As a Linux user, I think this is very accurate. However, google chrome is available on Linux and I have never heard of issues with the screen being upside down.
@@perrypereyra6671 Your intention to say _"Saaaaaaame!"_ unintentionally invoked Sam's family nickname - _"Sammmyyyyy"_ - if you look at your phonetics, and which vowel you used to elongate the word "Same" It's okay, a common error amongst people online. 😜
@@zeocamo Also Linux on M1 Macbooks is still in pre-beta stage, it's basically broken still. So not really an unexpected experience there. New user should imo really get started with something like Linux Mint or Ubuntu.
if you want to offer your customizability options in exchange for not being able to break your system you can install what's called an immutable linux distro
Hahaha. I guess you've never installed an immutable system. They are far from unbreakable, especially from a new user perspective. You can easily have your system "break" from the new user perspective by something going awry with the KDE or Gnome settings in your home folder.
You can hardly break you system if you don't touch the terminal or execute any "sudo something" command, something you don't need to use to run your system and install programs like you would on a Windows or MacOS. You generally only need it for already advanced stuff or debugging when you fucked up something because you ran a sudo command.
I use both Mac OS for work and Fedora on my PC laptops and yea this was pretty funny considering MacOS and Linux are cousins and most people who are Apple users would be more comfortable with Linux than Windows. LOL
@@chickenbobbobba 1 : it's not "exactly" the same. Chrome is based off the open source chromium much like Android is based off of AOSP, aka the Android Open Source Project. It's basically a way for google to pretend to be pro-FOSS to get PR and not be legislated into the dirt without them actually having to make their software open source. It's stupid that companies have to do that but, as the EU has proven, democracy works; your right to private choices goes out the window as soon as a few million people don't like the port your putting on the devices they're voluntarily purchasing. "boo hoo the environment" neat then stop buying them. "boo hoo repairability" neat then stop buying them. "boo hoo locked down appstore" neat. then. stop. buying. them. Realistically all this does is deny Google the rope to hang themselves and keep them in a perpetual state of just not-shit-enough for people to leave and create a truly superiour competitor, but who would expect politicians to actually think about the consequences of the bills they pass? 2 : you can literally just install google chrome. Not chromium, google chrome. I am looking at both Google Chrome and the Google Chrome Developer/Unstable build packaged as flatpaks inside of my software store right now as the top two results by typing in "chrome" and hitting enter.
"that doesn't let you customize anything, which means, you can't break anything" As a Linux user (software developer), this is so true that hurts. I just fixed my windows installation because I selected the wrong disk when I tried to unmount my USB device.
Funny :D A few inaccuracies I'd like to point out though. 1. Google Chrome runs natively on Linux 2. Sudo isn't a magic spell for every command 😉 It just gives a command admin rights (like the notification on Windows) 3. Flatpaks are probably the easiest way to install apps on Linux. In a distro where they're enabled by default, you can search for any flatpak in the software downloader, and it just works. 4. The terminal isn't needed for most basic tasks any more. But for more advanced use, it won't go long before you need it unfortunately. (If you learn it though, oh boy is it a practical tool 😉) Overall, there's still a way to go before Linux is as easy as MacOS or Windows, but it improves loads every year, and I don't think it'll be too long before it's considered on the same level as Windows and MacOS
if your pc is not one of the latest most drivers will just work, i dont know why is he so critical of linux, like installing things is just writing at most 3 lines of command compared to wasting 5-6mins in whatever os they use.
@@oksowhat The only piece of hardware that I have that worked halfway-decently on Linux was a Microsoft Surface. Everything else corrupted the FS in short order and crashed frequently.
I've had the same experience with Kubuntu and Ubuntu! Both worked out of the box flawlessly for me. I tried Linux once in college and gave up... it's actually very easy now if you use a stable distro. This video was hilarious though!
The main inaccuracy in this one is that Google Chrome definitely works on Linux. Also, many distros avoid the hassle of updating repositories by doing it automatically.
Great job, Sam! Supporting my long time belief that only a sense of humor will allow us to survive. 🙂 My OS life path: CP/M on an Osborne 1, UNIX System V via AT&T, SunOS/Solaris at Sun Micro, followed by Linux with side foray's into MS Windows and MacOS to support others. My Favorite "run back to Linux" guidance from a life-long Apple friend: "Here is a list of sixty 3 or 4 character "shortcuts" for MacOS." 🙂
Parallel universe: Recently I tried to install MacOS on my PC. And... it's horrible experience! It requires bios patches, specific hardware and lots of terminal commands. How an average user is supposed to use it?
Apple users don't install OS's, they get them preinstalled on Apple hardware! I'm sure the installation by a bot that can do it in under 5 minutes costs around $200+ as a hidden charge!
@@_denzy_6310don’t laugh in a prebuilt efi. If you build your own, you get faster boot times, less clutter, and usually more native Apple features (like FileVault & Apple secure boot)
Oh boy, the comments section is a warzone. 😂😂 As a linux user myself, I understand why linux users have the reputation of being passionate about linux. It's because we believe linux is the best since all of us start off from either MacOS or Windows and we can definitively give a review of all of the Operating Systems, we know them more intimately to give an informed recommendation. Also we want linux to succeed because we see what microsoft and apple are doing to the software industry and we don't want people to be stuck in those ecosystems without a way out. Linux is free, as in freedom.
