.2% of beginners saying they had problems with installing linux, that beginners don't have problems with installing linux (more than 7.2%). No. That means, the beginners who are spending time actively to search for linux information and did find the poll of the channel; didn't have much problems with installing. The people who didn't search your channel and documentation, who tried to install in a windows way for example can just say it's to difficult to install and quit. Why would you answer a poll when you are out of linux documentation or community? (I don't see many people searching for windows documentation when they want to install it) Same thing with beginners who actively use linux (like mint) but who don't have problems and don't use social media to find the poll except documentation.
    Yes the poll can be representative, but we have to take into account the representation of the people who can get into the poll first before making assumptions.
    (Btw begginers is also not defined here: people can considers themselves beginners at different levels even after years of documentation and using linux)

    • @imzesok
      @imzesok 27 дней назад +1

      "people can considers themselves beginners at different levels even after years of documentation and using linux"
      at that point you're just an experienced user in denial though. 🤣
      a beginner is pretty narrowly defined as someone whom has little to no experience with something. it's not commonly understood to mean anything else, tbh. 🤷

    • @matthewmoulton1
      @matthewmoulton1 27 дней назад +1

      @@imzesok I agree with the OP that an objective definition of experience would have been helpful here. Different people expect different levels of mastery to describe their proficiency, but that doesn't mean they are in denial. Compared to a 5-year old, I am an expert in chemistry, but compared to a professional chemical engineer, I am a beginner.
      I honestly have no idea what amount of Linux knowledge is considered typical. There are some people who have been using Linux for 20+ years who know way more than I do. Are they in the majority or is my experience more common?

    • @imzesok
      @imzesok 26 дней назад

      ​@@matthewmoulton1 "I honestly have no idea what amount of Linux knowledge is considered typical."
      Compared to whom exactly? the average linux user, or all people on the planet? the former requires gathering every linux user around the world and testing them individually. The latter, any experience at all is probably considered pretty abnormal. This is why we don't really assume subjective factors like your 5 year old comparison. I feel like you're overthinking it. The various dictionaries exists for a reason after all. 🤷

    • @PrezVeto
      @PrezVeto 23 дня назад

      ​@@imzesok You just spent several sentences making the case for the poll needing to define terms (accidentally, I guess) before summarily implying the opposite. It's still subjective after consulting a dictionary. That's the problem.

    • @imzesok
      @imzesok 23 дня назад

      @@PrezVeto if the point of the dictionary is to DEFINE WORDS, how would that be subjective? seriously, think about it.

  • @grheavy
    @grheavy 27 дней назад +13

    My biggest problem with Linux is, when I encounter any issue and I can't find a solution online, I don't want to spend time to report it. I work as an API support guy and I'm tired of discussing with people at the end of the day 😂

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад +2

      The very last thing I ever want to do is ask for help. But sometimes I've gotta. I will spend weeks on some problems. But if I exhaust every avenue I can think of then I've just got to ask for help.

  • @theaninova
    @theaninova 27 дней назад +110

    Big mistake not asking if people were using an unstable distro by choice. Lots run betas, unstable branches, rolling distros, etc. (including myself), so who knows what the experienced bugs actually mean.

    • @minion3806
      @minion3806 27 дней назад +4

      this ^^

    • @weab
      @weab 27 дней назад +3

      There were a lot of people running bleeding edge distros in the previous poll, so I think a lot of the software bugs and crashes can be attributed to those users. These results definitely aren't representative of the experience one would expect when using a stable LTS release.

    • @MrGamelover23
      @MrGamelover23 27 дней назад +1

      ​@@weabYeah, but a stable LTS release is a bad gaming system.

    • @gerarderloper
      @gerarderloper 27 дней назад +1

      If your using newer hardware then rolling distro's often is the better experience as features and fixes are hot incoming down the pipe and running a older LTS release might mean you must put up with bugs on your newer hardware for MUCH longer.

    • @weab
      @weab 27 дней назад +1

      @@MrGamelover23 That hasn't been my experience at all. Most performance improvements relevant to gaming still make it into the distro through kernel updates.
      The benefits of stability for a gaming system can't be overstated either. I don't want to worry about updates, bugs, etc. when I intend to play. As long as your distro is new enough to properly support your hardware you should be just fine.

  • @Sollace
    @Sollace 27 дней назад +51

    To answer about software problems:
    Yeah. Lots.
    The most annoying has to be when I close an application and it doesn't close. The window goes away but the process hangs around until I close it using System Monitor. And whilst I'm on there, the default "Quite Application" in KDE when something isn't responding also doesn't work. Neither does the "Quit" option in System Monitor. To actually close a program that's not responding I have to specifically do "Send Signal > Sig K*ll".

    • @RealFlicke
      @RealFlicke 27 дней назад +11

      For me it was package manager GUIs / app stores. I tried a few and they were horribly buggy. Having installs load endlessly, not detecting the app status correctly, installed apps not working correctly, loading extremely slow or just crashing. I also bricked systems a few times by installing or removing stuff via the package manager CLI or just by upgrading the system. That made me anxious about installing software on Linux and that's why NixOS is very appealing to me.

    • @Sollace
      @Sollace 27 дней назад +2

      @@RealFlicke The default store that came with KDE or the Manjaro one worked well enough for me.
      Oh man, but I for sure had problems upgrading! I started the upgrade to plasma 6 and pamac uninstalled my kernel then crashed itselt! I had to dig out a usb stick and reinstall a previous version of the kernel from scratch just to get it to boot again, and when I did, KDE had messed up all my settings in the migration!

    • @flagrama
      @flagrama 27 дней назад

      @@RealFlicke I always had problems with Gnome Software on Fedora distros up to about version 38, but this past year or so it seems to actually work. Haven't really experimented with anything on Ubuntu since that's a work system and doesn't really need a bunch of extra software installed from the repos.

    • @m4sterred853
      @m4sterred853 27 дней назад +2

      @@SollaceManjaro is an absolutely broken distro anyway. The experience is very different on distros that actually follow the philosophy of their package managers. Not saying it’s gonna be flawless.

    • @somenameidk5278
      @somenameidk5278 27 дней назад +1

      i have exactly that problem with Don't Starve Together, i have to close the game with steam to make it actually close

  • @SeanKent69
    @SeanKent69 27 дней назад +14

    Application issue here. VLC having sound issues. The fix? Go to tools - preferences - audio - output module and select ALSA audio output. After thats done, go through all the devices until you find something that works. Why is this still an issue? Most users dont want to have to troubleshoot their video/audio player. This is just one example....

    • @AlucardNoir
      @AlucardNoir 27 дней назад +1

      because open source is developed by developers for developers, we're only allowed to use the shit they put out.

    • @SeanKent69
      @SeanKent69 26 дней назад +7

      @@AlucardNoir Until the end user is put first, Linux just isnt going to become used by most users. I have tried over and over again through the years and every time I just end up finding more and more things that should never be an issue in the first place. An OS should just get out of the way and allow the user to work. Im pretty sure Stallman himself said that in the Revolution OS documentary. Windows (while annoying the heck out of me) at least gets out of the way and just works. I would love to use Linux but these nasty little issues need to be resolved.

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu 26 дней назад +7

      if you mention Linux's compatibility issues with developers they become so rude but they take every opportunity to bash Windows. Well guess what, Windows is developed for a wide variety of hardware and works!

  • @computerguymiguel
    @computerguymiguel 27 дней назад +24

    You have to take into account that this answers may not reflect the current state of Linux, but the overall experience of the users across the years. For example, you talk about GPUs not being a problem anymore, but if you ask someone if they ever had issues with GPUs and they had some a couple of years ago, chances are they still perceive it as a problem

    • @hyperspeed1313
      @hyperspeed1313 27 дней назад +2

      Yeah, maybe next time set a time window (like within the last year) as context for all the questions

    • @atrelios
      @atrelios 26 дней назад

      Well to be fair, if I was answering the survey (which I didn't have the changce to) I would have answered that I STILL have problems with GPUs. I am aware, that my problems are coming from the fact that I use(d) a wayland + kde distribution along with nVidia, but I was experiencing crazy issues with heavy flickering and some applications just being flat out unusable, because of graphical glitches etc. Luckily I knew enough to switch to X11, which solved all of those problems, but a (new) user that doesn't know about this, who installs let's say endeavourOS KDE (as it is quite recommended on youtube for gaming) will have a very bad first impression. The nVidia support is still bad in some cases - I know it can still be good and there are patches coming to fix those issues on wayland - but that doesn't change the fact that If a user doesn't know about the whole wayland x11 thing, they may just think that this is just "linux jank".

  • @SeanClarke
    @SeanClarke 27 дней назад +7

    A major pain point for me is the fact that so few hardware manufacturers seem to care about Linux and so few publications ever consider it.
    I'm looking for a new laptop and want one of the the very latest models. Finding out if Linux will work on them is really hard and its really annoying that all the really cool new stuff is made for Windows. Manufacturers need to know that Linux users want the latest gear, we shouldn't accept having to use 2 or 3 generation old hardware.

    • @jfolz
      @jfolz 26 дней назад +3

      Basically this. It's not that hardware isn't supported on Linux - a lot of it does work - but finding out whether some piece of kit is supported or not can be really difficult.

    • @SeanClarke
      @SeanClarke 26 дней назад

      @@jfolz a lot of new stuff isn't supported. Dual screen laptops with removable keyboards, fingerprint scanners, volume dials on keyboards. Often sleep modes don't work.
      Basically the cutting edge stuff is built for windows and then we have to wait for a kernel update or for the manufacturer to support Linux.

    • @jfolz
      @jfolz 26 дней назад +2

      @@SeanClarke I've personally not had any button that didn't work as expected. The fingerprint reader on my T14s also works out of the box. It really does depend on what you buy.

    • @only1muppet
      @only1muppet 13 дней назад

      Google Linux laptops and you’ll see a few companies that specialize in make gaming laptops with Linux distros pre installed, Juno Neptune, System76. Dell even gives the option to have a Linux distro pre installed on their XPS, Alienware and office oriented products.