Proud Linux user here! I'm so happy I switched from Windows, because all my games had more FPS, my one HDD doesn't randomly start spinning up anymore when I'm not even at the pc. And there are so much things I can customize and if anything annoys me, it's easily distinguishable. Also I'm so proud of the efficiency and security. With btrfs, I'm compressing the whole disk and encrypting it, making much more stuff actually fit on it
As a Linux user, I love this. Linux isn't perfect. But then again, I switched from Windows AND macOS because they're not perfect either. The step from using macOS to using Linux isn't that difficult to be honest. And more games now work with Steam! I still use Windows for 2 games. The rest is Linux for me!
Really? I switched from Linux to macOS years ago. Steam works on macOS and hell even wine(yes that is what Proton uses) works great on macOS. The more games via Linux? maybe one or two that won't work on macOS yet. But that is changing all the time, thanks to CodeWeavers. Native games? There are more native AAA and indie games on macOS over Linux. Don't get me wrong I love Linux but not for desktop. I am a gamer and the best way to game right now is Windows. So I use all three operating systems to their strengths. Windows for games, Linux for servers. and macOS for everything else.
@@SirRandallDoesStuff lol what? steam is on macOS, but the majority of games dont work on the new macs' arm processors, and since apple is so restrictive with their software its hard to make them work well. proton works much better for gaming on linux than any tool on macOS. native games dont need to be on linux, because they run great through proton, and the amount of proton compatible games vastly outnumbers the native games on macOS. unless you play a lot of competitive games with invasive anti-cheats, windows doesnt have that much of an advantage over linux for games. even if you do, the number of competitive games playable on linux has been increasing.
@@SirRandallDoesStuffI'm sorry but as a gamer, the best way to game right now is on console, not Windows. Sure the experience is far less pleasant for a bunch of reasons, but considering you're looking for simplicity as you clearly don't want to bother playing of Linux despite being able to run most AAA games and almost all indie games, your best choice is consoles, not PC.
1- Google chrome in Linux can be replaced with it's open source code version - "Chromium" - - - and an even better option - "Degoogled Chomium" - no ratting out your every move with its telemetry 2 - Photoshop has decent alternatives in Linux called GIMP, Krita and Darktable - tons of tutoral videos on YT on how to use. If you want to go the paid Non-Linux route, you can replace photoshop with these options: 1. Luminar Neo, 2. Affinity Photo (Version 2), 3.Capture One 3 - MS Office has a decent alternative "LibreOffice" in Linux - tons of tutoral videos on YT on how to use - and - documents can be imported between both - so in the end, it doesn't matter.
why is no-one mentioning that just about every non-buntu distro (canonical have their own thing that does basically the same job but is technically different) can install flatpaks, which don't require any root privilages, from their software store? Of all the issues people are pointing out that he didn't mention alternatives and not the things that he just flat out got wrong
ah yes i love being in the apple ecosystem and having to pay hundreds or thousands of bucks because apple decided to kill a good and working piece of technology
And I love using inferior versions of applications because Apple forces developers to use a strict list of technologies. For example, iOS web browsers can only use WebKit, and nothing can use Vulkan. I love powerful hardware that's nerfed by bad software!
Which one of the long list of software screwups are you referring to here? I moved to Mac in 2008 and caught leopard, then snow leopard, but besides 10.9 Mavericks it’s been a downhill slope ever since.
Terminal lets you do things like "find song files in my Music folder and subfolders, which has 'volter' in the name and move them all to folder 'boring'". Very useful, very powerful. But you need to actively learn how to do it first.
As a part time linux user for the past 2 years, i still don’t get how doing everything through the terminal is in any ways better than not doing that. I think they just want me to believe that so i don’t notice none of the 8+ graphical shells i’ve tried seemed t have been designed or thought out at all by a qualified human being. (Inb4 one of them comes tell me akchually shell doesn’t refer to gui things)
sometimes ( mostly) you get more options through the terminal. Most people don't need all the options. It's also the easiest way to run stuff as an admin. I find I don't use all the fancy, newest stuff in the GUIs either
simple: cause it's a fucking pain in the ass to use an app store, on any OS, for any app it sucks on windows, it sucks on mac, it sucks on GNOME and KDE, synaptic sucks, YaST sucks, everything out there finds a way to suck somehow
I installed a user friendly Linux. For the first month of Linux use, you understand why it is not a more popular operating system. Now it does get better once you get use to the system.