    • @GoodGirlPeruru
      @GoodGirlPeruru 7 дней назад

      This is _mainly_ a laptop issue, but it _is_ incredibly widespread, and bar mass protests and boycotts eg. Windows refund day, there's almost nothing that could be done to stop the amount of money trading hands between Microsoft and OEMs that leads to stuff like this.
      I would love to see this somehow get fought off though- the idea of barely even being able to REINSTALL an OS on a laptop, god forbid a DIFFERENT OS is genuinely unfathomable to me.

  • @WhiteG60
    @WhiteG60 27 дней назад +81

    I think the biggest 'problem' people have with GPUs is that they don't understand that they DON'T need drivers to be installed. I know I went down the rabbit hole of installing the AMD provided GPU drivers for my 7800XT before realizing that I didn't really have to if all I was doing was gaming. And those drivers always posed some weird problems if not installing them on the exact distro and version specified (Ubuntu 22.04, 20.04, RHEL or SuSe). Even doing a Mint based on 22.04 I had weird issues with the install, but especially after upgrades because Mint had a different kernel version than Ubuntu did. Or that they don't install on Debian nicely, despite Ubuntu being a Debian derivative.
    When I finally figured out that you don't have to do ANYTHING with most modern (anything with 6.3 or newer) distros. It just works. This isn't clearly explained really anywhere that I looked and if you're coming from Windows you assume you need to install/update GPU drivers.

    • @ThePlayerOfGames
      @ThePlayerOfGames 27 дней назад +11

      +1 to this. Coming from Windows I expected to need to go and get drivers. Only to painfully learn that you should try "without" getting anything first!

    • @CuteSkyler
      @CuteSkyler 27 дней назад +3

      I was used to going into the extra drivers tab on Ubuntu to change to proprietary but when I installed an AMD GPU into a different PC with Ubuntu I was confused as to what I should even do; so I downloaded drivers from AMD's site without it working at all before realising that it was pre-installed for me.

    • @SvenHeidemann-uo2yl
      @SvenHeidemann-uo2yl 27 дней назад

      Does this apply to old nvidia cards as well?
      Gonna try mint soon and have a 980 ti

    • @NevelWong
      @NevelWong 27 дней назад +3

      I think nowadays a lot of new linux users apart from the devs are AI researchers. And getting the correct cuda drivers for your obscure mix of TPUs running is a nightmare, even for experienced users.

    • @CuteSkyler
      @CuteSkyler 27 дней назад +1

      @@SvenHeidemann-uo2yl 980Ti isn't that old, dude, it'll work fine.

  • @ThatPineappleBoi
    @ThatPineappleBoi 27 дней назад +44

    Sleep/suspended has been a problem for me on linux mint. After waking up from suspend, I'm guaranteed to encounter a crash within 5 - 10 minutes

    • @NevelWong
      @NevelWong 27 дней назад

      I had a similar issue. It went away when I switched DE.

    • @vicmiklausic5415
      @vicmiklausic5415 27 дней назад

      I have similar issues with sleep and suspend.

    • @summerishere2868
      @summerishere2868 27 дней назад

      hibernation is also a problem on newer laptops.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад +2

      That's an easy fix. Just never sleep.

    • @LePedant
      @LePedant 27 дней назад +2

      I have a problem with my sound card disappearing after my PC wakes from sleep. I have to restart for it to come back. In POP_OS.

  • @Bench468
    @Bench468 27 дней назад +34

    Why make a poll and a video about these issues if you're just going to dismiss things because they either never happened to you, or because you think the user is just not informed enough? Shouldn't the goal be to try and find ways to improve the usability of the OS?

    • @deadpants182
      @deadpants182 27 дней назад

      As someone who's still fairly new to Linux, it's irritating having my issues dismissed as somehow my fault, especially when it comes to things that *just work* on Windows or macOS.

  • @alirahimi92
    @alirahimi92 27 дней назад +12

    It's really amazing how you are aware of statistical pitfalls and actively inform viewers of them.

  • @Jmvars
    @Jmvars 27 дней назад +115

    The only big issue I've faced in Linux is all related to gaming. The obvious one is most anti-cheats do not support Linux at all. The second one is trying to play Windows games through Lutris/Proton, having to test every Proton version to see what works and having to try and find out which Visual C++ versions I need, then if nothing works scouring the internet for potential fixes.

    • @PixelShade
      @PixelShade 27 дней назад

      that's completely different from my experience. practically every game I try works with the latest Proton. I'm running them all through Steam, even if I have non-steam games, I just add the setup file as a "non-steam game" activate the latest proton version, run the installer. Once it's done I just change the path to the installed .exe. Works great.
      Anti-cheat has full support for Linux, developers just need to enable it. there are resources out there to look up which are supported, like areweanticheatyet. 54 anti-cheat games are currently fully supported, two more games are planned. Unfortunately a couple of heavy hitters aren't supported.

    •  27 дней назад +23

      ProtonDB can be very useful, if you don't know.

    • @breadpirateroberts4946
      @breadpirateroberts4946 27 дней назад +10

      last time i had a major issue with proton was in like 2021. i dont play any AAA live service slop though

    • @meeponinthbit3466
      @meeponinthbit3466 27 дней назад +9

      Yeah, the Steam Deck really helped mature most of this very quickly the last few years. If you haven't checked into it lately, you may want to give her another go

    • @AnEagle
      @AnEagle 27 дней назад

      @@meeponinthbit3466 The problem is that it's fixed a lot of stuff on steam, but currently it's still awkward using wine with lutris/heroic/bottles. the move to uwlgl(I think thats the abreviation), should solve that within, maybe, a year

  • @utube521
    @utube521 27 дней назад +15

    07:45 - nvidia gpu works well in Wayland ... you make me laugh, or how many beginners know how to install nv. 555 42 beta driver - the first that makes my system run OK on wayland

  • @dejsasm123
    @dejsasm123 27 дней назад +11

    To be honest, Nick, I would hazard a guess that some of your surprise is because you've been using Linux for so long. For myself, I find that the more I use something the more I'm okay with its limitations, and that applies to Linux. Like "all the single-player games work perfectly, I guess they're trying to play new AAA titles" - I once wanted to play those on Linux and was unhappy I couldn't, and now I'm less interested in them because I've grown to accept what I can't use. In the same vein, back when I had a Mac I was totally fine with the limited controls it gave me, but that's because I had just accepted them as part of life on some level. Linux has come a long way; it also has a long way to go! Personally I don't feel the need to e.g. play new AAA games with anticheat, but plenty of people (especially newcomers) do and it's not ideal thst they can't do so easily on Linux.

  • @connivingkhajiit
    @connivingkhajiit 27 дней назад +8

    For me, the biggest issue with linux does not reside in linux itself, but its alternative softwares. I tried using FreeCAD recently and good god was it painful. Im no noob to CAD work. Ive been using Inventor for several years and can crank out a fairly complex model in only a few minutes. But with freecad, i could hardly get anything to actually wotk like extrusions and revolutions, and the damn thing just kept spitting out errors constantly. Took 10 minutes to get a single tangent hemisphere in the draft with proper precision, it takes seconds in Inventor.
    Most of the open source alternatives to proprietary productivity applications are just bad.

    • @ComradePhoenix
      @ComradePhoenix 26 дней назад +1

      Oh, for sure. PaintDotNet? Learning curve is flatter than Kansas. GIMP? Cliffs of friggin Dover.

    • @connivingkhajiit
      @connivingkhajiit 26 дней назад

      @@ComradePhoenix I found GIMP to be alright, but I dont do nearly as complex things with it as I do CAD.

    • @ComradePhoenix
      @ComradePhoenix 26 дней назад

      @@connivingkhajiit I found it quite frankly indecipherable. I couldn't even manage to do things I would find simple to do in PDN.

    • @connivingkhajiit
      @connivingkhajiit 26 дней назад +1

      @@ComradePhoenix I should also mention its the only image editing software Ive ever used

    • @ComradePhoenix
      @ComradePhoenix 26 дней назад +1

      @@connivingkhajiit I grew up messing around in regular MS Paint as a kid. In my teens, I discovered PDN and GIMP at the same time, and decided to try them both out. PDN was superior. Maybe that's personal bias from years of MSP, but also, I feel its still fair, since most people will also have that bias. And GIMP's unintuitive user experience and lack of onboarding does it absolutely no favors. Its like going from an RC plane to the cockpit of a 747, without even training on a Cessna.

  • @jonschde
    @jonschde 27 дней назад +21

    The OneDrive client is blocked for my university OneDrive storage. This the major pain point for my friends.

    • @23Vacuu
      @23Vacuu 27 дней назад

      I had also difficulty to get OneDrive to work, expecially with a organisation / teams OneDrive (not a personal one). I ended up buying a software which also supported linux and it worked great. Did'nt expect to put money on the table for that, but it was a quick fix for me.

    • @lumeronswift
      @lumeronswift 27 дней назад +2

      Is it possible to use OneDrive in browser?

    • @antoniopala8135
      @antoniopala8135 26 дней назад +1

      @@lumeronswift Yes, but it doesn'have the file synchronization; you have to downolad every document, work on it, and upload it again. And that may cause issues if there are other people working on the same files, which is often the case since it's your team's drive.
      I actually managed to mount my workplace's OneDrive shares using rclone, but I can't remember how... 😅

    • @jadesprite
      @jadesprite 23 дня назад

      @@antoniopala8135 I used rclone for google drive, it wasn't as nice and clean as I would have liked but it worked! Stopped using it just because I wanted to reduce my reliance on google, so moved to local backup/personal server solutions.

  • @SteveRowe
    @SteveRowe 25 дней назад +3

    I used to be a Linux expert. I used Slackware back in 2000. Compatibility with hardware was a lot worse than it is now, but overall the system was simpler. The past 10 years has seen changes to the fundamental infrastructure of Linux: different boot loader, different init system, Systemd taking over a bunch of system functions, and most recently Wayland taking over the display from Xorg. I'm not able to pick up new systems as fast as I used to, and I've resented every "new and improved" program that has replaced something I knew and was comfortable with. Now I don't call myself a Linux expert anymore.