What's great is that I got my first mac last month and one of the first things I had to do was go in the terminal so I could make a folder outside of the documents folder. I brought it to a friend and he was like "Why would you want to do that?" haha
What? I have made at least 10 folders in my home folder and it hasn't even given a warning Did you try to make it outside the /users/ folder? Or did you not manage to find your home folder? Because if it is the latter yeah it is a bit annoying that home is oddly hidden, to access it you either have to: - Open finder preferences and add it to the sidebar from there - Control-click the text at the top of the window that shows the name of the current folder you are in, at which point it will show you the directory in a drop down menu - Search /users/[user]/ in spotlight - Right click finder in the dock and click go to folder and type the directory - Hold option at which point the directory is going to show up at the bottom of the screen Unrelated but hidden folders are shown with command-option-. if you are looking for the /users/[user]/library folder And also holding option when the control-click menu allows for more options like copying the directory, opening something in a new window and opening the inspector which I can't notice any difference from the get info menu other than that it has a smaller font and no opening/closing animation why is it there I guess this turned into useful finder stuff that are not explained anywhere
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're refering to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX. Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called Linux, and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project. There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called Linux distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux!
- How many things can a mac user get wrong about Linux? - Yes. Chrome is available. Graphical app stores are capable of refreshing data and dealing with Flatpak apps. Cube effect isn't gone forever, it's just being rewritten (old version became impossible to maintain). There are fairly decent substitutions for office suite and Photoshop; it doesn't take much to look them up online.
The terminal on OSX is just the start. You don't actually have to boot into a graphical session at all- you can run it as a TTY just like linux. Or could, as of Snow Leopard.
Word being missing is true (besides the web one), but chrome is natively supported by google so it’s most definitely there, and photoshop is relatively easy to run with a little bit of wine trickery
1:54 Google Chrome is available on Linux… Also, who uses Linux doesn't exactly want to use Micro$oft software, so not many Linux users miss it. But Micro$oft actually made Edge available on Linux.
0:12 Since this is the same joke he made like a year ago, I'm starting to wonder if he actually went through something like that during his linux experience as i never had these types of issues, unless I'm missing something.
I had weird behaviors with dual monitors setup I think on Linux Mint XFCE or cinammon a time ago, even after installed, it was mainly related to not being able to change the primary display accordingly, but upside down displays are a new one to me
I was amused until you bleeped s*do, then I outright died. A pretty mean yet accurate picture of the Linux experience. (Nobody tell him about BSD and MacOS)
Chrome is available on linux, and photoshop (at least the 2019 version) works in wine, you are right about microsoft office though, we don't have that, and our replacements, though usable, are not 100% feature complete, particularly our excel clones.
Fun fact: Linux was created in Finland by Finnish coder and software developer Linus Torvalds. It is one of the few Finnish world conquerors after the use of SMS messages ended and Nokia went bankrupt and was sold to Microsoft.
Corrections from a GNU/Linux user: - Even some GNU users say free and open source are the same, but that's not true. Open source misses the point; you really should promote free software - The looks come not really from the distro, but from something called a desktop environment. Some distros, such as NixOS, offer a lot of options when installing, but some, such as Manjaro, Mint, Ubuntu, offer several installer images, one for each DE. Some distros have their own default wallpapers, but you can easily change them. Some distros have an unusual default look for some DEs (such as Fedora XFCE), but I think that can be configured, too. So, some DEs (such as Cinnamon or Plasma) usually look like NT by default while some (Pantheon) look like MacOS - I haven't seen or heard much correction, although they talk about it. However, what you said may be true because FSF opposes the name “Linux”, although they can't do a lot. Personally I prefer calling it GNU - I don't find installing applications very difficult. I've seen a video where they said Apple users said that you just have to drag the application into the app folder, but that's just a part of a process. (They probably have that part just to make the illusion.) So installing software from App Store or a GUI PM in GNU is easier - It's not necessary that everything is free. They can offer unfree software, such as Chrome or VS Code. That depends on the distro and its configuration - Unfortunately, Microsoft Office, Photoshop, and Google Chrome are used by many people - As I mentioned above, Chrome can be available depending on the configuration - There are free apps with functionality similar to MS Office, Photoshop, and Chrome. This isn't really a correction, but I think that's worth mentioning - Flatpak isn't the only option to download. It's just one of three well-known universal package managers. The others are AppImage and Snap. What package manager you can use depends on the app. Also, some system package managers (backends) have their own format that you can download. You can also install it from source; that's not Flatpak - The assembly doesn't happen in the terminal, although it's common to use the latter to initiate the former and see its progress and log - A lot of commands work without sudo. You can even install packages from Nix to your user without it - I don't think a terminal station is bad. Also, the word being used for bad things isn't really indicative of it
🤓 well, actually: the promt "sudo", is only applied for certain type of distros, depending on what kind of package manager it uses. i use garuda os, with is based on arch btw, so in my case, the promp "sudo" is changed with the prompt: "pacman." yes, that pacman. and i even got a little pacman animation with it, while i installing or updating my stuff.
Fun fact here, the terminal on macos actually uses a fork of bash (zsh), the default "terminal" for linux Which means a lot of commands on mac are the same, and, yes, sudo is also a thing on mac
But don't worry. Project X is working on a brand new way of installing applications, while Project Y is working on a brand new graphical interface and Z is going to create a new distro to fix some of these issues. Of course, none of them is going to have nothing to do with the other and may not work together at all, but at least you get the *choice* and the *freedom* of choosing what in your system is not going to work.