    • @greyspot00
      @greyspot00 7 дней назад

      Crazy to me that instead of things like Xorg being updated and improved, the answer is "throw it away and use the new thing"

    • @GoodGirlPeruru
      @GoodGirlPeruru 7 дней назад

      @@greyspot00 I understand the sentiment enough, but equally, i think it's necessary or else you wind up with a system that... behaves a lot more like Windows, with a bunch of crappy software that hasnt *really* been updated in fifteen years, layered on with a bunch of bandaid fixes.
      It's genuinely difficult for developers to work on something they never designed. And while a lot of people ARE willing to put in the effort, it's typically just more efficient to replace it outright anyway, and does avoid the windows bandaid fix solution.

    • @tedzards509
      @tedzards509 6 дней назад

      ​@@greyspot00 As far as I understand, xorg contributors got sick of all the legacy code they had to update so they collectively decided to recreate it with wayland and weston, abandoning xorg. So it makes sense to have everyone move away from it aswell.
      Also throwing xorg away seems like a bit of an overstatement in this context. The devs surely reused the algorithms and ideas of xorg for wayland and even the codebase for Weston.

  • @bentels5340
    @bentels5340 27 дней назад +8

    "*If you've never used computers before* and you're new to Windows, you'll look things up online."
    I don't know about that one...

    • @AlucardNoir
      @AlucardNoir 27 дней назад +4

      This generation grew up with phones in theri hands. Hell, smartphones are more common than laptops and computers in "third world countries". Chances are people that have never used a desktop or laptop will have used a smartphone before hand. Not a guarantee, but a high likelihood.

    • @Capiosus
      @Capiosus 27 дней назад

      as a person with friends who switched from mac to windows, people do look things up online. they often find the highly seo websites that have really bad answers

    • @michaelwright2986
      @michaelwright2986 27 дней назад

      @@AlucardNoir True that, but also Generation Phone expect things to just work, as indeed they mostly do on a smartphone, as on POTS. Means they're no better at trouble shooting a computer than a digital virgin.

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu 26 дней назад +1

      Computer literacy being taught in schools ended for the Millenial generation which is why Zoomers and Gen Alpha are struggling to use anything other than mobile devices. Many workplaces report needing to teach Gen Z/A how to use printers, how to use internal phones, etc.

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 25 дней назад +2

      @@Robbie-mw5uu Mind you, even when it was taught, at least in my experience (I'm sure this varies wildly from place to place) it was frequently multiple OS generations behind, nevermind being up to date in any other respect. Also it was pretty much entirely basic word processing and file management (it's kind of amazing how much of that carries over to all sorts of other areas, but it still leaves a LOT of really large gaps).

  • @iodreamify
    @iodreamify 27 дней назад +43

    More polls like this please! If devs and the community are so afraid of "telemetry" then proper regular communication is a must to stay up to date on important issues and to get a good picture where we're going.

    • @weltsiebenhundert
      @weltsiebenhundert 26 дней назад

      Theoretically a good idea - problem here.
      Windows has a dedicated Preview/Tester Program.
      I bet it is bigger than the Linux User base.

    • @mmstick
      @mmstick 24 дня назад

      @@weltsiebenhundert Linux users are more likely to create detailed bug reports, and open source projects tend to use user-friendly bug reporting platforms like GitHub. Telemetry is a non-issue in practice if you're building software with a programming language which makes errors predictable and well-defined (ie: Rust).

  • @skudnu5462
    @skudnu5462 27 дней назад +54

    3:00 I wonder how many of these 10% 'Linux systems have no secrets for me' is dunning kruger

    • @RealFlicke
      @RealFlicke 27 дней назад +9

      None because the dunning kruger effect paper had a fatal flaw and the effect is actually not real :P

    • @skudnu5462
      @skudnu5462 27 дней назад +8

      @@RealFlicke elaborate

    • @_sneer_
      @_sneer_ 27 дней назад +7

      @@skudnu5462 The Dunning-Kruger effect is (mostly) a statistical artefact. All people are biased and almost all overestimate their abilities in a similar manner.
      @RealFlicke is right.

    • @sashakoshka
      @sashakoshka 27 дней назад +19

      whoever says "linux systems have no secrets for me" is lying. the kernel has an absolute ton of features that the vast majority of people have no clue exist, and that's just the kernel, it's to say nothing about the software ecosystem surrounding it. for instance, one of my favorite things to tell linux users no matter how much they think they know is that polkit uses javascript as a configuration language. nine times out of ten they don't believe me, and have to look it up.
      if linux truly has no secrets for you, you are either a kernel dev, os maintainer, or a desktop environment dev, or something along those lines.

    • @kajojo2399
      @kajojo2399 27 дней назад +5

      Yeah, also I feel like the answers could be worded better, like "I understand how things work" and "I know my way around" are a bit too similar, I wonder if the results would be different if there was a 1 to 5 scale of how experienced you are instead.

  • @CristobalWatsonHernandez
    @CristobalWatsonHernandez 27 дней назад +9

    I get the Bluetooth problems, I'm having one myself. My Bluetooth earphones worked out of the box, but it throws a notification every time the battery drops by one percent.

    • @Capiosus
      @Capiosus 27 дней назад +1

      less of a bluetooth problem and more of a hardware support problem.

  • @lemonline3719
    @lemonline3719 27 дней назад +6

    It would be good to have open-ended questions as well, so that people can give more qualitative answers. Quantitative questions are obviously more easy to annalise, but it seems like it requires doing a lot of inferences as to why people answered the way they did. Some of these questions may also not get to the root of why people are having issues since they direct people to certain themes, while an open-ended feedback box would allow for people to express things that you may not even have thought of. Just my 2 cents

  • @user-bg3zr8of5i
    @user-bg3zr8of5i 27 дней назад +56

    i hate that after i reboot on arch kde my bluetooth suddenly doesnt work

    • @thiagoassisfernandes
      @thiagoassisfernandes 27 дней назад +9

      this. this happens with wifi and Bluetooth for me (same pcie card)
      and its effing annoying, only a reboot

    • @akshatsingh4937
      @akshatsingh4937 27 дней назад +8

      It was a kernal issue and was fixed in later kernal version and it could be fixed easily by creating a symlink

    • @user-rx9xb1bg2d
      @user-rx9xb1bg2d 27 дней назад

      Then please share the information if you're aware of the issue that is referring here to! That is the issue I've often encountered with the Linux community. It is inherently populated by more technically interested people than other OS. Making it sometimes actually hard to fix issues. Because everybody assumes you know programming, Linux and can find your way through a terminal. Some cannot. And for those "creating a symlink" might be a "what is that?" Moment. ​@@akshatsingh4937

    • @unduloid
      @unduloid 27 дней назад

      @@akshatsingh4937
      What's a "kernal?"

    • @eivis13
      @eivis13 27 дней назад

      @@akshatsingh4937 this is why i'm using a debian distribution. Better working than latest.

  • @hopelessdecoy
    @hopelessdecoy 27 дней назад +13

    1 I couldn't ever get KDE Konnect to work
    2 I couldn't connect my Google drive, Gnome's stuff just kept failing
    3 I don't fully understand Warpinator
    When i voted peripherals i meant keyboard and mice with functionality more than typing and clicking.
    So many beginners could be just on a not fitting Distro, correlating your last survey a lot of people went to first or are on Arch systems so yeah much more command line.
    I'm not a non-technical person either.

    • @agr-tech
      @agr-tech 27 дней назад

      I had the same issue with kde connect. It was hit or miss. Try localsend

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu 26 дней назад

      I started with Ubuntu-based Linux Mint and it still has the same issues I experienced with Zorin OS, PopOS, Ubuntu, Lubuntu (dont ask), and whatever the hell KDE Neon is trying to be cause it aint trying to be an intuitive operating system.

    • @GoodGirlPeruru
      @GoodGirlPeruru 7 дней назад

      @@Robbie-mw5uusomeone finally says it. There... is SO much basic shit missing on that fucking repository

    • @tedzards509
      @tedzards509 6 дней назад

      For the KDE Connect problem, GNOME has an extension calles GSConnect, that is a full implementation of the KDE Connect protocol. Maybe you can give that a shot.
      As for the google drive, I am also annoyed that GNOME wouldnt let users authenticate on a website, insisting that we enter password and username, praying it works, but as far as I know they improved it with Gnome 46 and the german grant is being used to pay devs to improve online accounts even further.
      I think that KDE Connect/GSConnect and most things on Linux have a fragmentation and publicity problem, since Linux doesnt have a company that tells its users what to use.

  • @FlyingJaco
    @FlyingJaco 27 дней назад +8

    The biggest hardware pain points that I usually run into is running Linux on any older system with Broadcom Wifi/Bluetooth or Realtek. Broadcom chips in general can be a bit of a pain. Webcams on older Macs is a disaster that you are just better off accepting as a lost cause.

    • @resistance1385
      @resistance1385 27 дней назад +1

      Yea those Broadcom drivers but it's not linux issue due being propietory driver Bluetooth does not work until you add that driver. I wish there was way to find it easily online. I remember finding the driver on github to use.

    • @AlucardNoir
      @AlucardNoir 27 дней назад +3

      @@resistance1385 how exactly is this not a linux problem? People install windows and it works, they install linux and it doesn't. They're not going to blame the hardware manufacturer for not supporting an OS that was under 1% a few years ago. They'll blame the OS.

  • @svrsakura
    @svrsakura 26 дней назад +3

    The problem is that you get hardware from Tuxedo, who as you keep reminding us, pick hardware specifically picked to be compatible with Linux... so you will have a skewed view on things... for instance, any Wireless radio (not final product, just the radio) (BT, Wi-Fi, GPS, PVR, etc) made by Realtek is a no-go for linux.

  • @negirno
    @negirno 27 дней назад +17

    You didn't mentioned Syncthing. It's basically a Dropbox-like file syncing option, but instead of using a centralized server, it just syncs between devices directly. You may not even know about it since you have your own Nextcloud server, but Syncthing is great for those who doesn't have the hardware to roll their own cloud at home.
    Also, I actually had GPU hangs on my Intel chipset on Linux, and having surround with AC-3 is still not working out of the box.

    • @Daniel_VolumeDown
      @Daniel_VolumeDown 27 дней назад

      The problem I have with Synctihng is when using multiboot. It is still possible to manage it - for example when you use syncting on mobile phone then for exampke you phone sync files from your windows and after reboot to linux then this linux wyould sync from phone. But it can be "not ideal" sometimes

    • @AlucardNoir
      @AlucardNoir 27 дней назад

      Syncthing is not a viable solution. IT never was.

    • @Capiosus
      @Capiosus 27 дней назад

      gonna be honest I just hosted a samba file server on my PC because I have a firewall so it doesn't matter that samba is open (also samba is only sharing a single folder which is used exclusively for transfers.)

    • @davey820051
      @davey820051 27 дней назад +2

      @@AlucardNoir I'm wondering why you feel that way-not trying to be confrontational, just curious. Syncthing has worked well for me over a period of a couple of years (using Linux, Windows, and Android devices). One thing I've learned is that everybody's use case is different and what works great for some folks may not for everyone.

    • @AlucardNoir
      @AlucardNoir 27 дней назад

      @@davey820051 Because I've actually used syncthing.

  • @obhwg
    @obhwg 27 дней назад +7

    I think it would've helped to have a question on what distribution they were using

  • @paolozago6123
    @paolozago6123 26 дней назад +4

    I'm surprised that only 17% had issues with bluetooth, probably because the user base isn't accustomed yet to use BT extensively. In all the years I've been using Linux the compatibility with BT devices and the stability of BT itself was a major headache to the point I stopped using BT devices with my latest box

    • @tedzards509
      @tedzards509 6 дней назад

      Counterpoint: I use many bluetooth devices and so far only had an hq audio transmission issue once (where the signal would be distorted strongly) but that was fixed at some point.

  • @FIRAGA
    @FIRAGA 24 дня назад +1

    From my personal experience, the issue with hardware support is not necessarily that hardware doesn’t work on Linux, but rather, that software made to configure said hardware is only available on Windows, and if you buy a product from a smaller brand, there is a very small chance that someone created a program to interface with it on Linux.
    For example, I have a Tecware Phantom keyboard. If I want to configure it, I need to connect it to a Windows virtual machine. This keyboard has its settings saved on-board so the program doesn't have to be running all the time in the background, but my solution wouldn't work for a keyboard that doesn't have on-board memory.

  • @CookiLover311
    @CookiLover311 27 дней назад +23

    Related to GPU issues: My biggest issue by far is using CUDA (and I've heard about problems with OpenCL on AMD too because of the AMD proprietary drivers). It's in general very messy, but the biggest problem with CUDA is that the nvcc compiler is usually an entire gcc compiler version behind, meaning it's necessary to have an old version of gcc installed, something that's difficult when using a package manager that wants to use the latest version (this also applies to clang btw)

    • @BrainStormzFTC
      @BrainStormzFTC 27 дней назад +3

      Ubuntu seems to handle having multiple GCC/clang/LLVM versions installed simultaneously just fine. Probably this is a distro issue rather than an overall Linux issue.
      Also, the OpenCL situation should hopefully be resolved nowadays with RustICL being a thing.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад

      It's not hard to install any version of GCC you want. You just don't install it globally. You do a parallel install. You don't do something like that with your package manager either. When you want to go off in the weeds you do that kind of thing on your own.

    • @CookiLover311
      @CookiLover311 27 дней назад +7

      @@1pcfred and that is not something the average 3D artist who just wants to fully use their expensive GPU when rendering an animation I Blender knows how to do

    • @AlexanderAnthis
      @AlexanderAnthis 27 дней назад +2

      It's really annoying at times when package managers don't let you downgrade packages (looking specifically at Arch btw and Fedora). I think this is usually because it costs storage space to store old versions of apps which can add up to be quite expensive. Doesn't solve the issue though and it sucks.

    • @Kris-od3sj
      @Kris-od3sj 27 дней назад

      Arch - a distro that likes newest packages - provides an older GCC for Cuda specifically.
      Currently, the only reverse deps of `gcc13` (excluding make deps) are `cuda` and `gcc13-fortran`.
      If you need to downgrade something, the easiest way is to use `downgrade`^AUR, but I'd rather not take the risk of downgrading a core part of the system like `gcc`.

  • @solidandshade
    @solidandshade 27 дней назад +13

    I still see my Nvidia as a problem even tho it works on my mint with x11. 1- It works worse than it did on windows. 2- My 1660 ti doesn't work with wayland. I know there is a new driver but it is beta. And we are talking about now. Too many distros are pushing wayland but I can't just install their flag spins because of that. 3-Everyone keeps shilling wayland, says it is the future and x11 is dead. But same people also say "Linux is great with nvidia, just use x11". The stance is contradictory.

    • @cameronbosch1213
      @cameronbosch1213 27 дней назад

      X11 isn't dead. XWayland will still be supported for the foreseeable future. On the other hand, XOrg _is_ about to die and Wayland _is_ the future. All I can say is that you're best bet is to wait for the kernel and Nvidia drivers to get better and support your GPU better. You still have a few more years before XOrg support drops off of a cliff.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад

      Wayland sucks. That's not a Linux problem. That's a Wayland problem. They need to learn to code.

    • @cameronbosch1213
      @cameronbosch1213 27 дней назад

      @@1pcfred Wayland may suck, but XOrg sucked more.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад

      @@cameronbosch1213 X only sucks if you're a goof and don't know how to use it. Which does describe quite a few people unfortunately. My .Xresources file is 237 lines long. There's some customization going on there. Mostly it's for my pimp xcalc I run.

    • @cameronbosch1213
      @cameronbosch1213 27 дней назад +4

      @@1pcfred Can XOrg run two or more monitors at a different refresh rate or scaling? Nope. That's a huge point for Wayland, as I have that setup for my desktop.

  • @TheLexikitty
    @TheLexikitty 27 дней назад +2

    My biggest issues with Linux have been accessibility related, Kmag just stops moving sometimes, behind that is lack of support for video editing software and hardware. Would love to see it approach mainstream.

  • @321Jarn
    @321Jarn 27 дней назад +9

    You need to add to your survey to ask what hardware they are using and what the community or youtubers promised about linux.
    Summary: community members including youtubers are overpromising (about linux breathing new life in very old laptops(which linux can't))
    Because like me I used a very bad laptop using the free Zorin Os version (because it looked the nicest and I didn't notice any performance difference using it on the usb).
    For me the experience was overpromised by youtubers, youtubers saying things like "very bad and very old laptop" while they were only 8 years old with 4 or 8 GB ram and a good/decent cpu.
    While my laptop was a emachines laptop originally made for windows xp with 2 GB ram with HDD with a celeron processor.
    There is a lack of transparency because youtubers say linux is good for their own hardware or software but don't talk about how bad it is with other hardware or distributions.

    • @KayloGL
      @KayloGL 27 дней назад +3

      THIS.

    • @stanzacosmi
      @stanzacosmi 27 дней назад +2

      you didn't n otice any performance because you used zorin, you want to use a lightweight linux distro running lxqt, xfce, or just outright being tinycore linux or puppy linux.

    • @ancalagonyt
      @ancalagonyt 27 дней назад

      Linux can absolutely breathe life into very old laptops.
      I've used Linux since 1995, and the first computer I used it on had a 1GB hard drive. Not RAM, hard drive. I think it had 16MB of RAM, which is about 128 times smaller than your 2GB.
      I used to run Linux on a very old, very cheap netbook from about 2010. I used the XFCE desktop on it, because it was low powered even back when I got it.

    • @piotrmazek540
      @piotrmazek540 26 дней назад +1

      Zorin is slow, you should use something lighter.

    • @321Jarn
      @321Jarn 26 дней назад

      Ok I will maybe try something lightweight one day, But what is the most lightweight distro that is still fully functional? Alpine linux? Lubuntu?
      This might actually be the problem that I don't know which distro I need, because a lot of distributions market themselves as lightweight.

  • @sulfur2964
    @sulfur2964 27 дней назад +20

    Because of Linux I finally understood that my 2009 wifi usb stick isn't cutting anymore, using my phone as wifi adapter for now, lol

    • @uglycustard11
      @uglycustard11 27 дней назад

      usb tethering is the way lol

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu 26 дней назад +3

      its likely because your wifi stick uses 2.4ghz and that is very crowded radio signal with lots of interference. If you use 5ghz from a dual-band-compatible network adapter, you would likely have more breathing room. Additionally, you might need an antenna if the stick doesnt already have one. Then again it could just be because the modern Internet uses too many resources that old adapters arent capable of transmitting fast enough.

  • @rexthewild1183
    @rexthewild1183 27 дней назад +35

    That moment when you can't watch it cus you need to go to work :(((

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  27 дней назад +31

      Ah dammit! Say you’re sick!

    • @darylandcat
      @darylandcat 27 дней назад +9

      Can’t come in today, installing Arch.

    • @GoldenGrenadier
      @GoldenGrenadier 27 дней назад

      Good thing I'm on lunch!

    • @rexthewild1183
      @rexthewild1183 27 дней назад +2

      @@darylandcat used that excuse already

    • @rexthewild1183
      @rexthewild1183 27 дней назад +1

      @@TheLinuxEXP no more sick days :((

  • @jameslewis2635
    @jameslewis2635 26 дней назад +4

    The biggest issue I have had with trying to fix problems in Linux is that there are a lot of articles and videos that are designed to help people but they often only have command line instructions that either work for Debian (or Ubuntu) based distro's and don't translate to other distro's or point to controls that have become depreciated and have been replaced. I have had these kinds of issues fairly often (running OpenSuse) and the thing is, while this might not matter much to someone who has used the command line for many years, it is far from obvious how to get around the fact that these instructions often don't translate between different distributions for everyone else.