Never came across your channel as far as I can remember, but the title made me watch: You had me there for a moment! But then I realized who your parody was really about! BTW: I use Arch and KDE PLasma with the wobbly windows, cube effect... and I love it! Microsoft and Apple would have to pay me a crap load to even consider using anything they make! Oh the Apple Fanbois in these comments here are hilarious!
As a Linux user, I think this is very accurate. However, google chrome is available on Linux and I have never heard of issues with the screen being upside down.
My screen was upside down once on a Gnusmas monitor. That's about all.
Chrome seems to be misunderstanding, but the screen is an obvious joke.
@@kiran9s honestly, the whole video is a joke. Don't take anything seriously :)
@@mikeonthecomputerI accidentally did that on my friends laptop but it was running windows 8. There’s a key combo for that…
@@mikeonthecomputer True, but most of the video was spot on.
I laughed for about a minute on "Nothing good starts with terminal" 🤣
I love this man's sense of humour!
sameeee LOL
@@perrypereyra6671 Your intention to say _"Saaaaaaame!"_ unintentionally invoked Sam's family nickname - _"Sammmyyyyy"_ - if you look at your phonetics, and which vowel you used to elongate the word "Same"
It's okay, a common error amongst people online.
😜
I liked Terminal the movie but still laughed at the joke. 🤣
I was eating and had a full mouth when that bit came on haha
As a person who works at KFC and uses Linux on my Raspberry Pi. I can 100% confirm that the Kernel uses 11 herbs and spices
Now, what are they?!
🤫
😅 nice --11
Probably a backhanded reference to X11 windowing system?
X11❤
Lovely to see how Sam will one day become a Linux fanboy...
IT start by hading on Linux, it end on Arch Linux btw
ps Sam started on Arch and then nothing works ... that is no good.
@@zeocamoarch not begineer friendly. Debian distros better like feren os
@@furdiburd Need beginner friendly, it's Ubuntu, Linux Mint, or Linux Light. All are Ubuntu based, but Mint and Light are more polished.
@@zeocamo Also Linux on M1 Macbooks is still in pre-beta stage, it's basically broken still. So not really an unexpected experience there. New user should imo really get started with something like Linux Mint or Ubuntu.
@@Sjoerd1993 yes, i write this on the video too.
This is funny. But Chrome is absolutely available for Linux.
However Linux users will do everything to keep you away from that ABSOLUTELY PROPRIETARY browser.
@@subaru4920 Because people don't use Linux. It's literally just 3% of the desktop market share.
And it also has something like Microsoft Office that is enough for normal use.
Guys above me, you are rock! Free (as in freedom) software is our everything!
@@APPLP1E to be fair it is an awful browser that's basically just spyware
if you want to offer your customizability options in exchange for not being able to break your system you can install what's called an immutable linux distro
"Unfuckable Linux distro"
@@Trident_Euclid*We'll see about that.*
A lot of linux distributions like Debian are stupidly stable anyways. Its pretty hard to break unless you really mess with things you shouldnt have.
Hahaha. I guess you've never installed an immutable system. They are far from unbreakable, especially from a new user perspective. You can easily have your system "break" from the new user perspective by something going awry with the KDE or Gnome settings in your home folder.
You can hardly break you system if you don't touch the terminal or execute any "sudo something" command, something you don't need to use to run your system and install programs like you would on a Windows or MacOS.
You generally only need it for already advanced stuff or debugging when you fucked up something because you ran a sudo command.
Happy Linux user here. I pound-the-table laughed multiple times during this. Absolutely hysterical.
I use both Mac OS for work and Fedora on my PC laptops and yea this was pretty funny considering MacOS and Linux are cousins and most people who are Apple users would be more comfortable with Linux than Windows. LOL
@@joesalyers - Perhaps someone aught to explain the cousins thing to elementaryOS.
@@joesalyers Linux is the poor man's Apple.
Poor table
You really screwed my head a different way when you said chrome isn’t available on Linux, I’m sat at my Linux machine using google chrome right now
chromium (the open source alternative) is exactly the same and available in all btw
@@chickenbobbobba that too. But he is right about Libreoffice as it just isn’t as good.
@@chickenbobbobba 1 : it's not "exactly" the same. Chrome is based off the open source chromium much like Android is based off of AOSP, aka the Android Open Source Project. It's basically a way for google to pretend to be pro-FOSS to get PR and not be legislated into the dirt without them actually having to make their software open source. It's stupid that companies have to do that but, as the EU has proven, democracy works; your right to private choices goes out the window as soon as a few million people don't like the port your putting on the devices they're voluntarily purchasing. "boo hoo the environment" neat then stop buying them. "boo hoo repairability" neat then stop buying them. "boo hoo locked down appstore" neat. then. stop. buying. them. Realistically all this does is deny Google the rope to hang themselves and keep them in a perpetual state of just not-shit-enough for people to leave and create a truly superiour competitor, but who would expect politicians to actually think about the consequences of the bills they pass?
2 : you can literally just install google chrome. Not chromium, google chrome. I am looking at both Google Chrome and the Google Chrome Developer/Unstable build packaged as flatpaks inside of my software store right now as the top two results by typing in "chrome" and hitting enter.