    • @DavidStruveDesigns
      @DavidStruveDesigns 21 день назад +1

      This is still the biggest off-putting part about Linux in general for me. I haven't interacted with Command Line since the MS-DOS days, and I absolutely do not want ANY interaction with the Command Line in my modern OS. Using Linux means you're basically guaranteed to, at some point, be required to interact with and use Command Line. Apple OS doesn't require it, Microsoft OS don't and even Android doesn't - it's daft that in this day and age Linux STILL DOES. Until the Linux community figures out a way to no longer EVER require or need the Command Line at all, it will forever not be the OS for me.

  • @RipCityBassWorks
    @RipCityBassWorks 27 дней назад +1

    Lack of Excel support is probably an issue for many people. VBA macros are just super useful for people who use them.

  • @Arkevorkhat
    @Arkevorkhat 27 дней назад +8

    On the topic of Wifi and bluetooth, Realtek has some significant compatibility issues with their networking cards, especially the ones used by HP in their low to mid tier consumer laptops.

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu 26 дней назад

      Yes and Realtek recently removed a bunch of the Windows version of their drivers so soon it could be impossible to get the drivers we need for our laptops!

  • @kote315
    @kote315 27 дней назад +4

    As an example of a stability issue related to the GPU or software freezes/crashes, I've had video playback freezes after watching RUclips for a long time (more than 1 hour or so) in Firefox. Even though I used Intel integrated graphics, which should work fine. This problem never happened in Windows.
    Now it seems to be working fine (I can’t say for sure whether I did something or the problem was solved with updates). But I'm pretty sure it was due to hardware video decoding issue or something like that.

  • @EpiX0R
    @EpiX0R 26 дней назад +1

    I don't think the issue with troubleshooting linux comes from lack of documentation. In comparison to Windows or MacOS, Linux has very good documentation. I think the issue lies with the fact that we have so many more alternatives that the issues can come from. Have an audio issue? A regular use would probably google "Linux audio not working". This would probably return 3+ years old results which may or may not be relevant since a new user doesn't know what PipeWire or PulseAudio is, even less which one they use, and even less what problem within each might cause the issue.
    The same scenario can be applied for display issues (Wayland or X11?) and GPU drivers (mesa or vulkan. or noveou for AMD; proprietary or open-source for Nvidia). Especially Nvidia GPU users about 3-6 months ago who had no clue which driver to use or where to find it (its definetly not on the Nvidia website atleast).

  • @danoblue
    @danoblue 27 дней назад +1

    I first used Linux about 17 years ago, and over the years my use has increased exponentially. I no longer need Windows and so have a single-boot Linux system running Kubuntu 24.04. My only issues have been with btrfs, which I still don't understand very well overall but use it extensively to back up my system. and recently, with trying to get Wayland to work with a Nvidia GEforce 730 graphics card. The Kubuntu Forums community has been most helpful any time I've had problems, and since there are no Linux experts that I know of where I live (Lima, Peru), I've had to depend on that community to fix all my problems, which they have. As for the Wayland-Nvidia issue, I tried using the Nouveau driver, and it worked for most things but eventually had issues with RUclips. By the way, I consider this channel very helpful in understanding Linux issues, and very entertaining as well. Keep up the good work.

  • @Winnetou17
    @Winnetou17 27 дней назад +29

    7:34 "Intel GPUs work flawlessly" 😄😄😄 Seems like Nick needs to get an Intel ARC card and play with it.

    • @necuz
      @necuz 27 дней назад +5

      In my experience Arc works perfectly, as long as you don't try to run games. Flawless Wayland desktop experience, no problems with video decode/encode, fully working power management and sleep/wake.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад

      Depending on what I hear when Battlemage comes out I might try Arc out then. Hopefully by then distros will have the packages it needs to work. I do not need the headaches it takes to get Arc working now.

    • @Winnetou17
      @Winnetou17 27 дней назад +4

      @@necuz That's the thing, gaming is what some people might actually want to do.
      Compelling Bytes, a channel here on YT, has all kinds of tests. It's not horrible, some things you can play, but there's also many where they kind of don't work.

    • @AlucardNoir
      @AlucardNoir 27 дней назад

      @@necuz ... why even own a graphics card as weak as an Arc one if you're not going to use it for games? They are too weak to do any work that's demanding on the GPU and are overkill for any computer that doesn't need a GPU to begin with. If you're not going to play games with them you might as well buy something that only has an integrated GPU. IF they're not good for gaming they're not good for anything.

    • @briandewolfe
      @briandewolfe 27 дней назад

      @@necuz Makes sense since what's left is essentially the stuff they've been baking into their CPUs for years... desktop graphics with video playback.

  • @blakecasimir
    @blakecasimir 27 дней назад +9

    This is a super helpful channel. And I'd agree that Linux is easier than ever to get into, particularly over the last few years. However for those of us requiring Windows apps like Affinity and Ableton Live: Linux is still not an option.

    • @r3lativ
      @r3lativ 27 дней назад

      I'm using Ableton Live with no issues. Installed through wine.

  • @zipforth
    @zipforth 27 дней назад +4

    In my experience Linux works well, but there's edge cases that just aren't handled when something does go wrong, where windows at least knows it screwed up. For instance, on kubuntu, sometimes when I wake my machine from sleep, my second monitor goes back to the default wallpaper, and sometimes an app will just crash with no error or popup to tell me something happened. They aren't generally big issues, just annoying and makes it feel less polished than it could be. I think it just comes down to that nowadays I expect an OS to run its own modules flawlessly, and handle errors for everything else in a way that gives me a clear picture of what went wrong and when. On the plus side I haven't had any issues at all with gaming, even new multiplayer games run exactly the same as they did on windows.

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu 26 дней назад +1

      I recently had a BSOD with Windows while playing a game. When I rebooted back into Windows, I was able to run a system scan and Windows found some operating system files that were corrupted...and fixed them by itself! Windows is really amazing sometimes.

  • @lootria
    @lootria 27 дней назад +13

    for me one of the biggest issues when using linux is the fact that i have a gaming laptop, and im completely unable to change the fan speeds even when using tools that usually can change them based on temperature (i believe it was called greenwithenvy but that was about 2 years ago or so). what ends up happening often is that my laptop is always blasting fans at full speed and STILL somehow manages to overheat enough to make it shut down, due to some setting i cannot change through any means ive tried. pair that with having to do video editing, audio production, wanting to do more than casual gaming from time to time and you get a recipe for something you cannot use no matter how much you love it, and i absolutely loved using linux as a desktop operating system outside of those issues. gnome and kde are amazing and i wish i could try out some tiling window manager but unfortunately for me i will have to be stuck on windows for at least a little while longer.

    • @pyepye-io4vu
      @pyepye-io4vu 27 дней назад +2

      Unfortunately these are mostly hardware based problems.
      Many motherboards / GPUs don't comply with Linux / Posix standards or they don't give Linux kernel enough access to fan speed control.
      YOU HAVE TO BUY LINUX COMPATIBLE HARDWARE!
      Manufacturers are hostile to Linux.
      If you bought a laptop with Windows installed on it, chances are you'll have problems.

    • @BrainStormzFTC
      @BrainStormzFTC 27 дней назад +2

      If your system is overheating to the point of shutting down despite the fans running full throttle, you have a hardware issue. Probably clogged heatsinks and/or old thermal paste. Thankfully both are very easy to fix, and will make the computer run much better no matter what OS you are running.

    • @Capiosus
      @Capiosus 27 дней назад

      hey there, heard of your uefi settings menu? it is what your supposed to use to adjust your fan speeds. Don't use OS apps to do what the uefi settings do.

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu 26 дней назад

      yo seriously! Linux bas NOTHING for fan speed control!

    • @lootria
      @lootria 26 дней назад +1

      @@BrainStormzFTC actually ive never had that issue on windows both before installing linux, and after having to uninstall it for more storage, so it cant be a hardware issue

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe2020 27 дней назад +4

    For me KDE 5.27 on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS crashes almost every time I connect a second monitor to a running session. It only affects plasmashell, so my session doesn't get killed, but it's annoying nonetheless.

    • @cameronbosch1213
      @cameronbosch1213 27 дней назад

      Don't use KDE Plasma on Kubuntu or Ubuntu Studio at the moment. Try Tuxedo OS, that has been fixed in Plasma 6.

  • @hyperspeed1313
    @hyperspeed1313 27 дней назад +3

    A lack of hibernation support has been a major pain point for me. Every single time I’ve tried setting up hibernation over the years, it failed to resume correctly and I just gave up after trying to poke around and getting nowhere. In Windows, I would always have my desktop use hybrid sleep (sleep + hiberfile backup) so I wouldn’t lose my work if the power went out while in sleep mode. I just can’t replicate that in Linux

    • @paolozago6123
      @paolozago6123 26 дней назад

      In fairness, hibernation and sleep wake have always be a major chore on Windows too, I remember it was the first thing I disabled on my old laptop. The only system that really surprised me for how seamless sleep worked was macOS when I switched in 2013. I've not owned a Linux laptop recently so I don't know how it fares, but my current Windows laptop still has issues with sleep/wake :D

    • @unnainconnu9098
      @unnainconnu9098 24 дня назад

      On Windows, the issue I had was that it sometimes wouldn't go to sleep / hibernation because a program (mostly a torrent downloader - even though that option was disabled - or the browser) was preventing it.
      I had to use the command line to find out which one.
      On Linux, since systemd v255 (12-2023) and mkinitcpio v38 (02-2024), if you have a (big enough) swap file or partition, it should work without changing anything.

  • @michadybczak4862
    @michadybczak4862 27 дней назад +1

    Sleep/suspend issues are real. I have Tuxedo's Sirius laptop and although it supposes to be Linux compatible, it won't suspend on any distro aside Tuxedo OS, where there is a kernel patch fixing it. Hibernation works but... there is an obscure bug that makes laptop to heat up during hibernation when it's not plugged in to AC, so basically, I shouldn't use it. So yeah, no suspend or hibernation on a laptop is a big problem.
    As to crashes, this is also weird for me. 10 years ago crashes were frequent, but nowadays, everything is incredibly stable, even on Wayland.

  • @joelimbergamo639
    @joelimbergamo639 27 дней назад +5

    Conecting to clouds yes. But kde connect works only on local networks (so, not in airport, neither in wortk, neither at university...) and then sharing files becomes super hard, without talking about it working half of the time for files. And they you have zero syncronisation between linux devices themselves, if you have two linux computers there is zero ecosystem, no way to share files between those two devices easily

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад +3

      How do you expect to connect to a cloud? It's just water vapor!

  • @tulsatrash
    @tulsatrash 27 дней назад +6

    Aw man. I didn't find out about this poll.

  • @2greenify
    @2greenify 26 дней назад +2

    I notice the Linix steam client had all kinds of bugs that are not solved in 2 years time.
    Eg forcing compatability mode on al games works, but disabling is impossible.

  • @syntheid
    @syntheid 27 дней назад +2

    I'm in that camp having hardware issues that are interfering with daily use... my sound keeps popping/cutting out, and I can't really figure out why and none of the fixes i found worked.
    On top of that, though, my gaming experience is kinda complicated-- can't use my game pad on Linux (razer tartarus), mods I use to help game play aren't working, graphics are a bit weird between scaling problems and color profile. The game itself works pretty good though. It's basically been a no go to try to swap yet though.

  • @Romaoplays
    @Romaoplays 27 дней назад +5

    My gtx 1060 on my laptop doesn’t actually work with wayland at all. Like straight up refuses to be used. It works fine on X11 though

    • @cameronbosch1213
      @cameronbosch1213 27 дней назад +2

      That is going to be a problem possibly forever, unless Nvidia is forced to open source non GSP driver support for those 9 and 10 series GPUs...

  • @RemindMeToCheck
    @RemindMeToCheck 27 дней назад +6

    A friend of mine is very interested in switching to Linux but they work with CAD software and they mentioned all of the CAD software they need (or their alternatives) don't work at all on Linux (even with Wine). Personally, I've been comfortably using Linux for quite a while.

    • @cameronbosch1213
      @cameronbosch1213 27 дней назад +1

      Did they try running Linux on their hardware and running Windows in a VM, and passing the dGPU into their VM?

    • @m4sterred853
      @m4sterred853 27 дней назад +1

      CAD software is an industry that is actively hostile towards Linux. It’s not to the same degree as Adobe, but it’s close.

    • @Daniel_VolumeDown
      @Daniel_VolumeDown 27 дней назад

      There is OnShape that works in browser but to be fair that is probably it. Although I saw github pages with sctipts to run some CAD software via wine.
      This year is also the year when FreeCAD biggest problem (TNP) should finally be fixed. Recently also new project emerged: ondsel. It is based on freecad but have nicer interface and is adding a lot of little fixes and improvements, so I hope we will have in the near feature a lot of improvemets to open source CAD.
      Btw. Freecad is not the only open source cad. There is also much less known salome (tbf cad is onpy part of that whole fem suite), but idk how good it is.

    • @sol_mental
      @sol_mental 27 дней назад +2

      @@cameronbosch1213 I guess you never tried to work with 3D. You need raw power, not vm.

    • @paolozago6123
      @paolozago6123 26 дней назад

      @@sol_mental For light to medium 3D MCAD work I used for some time parallels VM on a macbook pro with emulated GPU and it was usable, if the VM supports graphics acceleration it's not much slower than native. That said, I agree that you want "the real thing" and the real thing today is 99.9% Windows for heavy CAD work

  • @needsLITHIUM
    @needsLITHIUM 25 дней назад

    I have MX Linux KDE on my laptop and my desktop. Neither one can connect to the KDE Connect app on my phone. Network printer works fine, bluetooth headphones and mice and things like game controllers, wired and wireless, all work fine. I use Mega and Google Drive for my storage and they work fine, desktop integration and all; Mega even has a separate command line tool for powershell and Linux (I reserve my OneDrive for Windows specific/related storage). My two USB audio interfaces, both from different brands, work fine. Also, I see a few comments about people not seeing the poll, and it's good to know I'm not the only one who missed it, despite watching several videos from the channel.

  • @snekulcire
    @snekulcire 26 дней назад

    One thing I've noticed is the signal-to-noise ratio on searching for fixes on Linux. You search for an issue, and you get an answer in the first result that might even pop up on the screen without having to click a link--but the answer is for Ubuntu 12.04. So no Wayland, no systemd, old display managers, etc. This can really, really confuse people and break things if they try to use those answers. I've just learned that I have to include version numbers or code names in when searching. But some users aren't in that habit.

  • @bvd_vlvd
    @bvd_vlvd 27 дней назад +6

    App bugs and crashes are an everyday part of my desktop usage. Not necessarily in core apps though. Paper, the best GTK4 markdown editor otherwise, crashes every time I use it. Speaking of bluetooth, my old bluetooth mouse was crashing my gnome shell on newest kernel versions at the time. No idea how any of that was correlated. My new mouse works well.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад

      Have you debugged the crash? On Linux you can debug software. There's ways of finding out precisely what is going on. Set your ulimit to dump core and then run the core file through gdb.

    • @bvd_vlvd
      @bvd_vlvd 26 дней назад

      @@1pcfred That sounds out of the scope of my skills. App mostly crashes when I click close anyway. I don't really mind it, though it is a little annoying that it doesn't ask me to save changes because of the bug.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 26 дней назад

      @@bvd_vlvd it probably is beyond your scope now. But you can't learn how to ride a bull except by getting up there and trying. You'll get thrown and trampled. But you keep getting back up there. Then one day you can say, This ain't my first rodeo. You may win the ribbon then too.

  • @bassamatic
    @bassamatic 27 дней назад +10

    frankly whats disturbing me about linux is we cant adjust the width of a window scrollbar anymore... wtf happened?

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 27 дней назад +1

      A window scrollbar is a widget. Libraries control widgets. Two popular window widget libraries are QT which KDE uses and GTK which Gnome uses. They're the software responsible for creating those graphical elements. They're what you would work with to modify any widget. Perhaps in a theme setting or something like that. Software can also lock some widgets from being adjusted. Like resizing windows. Sometimes you just can't. The program tells the library to not offer the option.

    • @bassamatic
      @bassamatic 27 дней назад

      @@leejohnson3959 do you think its right that basic accessibility options require terminal commands, or editing hidden system files to correct? I do not see any advantage to this. I am using Linux Mint xfce, linux mint Mate, Fedora. Puppy Linux does not have this problem.

    • @bassamatic
      @bassamatic 27 дней назад

      @@1pcfred the theme settings in mint xfce handles most of the UI ... but not scrollbars or anything imp[ortant. Most of the themes also make resizing a WINDOW INTOLERABLE.

    • @bassamatic
      @bassamatic 27 дней назад

      @@leejohnson3959 thanks for trying to help!

    • @bassamatic
      @bassamatic 27 дней назад

      @@1pcfred thanks for trying to help

  • @PassengerMX
    @PassengerMX 25 дней назад +1

    Part of the problem of connecting with other devices, particularly mobile phones is not Linux fault. For example, I cannot use KDE Connect because my phone's Android OS has very aggresive restrictions on what an App is allowed to do. In my case, even if I enable App permissions, file transfers are a no go.

  • @samsam21amb
    @samsam21amb 26 дней назад +1

    When I got a new computer, i discovered your channel at around the same time (complete beginner and fairly basic user of computers and your videos convinced me that switching to Linux was a good option) so decided to install Linux on the old one (Surface Laptop 3), i tried the usb live (of Kubuntu) and the touch screen wasn’t supported (but I didn’t mind that because I don’t really use the touch screen, but still a hardware issue) so I decided to do a full install, I followed all the steps and clicked ‘full install’ during set up (where it did all the formatting, erasing and partitioning for me, because I don’t know what all means) and my laptop never woke up, and is stuck in a boot loop. Now it can’t even boot live from a USB. Dead. Never using or installing Linux again, it kills computers and doesn’t support hardware. (I will stick to my ad ridden, copilot powered, invasive OS, for the reason that I am confident my computer won’t die), but overall I love your videos and like to have news about this topic that I’d never thought I’d like, and that’s why I watch.

    • @hidesh77
      @hidesh77 14 дней назад

      For the moment Linux is still trial by fire, you will need to attempt several times before it starts to work, it has quite a steep learning curve, speaking from own past fails too. But still recommend to try. 😊

  • @corviraptor
    @corviraptor 27 дней назад +4

    i answered GPUs because Nvidia's newer drivers (before 555's release) would break xwayland apps. after 555's release which implemented explicit sync for wayland , basically all of my GPU problems on wayland have been totally solved even without KDE's compositor support for explicit sync, so if the poll came out like a week later i would've answered differently LOL

  • @szaszm_
    @szaszm_ 27 дней назад +4

    I had some serious issues with laptops, especially around nvidia and KDE Plasma 5 not starting at all or crashing on startup. Obviously the devs fix issues on their systems, but some hardware-related issues remain in a large portion of the cases.

  • @bes12000
    @bes12000 27 дней назад

    I want to know what version of Linux they are using to have problems with Integrating with other devices, im not having that issue on Garuda Linux(Arch distro).

  • @luxdalet
    @luxdalet 27 дней назад

    I second those requesting an announcement or link for the survey as I would like to participate. Today linux is my daily driver os (Debian 12 with KDE Plasma), but to get it running I suffered A LOT. Nvidia GPU 2060 (laptop) wasn't working, sleep/wake wasn't working, and battery was draining.
    Took me a lot of online help, trial and error, and learning Linux as I had never used it before.
    Mostly blame the fact that I installed Debian 12 without Gnome, and many expected repos and bits of software were missing when just running KDE Plasma (with Wayland).
    Once I installed Gnome to try it out, most of the KDE Plasma issues went away with the missing components then being present.