@@chickenbobbobba almost exactly
It is unavailable in some distros.
What’s MacOS? Do you mean Darwin+XNU
This guy gets it.
@@EightNineOne what us XNU ????
@@xgui4-studiosIt's the kernel stolen by Steve Jews 😂
@@UnixPerdunix Steve **Jews** ?! 😂
Don’t you make the sacred operating system dirty with your Unix filth!
"that doesn't let you customize anything, which means, you can't break anything"
As a Linux user (software developer), this is so true that hurts.
I just fixed my windows installation because I selected the wrong disk when I tried to unmount my USB device.
Funny :D
A few inaccuracies I'd like to point out though.
1. Google Chrome runs natively on Linux
2. Sudo isn't a magic spell for every command 😉 It just gives a command admin rights (like the notification on Windows)
3. Flatpaks are probably the easiest way to install apps on Linux. In a distro where they're enabled by default, you can search for any flatpak in the software downloader, and it just works.
4. The terminal isn't needed for most basic tasks any more. But for more advanced use, it won't go long before you need it unfortunately. (If you learn it though, oh boy is it a practical tool 😉)
Overall, there's still a way to go before Linux is as easy as MacOS or Windows, but it improves loads every year, and I don't think it'll be too long before it's considered on the same level as Windows and MacOS
im pretty sure h e knows sudo is not a magic spell
@@ceticx Yeah, but that's how he made it seem in the video, so I went along with it 😉 I'm just explaining if anyone who doesn't know is curious
About sudo, he's just making a joke. As an avid arch linux user, you do kinda need sudo for almost anything that requires to break out the terminal.
@@logosking2848 thats only because basic tasks dont need admin rights, and nowadays linux has usually has GUI options for basic tasks
Karen is that you 😂
Linux is surprisingly easy to use, as a Windows user, Linux Mint was a breeze for me when installing Applications and drivers
if your pc is not one of the latest most drivers will just work, i dont know why is he so critical of linux, like installing things is just writing at most 3 lines of command compared to wasting 5-6mins in whatever os they use.
@@oksowhatThat's Arch thing you see, he shouldn't have started at Arch.
@@oksowhat The only piece of hardware that I have that worked halfway-decently on Linux was a Microsoft Surface. Everything else corrupted the FS in short order and crashed frequently.
I've had the same experience with Kubuntu and Ubuntu! Both worked out of the box flawlessly for me. I tried Linux once in college and gave up... it's actually very easy now if you use a stable distro. This video was hilarious though!
@@GoogleDoesEvil Just the opposite for me. I've put different versions of linux on various pcs, and the only ones that gave me fits are the Surfaces.
The main inaccuracy in this one is that Google Chrome definitely works on Linux. Also, many distros avoid the hassle of updating repositories by doing it automatically.
Technically the militant Linux advocate would refuse to install any proprietary software on principle.
@@kevinclass2010 Agreed. But I can say for sure that Sam is not a militant Linux advocate...
There are a ton of inaccuracies in this vid
@@banks3388 Agreed
@@kevinclass2010true, very true. I kinda do that and I'm not even a militant user.
Google chrome works just fine on linux.
Yeah, I was about to comment that, idk what he's on about.
Chrome "original" is different from chromium in terms of branding. I think this is what he meant.
@@darukutsu Yes, but still the original Google Chrome is available on Linux.
@@darukutsu chromium and chrome both work just fine
I only knew about chromium since it's in repository.
Hilarious!!!
BTW, don't worry about any factual errors. There will be no shortage of Linux users, absolutely eager to keep on correcting you!
Great job, Sam! Supporting my long time belief that only a sense of humor will allow us to survive. 🙂
My OS life path: CP/M on an Osborne 1, UNIX System V via AT&T, SunOS/Solaris at Sun Micro, followed by Linux with side foray's into MS Windows and MacOS to support others.
My Favorite "run back to Linux" guidance from a life-long Apple friend:
"Here is a list of sixty 3 or 4 character "shortcuts" for MacOS." 🙂
1:00 they just announced the return of the famous cube :D
google does work on linux 😐
It’s a sarcastic video
That slap to the monitor so on point😅😂
Breaking out the ol' FunkOS wallpaper for this one 😎
That ending was beautiful. Also how he plainly sensed the Terminal icon from within the Launchpad icon and from so far away!
And then he discovers sudo returns!
That clip of arch users was gold! XD
Parallel universe: Recently I tried to install MacOS on my PC. And... it's horrible experience! It requires bios patches, specific hardware and lots of terminal commands. How an average user is supposed to use it?
they made it tough on purpose. they just want their software on their overpriced hardware.
Laughs in pre built efi
Apple users don't install OS's, they get them preinstalled on Apple hardware! I'm sure the installation by a bot that can do it in under 5 minutes costs around $200+ as a hidden charge!
Opencore works on most hardware (even Ryzen iGPUs) these days…..
@@_denzy_6310don’t laugh in a prebuilt efi. If you build your own, you get faster boot times, less clutter, and usually more native Apple features (like FileVault & Apple secure boot)
Bruh google chrome is actually available
yes, but not out of the box due to licensing issues...