  • @Deezter16
    @Deezter16 27 дней назад +7

    I really like this video format, keep making them ;)

    • @TheLinuxEXP
      @TheLinuxEXP  27 дней назад +3

      Yeah, they’re nice to make!

  • @JoelJosephReji
    @JoelJosephReji 27 дней назад +3

    To add some context regarding the Bluetooth issues: There was a very recent bug in one of the newer kernels which caused kernel panics with Bluetooth so that might have skewed the result a bit. I also faced another issue in the newer kernels where I was getting spammed with the Bluetooth connection notification from my wireless keyboard which faces no issues when connected to any other system. In general, pairing/unpairing things are generally finicky in non-desktop environment use cases where it is not responsive at all and if you click the pair or trust buttons in the GUI too much, the Bluetooth application (blueman or one of the similar ones) might freeze. I've heard online that freezing is due to the underlying Bluetooth stuff and not related to the application itself.
    Right now, I'm currently dealing with an issue in Endeavour OS with KDE and Wayland where I can't connect to the 5.0 Bluetooth of the keyboard and so I'm forced to use the 3.0 connection which doesn't have the battery indicator and some similar features.

    • @paolozago6123
      @paolozago6123 26 дней назад

      I think the Linux dev community underestimates the importance of bluetooth, the fact that you can ship a kernel with a BT bug should be unacceptable like if you shipped a kernel that makes the keyboard non-functional

    • @JoelJosephReji
      @JoelJosephReji 26 дней назад +1

      @@paolozago6123 I mean, Windows development introduces bugs many a times, it is just that people put up with it. Regarding the kernel bluetooth bug, it got patched up in the very next release so it only really affected folks in the bleeding edge. Not the end of the world, but annoying.

    • @paolozago6123
      @paolozago6123 26 дней назад +1

      @@JoelJosephReji What about people on LTS distros? I think my Ubuntu LTS is still affected (BT works for a couple of hours then just stops working and I have to unplug the PC)

    • @JoelJosephReji
      @JoelJosephReji 26 дней назад +1

      @@paolozago6123 I was of the belief that LTS releases were unaffected. This happened in kernel 6.8.2, I think which got fixed in 6.8.3. (Also, Bluetooth itself is a very finicky protocol in my experience with Android being the only platform where I experienced almost perfect Bluetooth connections.)

  • @RichardJActon
    @RichardJActon 27 дней назад

    Very interesting results - would be awesome to do this periodically and see how the numbers change over time.

  • @zerrubabbel
    @zerrubabbel 27 дней назад +1

    I somehow missed the news that there was a poll going on... but in case it matters, I'll share a summary of my answers
    I'm almost up to 1 year on Linux. I'd describe myself as an intermediate user. I can navigate pretty well, but I do still encounter new problems from time to time. I also have the benefit of moderating a large Linux subreddit, which has actually helped accelerate my own skills.
    My biggest problem with Linux by far is Nvidia. I've tried dozens of solutions, fixes, drivers, etc, which all yeild the exact same result: Nothing changes, and my 2070XC runs Stardew Valley at 15 FPS, but my Intel 4425Y runs Minecraft at the full 60 Hz of it's respective display. I'm glad to see Nvidia playing nice with Red Hat, but I think it's too little too late... I'll be moving to AMD by this fall
    Because of this, I can't rule Gaming out as an issue, but I really can't rule it in either... The games my laptops are able to play all work just fine... but anything that touches my Nvidia card refuses to launch... Except FFXIV... I can launch it, and walk about 20 feet before it crashes... If I could, I'd be trying to play MSFS, Xdefiant, Civ 6, Forza, and maybe Cities Skylines or Xplane12
    In terms of stability, I did encounter some issues while I was exploring distros, but since switching to Arch, I haven't had anything to complain about. What issues I did have, I'd guess were probably a product of my own misunderstandings of how things on Linux work... My satisfaction with Linux has been overall pretty good... Probably 8-9 out of 10... And Windows, of which I still have 1 partition left... It really seems like they're trying to suck, and since around March it feels like they've turned on the rocket boosters to suck as much as possible.
    The state of Linux is such that it's capabilities are satisfactory and improving, It treats the end user with the right amount of dignity, It's features are deep and expansive, and it's competition (maybe except BSD) is moving backwards on virtually all fronts.
    Command Line: I need the command line... I don't mind using the command line... In a way, I feel less like it's a scary cryptic tool, and more like it's just a better way for me and my computer to "talk"
    Overall, I'm optimistic about the future of Linux. It seems to have a lot of momentum in the right direction, If things aren't where they need to be today, I think they will be soon.

  • @patocarrasco6266
    @patocarrasco6266 27 дней назад +5

    I have pain in terms of using office related apps in linux. Excel has a few features that are very confortable to have: Macros; dynamic tables (not pivot tables); and "new" matrix functions. Libreoffice offers macros compatibility, onlyoffice offers dynamic tables, and none of them offers the autoexpandable matrix functions. Those functions allow excel to be a complete turing language by itself, allowing me to replace 99% of the macros that I had. Today, I use macros for specific UI needs, like changing color on mouse click, switching pages and stuff like that, but not for calculation anymore, unless those calculations run over an important amount of cells, performance fix is really needed and automatic calculation is disabled. If not the case, then matrix functions work great.

    • @haraldbackfisch1981
      @haraldbackfisch1981 26 дней назад

      If u want a Turing complete datastorage why not go straight to SQL with a viewer? Then u could actually talk about features... making excel the "everything app" is just lazy und honestly if you're using regex or similar within excel you're doing it wrong.. use python or sth - same as using classes on python... that's not what the tool is made for, it's glue. Excel is a high-level table editor not a low-level data Manipulation tool, but have fun auditing your scattered excel functions... when r they bringing unit tests to excel?

    • @haraldbackfisch1981
      @haraldbackfisch1981 26 дней назад

      Sry but : January, 1900, has annoyed me more than once...

    • @patocarrasco6266
      @patocarrasco6266 26 дней назад

      @@haraldbackfisch1981 hahahaha, jan 0th of 1900, a nice memory. Indeed, for enterprise level apps, it is not the way to go for a final solution, but you must accept that excel is the defacto tool for not devs to solve any problem. I learnt excel at a point that I became a guru to them and I help fixing their spreadsheets. At the same time, I can make sample apps even faster than with power apps. Those apps iteroperate well with local python if needed, and I have solutions in no time. Remember that excel is a low-code tool and that means it lacks of scalability, but shines in fast iterations for demonstrations. Later you should go for a traditional language, not cell oriented xD, and develop a nicer app.
      Btw, people (not devs) usually have excel already installed, which is not the case for DBMS, and they will never understand why you must separate data source from views, and that's why spreadsheets are so persuasive.
      In my personal computer I went full linux and I use libreoffice just for one table that I have, but back to my office computer, I have no option, so I decided to master it, became a fullstack cells dev, and it's been paying me for 3 years now. That alone is pretty sad, but you can't imagine how happy I am when I hit the point at which a spreadsheet must turn into an "actual" app and everyone says "ok".

    • @patocarrasco6266
      @patocarrasco6266 26 дней назад

      ​@@haraldbackfisch1981 maybe I need to clarify that I am a full time eployee and I'm solving issues inside my office. Also, no one has admin privileges, but we have excel and python preinstalled. The better sql I can use is the sqlite module packaged with python hahaha (don't get me wrong, I love sqlite).

    • @patocarrasco6266
      @patocarrasco6266 7 дней назад

      @@haraldbackfisch1981 hahahaha, jan 0th of 1900, a nice memory. Indeed, for enterprise level apps, it is not the way to go for a final solution, but you must accept that excel is the defacto tool for not devs to solve any problem. I learned excel at a point that I became a guru to them and I help fixing their spreadsheets. At the same time, I can make sample apps even faster than with power apps. Those apps interoperate well with local python if needed, and I have solutions in no time. Remember that excel is a low-code tool and that means it lacks of scalability, but shines in fast iterations for demonstrations. Later, you should go for a traditional language, not cell oriented xD, and develop a nicer app.
      Btw, people (not devs) usually have excel already installed, which is not the case for DBMS, and they will never understand why you must separate data source from views, and that's why spreadsheets are so persuasive.
      In my personal computer I went full linux and I use libreoffice just for one table that I have, but back to my office computer, I have no option, so I decided to master it, became a fullstack cells dev, and it's been paying me for 3 years now. That alone is pretty sad, but you can't imagine how happy I am when I hit the point at which a spreadsheet must turn into an "actual" app and everyone says "ok".

  • @flemtone
    @flemtone 27 дней назад +9

    I've managed to switch many clients to Linux Mint after having so many issues with Windows, and to date none of them have had an issue with using linux.

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu 26 дней назад +1

      lol have you actually followed up with any of them and checked if they were still running Linux? Cause I would just install Windows instead of contacting a tech person if I had issues with Linux.

  • @MoonlightJellyfish-vz4wq
    @MoonlightJellyfish-vz4wq 25 дней назад +1

    To clarify on Gaming controllers / peripherals since it was a surprise to you; while I haven't had any issues actually connecting and using gamepads (Xbox), that work perfectly with modern Xinput games I'm unable to get them recognized by older games which still used DirectInput. Windows handles those cases out of the box, but I'm not savvy enough to tinker with wine to get it working.

  • @michaelarighi5268
    @michaelarighi5268 27 дней назад +1

    Your interpretation of your question about finding help/how easy to find it was, I think, a bit off the mark. What you asked was about finding solutions to "all" your problems. I've been using Linux for ~20 years. I can generally find whatever answers I need. I recently changed from using Mint to Debian 12, due to needing Wayland support for external monitors on my new Framework machine. That part works fine (and discovering that the issue was the need for full Wayland support was an answer I found fairly quickly). Nonetheless, I've found that Blueman on Debian, for some reason, fails to detect my Bluetooth headphones, which worked under Mint and still work under Android on my Samsung tablet. It detects SOME, but not ALL, my Bluetooth devices. Why? I've been searching off and on for about 4 months, with little success. Not a critical function, but I'd like it to work. So, I can solve ALMOST ALL, but not ALL, my problems fairly easily, which is what I would have had to answer.

  • @SirRFI
    @SirRFI 27 дней назад +3

    7:20 I am not sure, but I think I voted for GPU. I've had problems on laptop with NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650Ti. It may or may not be solved now, but I can see how it could easily be a problem for new comers.
    Very recently I asked around how is the experience on NVIDIA laptops nowdays, and the responses were mixed - some people still stay on X11. So, I'll consider it a problem until the new official drivers will land in kernel or distros by default, so the experience is good for majority of users out of the box.
    After one of recent updates, I started experiencing random black-flickering on my AMD+AMD laptop. My coworker on KDE tends to have problems with multi-monitor setup too.

  • @vlada909
    @vlada909 27 дней назад +5

    I selected both wifi and GPU issues. On my pc I have a Nvidia GPU and xwayland apps were flickering a lot. I've heard that not everyone has this issue because, if I remember corectly, it is a race condition or something like that. Fortunately the update that fixes this issue is out and I'm just waiting for it to release for fedora.
    As for wifi I have a 2014 macbook pro, 5ghz wifi doesn't work at all and 2.4ghz is insanely unstable. Sometimes it doesn't want to connect to wifi at all, even if I'm next to the router. I might be able to change the wifi card in that model but I have not looked into it that much tbh.

    • @MrMediator24
      @MrMediator24 27 дней назад

      Same problem here. Though most apps through Xwayland/Proton work fine, few games and one critical for work app flicker insanely. Can't wait to finally get 555 on Fedora too

    • @shib5267
      @shib5267 27 дней назад

      Also had wifi instability issues on a 2015 MacBook air, but it was similar on macOS and it turned out either the chip or the antenna were damaged. Might want to check for that
      The drivers do work decently on most of these pre 2018 models

  • @BiudreuN1
    @BiudreuN1 27 дней назад

    I have a question about your Infinitybook, I've heard that the black version attracts more fingerprints, is that true? Because it looks great, but if that's the case I would prefer to get the white one.

  • @theodoros_1234
    @theodoros_1234 26 дней назад

    Dang it, I missed this survey! Great work, I love seeing this info!

  • @AaravKuxar
    @AaravKuxar 27 дней назад +4

    The biggest issue that bugs me out in GNU/Linux is the unavailability of hardware video decode on chromium browsers. I have tried all permutations and combinations of flags associated with it and still can't get it to work. Due to this issue, the battery life sucks on my Ideapad.

    • @3lH4ck3rC0mf0r7
      @3lH4ck3rC0mf0r7 27 дней назад

      Interesting, because hardware video decode is actually implemented in mainline. What distro are you using? Maybe the distro disabled it or your hardware doesn't support AV1 hardware decoding, which is what RUclips wants.

    • @AaravKuxar
      @AaravKuxar 27 дней назад

      @@3lH4ck3rC0mf0r7 I thought RUclips wanted VP9. Also arch btw. And video decode on RUclips seems to work fine on Firefox. It's only the chromium-based browsers that I have this issue with.

    • @AaravKuxar
      @AaravKuxar 27 дней назад

      @@3lH4ck3rC0mf0r7 IIRC, RUclips wants VP9. Also arch btw. And video decoding seems to work just fine on firefox. It's only the chromium-based browsers I have this issue with.

    • @AaravKuxar
      @AaravKuxar 27 дней назад

      @@3lH4ck3rC0mf0r7 IIRC, RUclips wants VP9. Also arch btw. And video deciding on RUclips seems to work just fine in Firefox. It's only the chromium based browsers I have this issue with.

    • @AaravKuxar
      @AaravKuxar 14 дней назад

      @@3lH4ck3rC0mf0r7 I know this is old. But youtube wouldn't let me reply the last time I tried. So anyways, I believe youtube uses vp9 and hardware video decoding works just fine on firefox. It's just the chromium browsers which seem to have this issue.

  • @nerdon2
    @nerdon2 27 дней назад +10

    The GPU thing might be about just installing drivers for nvidia. Some people run into issues with that on distros like fedora and arch, as the commands in my experience don't always work perfectly.
    As for wifi and bluetooth, it's all about hardware that has no support for Linux or closed source support which you need to first find and then install. You haven't come across that because you use hardware from a vendor who only uses parts that have good Linux support.
    Same goes for audio issues btw.

    • @WhiteG60
      @WhiteG60 27 дней назад +4

      I said it in a standalone comment, but also the fact that Intel and AMD don't require GPU driver installs, but the drivers exist on their sites. So, coming from Windows, you go 'ok time to get GPU drivers', head to the site, see them, download them and they're not exactly SUPER easy to install and can cause issues later on as you update the system. And not only that, you kinda have to take it on trust that they're installed. There's no easy to look at panel that says 'Yup, you've got version XX.XX installed!' like there is in Windows. At least with nVidia you get the control panel, but I wish AMD and Intel would do something similar for Linux.
      A few years ago, I had a ThinkPad given to me at work that had RHEL on it. It had an nVidia GPU in it and you could get it working just installing the driver package just fine. But every time the kernel updated, it would break and you'd have to go in to the CLI, and reinstall/rebuild the new kernel with the nvidia drivers to get back into a graphical environment. That was a pain and I kinda mostly knew how to use linux. The people in the office that had only used Windows were lost. After two years of that, the company took them all back and gave everyone MBPs instead. They said the difference in up front capital was dwarfed by the amount of support time needed on the Linux laptops.

    • @stuner1337
      @stuner1337 27 дней назад +1

      GPU drivers are probably the main reason why I don't use Fedora. I've had so many problems with Fedora specifically, while all other distros have been fine... The first time I tried, I managed to completely break the display output (black screen after reboot). The second time I got that issue even on the first boot of the Live DVD. And the last time I tried, it plain refused to recognize my second display... I may just be too dumb for Fedora xD

    • @SS-ARYAN
      @SS-ARYAN 27 дней назад +1

      @@stuner1337 The main issue with NVIDIA on Fedora is that simply running the command is not enough, you have to wait about 5 minutes as it compiles in the background AFTER the terminal is free for new input. You are not warned about this anywhere except in the install documentation, which must be read thoroughly.

    • @briandewolfe
      @briandewolfe 27 дней назад +1

      A very common GPU related issue has been poor performance compared to Windows in the same game and using the same settings. My own experience on various distros over the last few years has seen framerates during gameplay at around half (50-60%) of what you'd get with Windows, with the same overall power draw, even for the native Linux build of the game.

    • @SS-ARYAN
      @SS-ARYAN 27 дней назад +1

      @@briandewolfe I got NVIDIA and usually get only a 5-10% penalty, are you installing the proprietary drivers? (Open-source drivers will be recommended in the next month though)

  • @RandomGeometryDashStuff
    @RandomGeometryDashStuff 27 дней назад +1

    13:41 I like sidebar interface most but replace everything in toolbar with [save] and [search commands] and whatever used most often

  • @danielattilavanyi
    @danielattilavanyi 3 дня назад +1

    I think if you had never encountered an issue with gaming controllers you did not really tried many. Like all the Racing Wheels are broken on Linux besides some DIY open source projects. Trustmaster and Logitec are completely broken, you can hack them to be recognised as an input device but the force feedback is not going to work, and that is the point of the whole hardware. For me this is extremely annoying. Now I "fortunately" do not have any wheels around here so it is not a problem for now, but I would like to get one when my kid is going to be a little bit older :)

  • @crapmalls
    @crapmalls 27 дней назад +3

    No secrets except how to make linux work

  • @RBSriGanesh
    @RBSriGanesh 27 дней назад +24

    Installing Linux is easy but getting into the BIOS and booting the live USB can be a big hurdle for beginners.

    • @SirRFI
      @SirRFI 27 дней назад +12

      This can involve turning off secure boot and TPM too. If one doesn't know that, they just may think it just doesn't work.

    • @soulprestigio9162
      @soulprestigio9162 27 дней назад +1

      Blame grub... It's sucks on UEFI

    • @silence___
      @silence___ 27 дней назад

      Wait people have difficulty with that, I used Linux for a while and on my first install it felt simple

    • @laurencefraser
      @laurencefraser 25 дней назад

      @@silence___ did you start out using computers back in the day when Windows actually prompted you regarding entering the bios as part of it's start up procedure?
      Because that's been gone for a While, so newbies won't have that to work from.
      (on an interesting note, it's not technically a BIOS anymore, and hasn't been for quite some time, that got replaced with something else that serves Mostly the same purpose but works differently and has much greater capability in many respects (such as supporting a mouse driven GUI interface and USB). Not that I remember what the current thing is actually called).

    • @silence___
      @silence___ 25 дней назад

      @@laurencefraser it was a computer made in like 2019. I had no trouble navigating the gui. Press a button on start turn an option off and load the live usb.

  • @Arkonny.S
    @Arkonny.S 27 дней назад

    These kind of polls are so precious to the linux community, I'm convinced it can only help making Linux a better OS for everyone

  • @norbertjanik3323
    @norbertjanik3323 26 дней назад

    For local synchronization, Syncthing is a very easy and plug and play solution. It supports Windows, Linux, OSX, Android and there is a port (Möbius Sync) on iOS. All you have to is having given devices connected to the same network and the synchronization happens on its own.

  • @WolfySnowy
    @WolfySnowy 27 дней назад +12

    Damn, I missed interesting survey? I had to unplug/replug bluetooth for it to work, screenshotting x.x I still haven't figured out how to run standalone game from gog installer on linux... or install game with exe installer...
    Might be good idea to survey what distros are used.

    • @korgalis
      @korgalis 27 дней назад +1

      wine/lutris were working for me as far as gog instaler is concerned and in like 70% of games

    • @stuner1337
      @stuner1337 27 дней назад

      To run GOG games I've found Heroic Games Launcher to be quite useful. For standalone exes I use Bottles, but that I struggled more with that (I didn't copy the installers to the Wine prefix and it caused me lots of issues).