@@davepastern It's also not available out of the box for Windows or MacOS.
@@wta1518 true, but for GNU/Linux it's because of the licence and not cos Windows is a monopoly...
@@davepastern There is also at least 1 distro that comes with Chrome: ChromeOS.
@@wta1518 sure...and it's proprietary AF...
Oh boy, the comments section is a warzone. 😂😂
As a linux user myself, I understand why linux users have the reputation of being passionate about linux. It's because we believe linux is the best since all of us start off from either MacOS or Windows and we can definitively give a review of all of the Operating Systems, we know them more intimately to give an informed recommendation. Also we want linux to succeed because we see what microsoft and apple are doing to the software industry and we don't want people to be stuck in those ecosystems without a way out. Linux is free, as in freedom.
This brought back some serious Linux PTSD.
Proud Linux user here! I'm so happy I switched from Windows, because all my games had more FPS, my one HDD doesn't randomly start spinning up anymore when I'm not even at the pc.
And there are so much things I can customize and if anything annoys me, it's easily distinguishable. Also I'm so proud of the efficiency and security. With btrfs, I'm compressing the whole disk and encrypting it, making much more stuff actually fit on it
17 years linux user here - I stopped customizing 10 years ago and I like my distros as they are - not even changing the default background. 🥰
Congrats to you and the other two people where ever they are that game on linux....
@@sk_jay bro the steam deck alone has sold over a million units confirmed and likely over 2-3 by now. Cope.
@@punpcki have ascended and started using unconfigured i3 (aside from rofi and some minor adjustments)
As a Linux user, I love this. Linux isn't perfect. But then again, I switched from Windows AND macOS because they're not perfect either.
The step from using macOS to using Linux isn't that difficult to be honest. And more games now work with Steam!
I still use Windows for 2 games. The rest is Linux for me!
Really? I switched from Linux to macOS years ago. Steam works on macOS and hell even wine(yes that is what Proton uses) works great on macOS. The more games via Linux? maybe one or two that won't work on macOS yet. But that is changing all the time, thanks to CodeWeavers. Native games? There are more native AAA and indie games on macOS over Linux. Don't get me wrong I love Linux but not for desktop. I am a gamer and the best way to game right now is Windows. So I use all three operating systems to their strengths. Windows for games, Linux for servers. and macOS for everything else.
@@SirRandallDoesStuff lol what? steam is on macOS, but the majority of games dont work on the new macs' arm processors, and since apple is so restrictive with their software its hard to make them work well. proton works much better for gaming on linux than any tool on macOS. native games dont need to be on linux, because they run great through proton, and the amount of proton compatible games vastly outnumbers the native games on macOS. unless you play a lot of competitive games with invasive anti-cheats, windows doesnt have that much of an advantage over linux for games. even if you do, the number of competitive games playable on linux has been increasing.
@@SirRandallDoesStuffsteam os is based on arch linux
@@SirRandallDoesStuffI'm sorry but as a gamer, the best way to game right now is on console, not Windows. Sure the experience is far less pleasant for a bunch of reasons, but considering you're looking for simplicity as you clearly don't want to bother playing of Linux despite being able to run most AAA games and almost all indie games, your best choice is consoles, not PC.
@@meow69696 Huh? Cyberpunk runs great on Linux with an older NVIDIA 2070 here.
1- Google chrome in Linux can be replaced with it's open source code version - "Chromium" - - - and an even better option - "Degoogled Chomium" - no ratting out your every move with its telemetry
2 - Photoshop has decent alternatives in Linux called GIMP, Krita and Darktable - tons of tutoral videos on YT on how to use.
If you want to go the paid Non-Linux route, you can replace photoshop with these options:
1. Luminar Neo, 2. Affinity Photo (Version 2), 3.Capture One
3 - MS Office has a decent alternative "LibreOffice" in Linux - tons of tutoral videos on YT on how to use - and - documents can be imported between both - so in the end, it doesn't matter.
why is no-one mentioning that just about every non-buntu distro (canonical have their own thing that does basically the same job but is technically different) can install flatpaks, which don't require any root privilages, from their software store? Of all the issues people are pointing out that he didn't mention alternatives and not the things that he just flat out got wrong
ah yes i love being in the apple ecosystem and having to pay hundreds or thousands of bucks because apple decided to kill a good and working piece of technology
And I love using inferior versions of applications because Apple forces developers to use a strict list of technologies. For example, iOS web browsers can only use WebKit, and nothing can use Vulkan. I love powerful hardware that's nerfed by bad software!
Which one of the long list of software screwups are you referring to here? I moved to Mac in 2008 and caught leopard, then snow leopard, but besides 10.9 Mavericks it’s been a downhill slope ever since.
it's a blessing in disguise, because you can install Linux on the device instead.
@@autohmaewell, with ARM, it's screwed for some time again.
@@spl420Asahi is already working
i almost choked my self at "SUDO" @ 2:50 ,,,🤣
S*DO
fun fact: sudo is on MacOS as well
Terminal lets you do things like "find song files in my Music folder and subfolders, which has 'volter' in the name and move them all to folder 'boring'". Very useful, very powerful. But you need to actively learn how to do it first.
Linux, the best OS humanity has ever gotten. Switch to Linux
wait you didn't have any corn!!!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
If you don’t value your time
Chrome works on Linux for years.
Exactly lol I posted that too 😅
Correction:: Chrome is on linux
Have you ever Noticed nothing good ever starts with terminal?🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@SaraMorgan-ym6ue Opens up terminal on MacOS, and run: say "Have you ever Noticed nothing good ever starts with terminal?"
This was an excellent video. The thumbnail made me laugh and the rest of the video was an absolute gem. You even got the upside down monitor issue!
100% up for Sam basically becoming a Linux RUclipsr lol
This was my experience exactly, but you had more fun doing it!
Ahhh, Sam adopted a cute little penguin.
As a part time linux user for the past 2 years, i still don’t get how doing everything through the terminal is in any ways better than not doing that. I think they just want me to believe that so i don’t notice none of the 8+ graphical shells i’ve tried seemed t have been designed or thought out at all by a qualified human being.
(Inb4 one of them comes tell me akchually shell doesn’t refer to gui things)
sometimes ( mostly) you get more options through the terminal. Most people don't need all the options. It's also the easiest way to run stuff as an admin.
I find I don't use all the fancy, newest stuff in the GUIs either
It's unambiguous, self-documenting, and generally faster. Verbally describing a task seems a lot more efficient than playing charades
simple: cause it's a fucking pain in the ass to use an app store, on any OS, for any app
it sucks on windows, it sucks on mac, it sucks on GNOME and KDE, synaptic sucks, YaST sucks, everything out there finds a way to suck somehow
@@supercellex4D wait do you think people have to pick between an APP STORE and a TERMINAL on pc (and mac for that matter) to install stuff?
@@seanfaherty i mean there being more options in the terminal is only true if the GUI is bad enough (my original point)
> sudo install program
> SAMTIME ia not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported
This guy Linuxes. Ctrl + D
"This incident will be reported" To who? My root account?
@@FlushDesert22 Santa Claus
Rtfm. It tells you who it will be reported to.
`apt`? `pacman`? `aptitude`? Hellooooo??!
Google chrome have native linux app.
Sudo is like Window$'s "Right-click→Run as Administrator" but more powerful.
By powerful, sudo is running as if the operating system itself run the command (in CS terms, root). Btw, sudo is on MacOS's terminal as well.
@@tanawatjukmongkol2178 sudo account on MacOS are disabled by default, but it is Simple to enable it.
Huh? Chrome is on Linux.
Google Chrome is supported by the way
"Sudo, of course, is a very powerful curse" with Harry Potter playing 💀
Just watched your other linux video. Then watching Nicco reacting to your linux video. Now watching you do another linux video. Based Linux
I installed a user friendly Linux. For the first month of Linux use, you understand why it is not a more popular operating system. Now it does get better once you get use to the system.
As a Linux user, I'm laughing my ass off! Great video!
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I use Arch btw!
Your videos are hilarious as heck, and accurate! Amazing work as always!
I tried installing a mouse driver on Linux once, by the end of it I was a fully fledged developer.
What's great is that I got my first mac last month and one of the first things I had to do was go in the terminal so I could make a folder outside of the documents folder. I brought it to a friend and he was like "Why would you want to do that?" haha
What?
I have made at least 10 folders in my home folder and it hasn't even given a warning
Did you try to make it outside the /users/ folder? Or did you not manage to find your home folder?
Because if it is the latter yeah it is a bit annoying that home is oddly hidden, to access it you either have to:
- Open finder preferences and add it to the sidebar from there
- Control-click the text at the top of the window that shows the name of the current folder you are in, at which point it will show you the directory in a drop down menu
- Search /users/[user]/ in spotlight
- Right click finder in the dock and click go to folder and type the directory
- Hold option at which point the directory is going to show up at the bottom of the screen
Unrelated but hidden folders are shown with command-option-. if you are looking for the /users/[user]/library folder
And also holding option when the control-click menu allows for more options like copying the directory, opening something in a new window and opening the inspector which I can't notice any difference from the get info menu other than that it has a smaller font and no opening/closing animation why is it there
I guess this turned into useful finder stuff that are not explained anywhere
3:40
Wait until he finds out about Command Prompt and Powershell on Windows
Soon Sam will be overcome by the Linux Madness. He has almost passed the Linux Event Manager Horizon and there will be no return.
What? I'm watching this in Chrome in linux...in arch btw
Linux is a kernel not a os. Linux is the kernel
You don’t say…
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're refering to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX.
Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called Linux, and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project.
There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called Linux distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux!
I was expecting the end to be like "you can do everything in the gui... until you aren't supported"
Actually, Elementary Apps are free... those are optional (and recommended) donations.... which most people don't pay....
When you said repository I knew the word suppository was not far behind!
as a long time Linux user daily-driving Ubuntu, i had a chuckle or two
LInux user since 2004. Im viewing this video on my Debian 12 seamlessly running a Macbook Pro. Chrome is available and much more.
- How many things can a mac user get wrong about Linux?
- Yes.
Chrome is available. Graphical app stores are capable of refreshing data and dealing with Flatpak apps. Cube effect isn't gone forever, it's just being rewritten (old version became impossible to maintain). There are fairly decent substitutions for office suite and Photoshop; it doesn't take much to look them up online.
The terminal on OSX is just the start. You don't actually have to boot into a graphical session at all- you can run it as a TTY just like linux.
Or could, as of Snow Leopard.
I think you meant sudo, not sodu.
Why doesn't SAMTIME have more subscribers? This stuff is funny as heck.
Chrome is absolutely available on Linux, where did you get that from?
I'm using linux exclusively for 17 years (private and on my job) and I find it really amusing what is explained in this video - nice satire 😂
Inb4 the thumbnail is inevitably changed to “sudo” from “sodu”
it's changed to sodu
soda
Correction.... All of the cube effects are Compiz and readily available.
Man, I really miss the good old compiz days
Word being missing is true (besides the web one), but chrome is natively supported by google so it’s most definitely there, and photoshop is relatively easy to run with a little bit of wine trickery
1:54 Google Chrome is available on Linux…
Also, who uses Linux doesn't exactly want to use Micro$oft software, so not many Linux users miss it.
But Micro$oft actually made Edge available on Linux.
Google Chrome does work on Linux. I don't know where you got the idea that it doesn't.
it wasn't in his package manager "app store" so he was lost... lol
As someone who's seen the thumbnail, I can confirm that you misspelled "sudo" in the thumbnail.
0:12 Since this is the same joke he made like a year ago, I'm starting to wonder if he actually went through something like that during his linux experience as i never had these types of issues, unless I'm missing something.
I was also wondering the same thing, he does this joke a lot, and never once have I ever experienced it.
I had weird behaviors with dual monitors setup I think on Linux Mint XFCE or cinammon a time ago, even after installed, it was mainly related to not being able to change the primary display accordingly, but upside down displays are a new one to me
I hate you. I'm a full-time Linux user but this is so funny I laughed so hard and spat my lunch all over my keyboard.
I was amused until you bleeped s*do, then I outright died. A pretty mean yet accurate picture of the Linux experience.
(Nobody tell him about BSD and MacOS)
I think every macos user i ve seen has used brew install. Mac is proud of its unix heritage since nextstep
The cube and wobbly windows is still available out of the box with KDE Plasma
Anytime I’m watching him I focus more on the jokes than the actual content😂😂
You’re the best man
Fun fact: Darwin is a UNIX like OS, and XNU kernel have many features forked from FreeBSD and OSMFK.
Fun fact: I think of you don’t know this fundamental level stuff by now, and are watching a video about Linux, there ain’t much hope. 😂
hey sam, there's google chrome for linux.
I don't know where you heard about that chrome is not on Linux, but it's probably because no ones uses it there
As a linux user, We do have chrome however no one wants it.
"Don't hurt me"
~My Computer
Chrome is available on linux, and photoshop (at least the 2019 version) works in wine, you are right about microsoft office though, we don't have that, and our replacements, though usable, are not 100% feature complete, particularly our excel clones.
What on earth is wrong with "The Terminal"? It's got Tom Hanks AND Catherine Zeta-Jones AND John effin' Williams AND "medicine is for goat"!
You're right and i've nothing further to add.
Fun fact: Linux was created in Finland by Finnish coder and software developer Linus Torvalds. It is one of the few Finnish world conquerors after the use of SMS messages ended and Nokia went bankrupt and was sold to Microsoft.
Corrections from a GNU/Linux user:
- Even some GNU users say free and open source are the same, but that's not true. Open source misses the point; you really should promote free software
- The looks come not really from the distro, but from something called a desktop environment. Some distros, such as NixOS, offer a lot of options when installing, but some, such as Manjaro, Mint, Ubuntu, offer several installer images, one for each DE. Some distros have their own default wallpapers, but you can easily change them. Some distros have an unusual default look for some DEs (such as Fedora XFCE), but I think that can be configured, too. So, some DEs (such as Cinnamon or Plasma) usually look like NT by default while some (Pantheon) look like MacOS
- I haven't seen or heard much correction, although they talk about it. However, what you said may be true because FSF opposes the name “Linux”, although they can't do a lot. Personally I prefer calling it GNU
- I don't find installing applications very difficult. I've seen a video where they said Apple users said that you just have to drag the application into the app folder, but that's just a part of a process. (They probably have that part just to make the illusion.) So installing software from App Store or a GUI PM in GNU is easier
- It's not necessary that everything is free. They can offer unfree software, such as Chrome or VS Code. That depends on the distro and its configuration
- Unfortunately, Microsoft Office, Photoshop, and Google Chrome are used by many people
- As I mentioned above, Chrome can be available depending on the configuration
- There are free apps with functionality similar to MS Office, Photoshop, and Chrome. This isn't really a correction, but I think that's worth mentioning
- Flatpak isn't the only option to download. It's just one of three well-known universal package managers. The others are AppImage and Snap. What package manager you can use depends on the app. Also, some system package managers (backends) have their own format that you can download. You can also install it from source; that's not Flatpak
- The assembly doesn't happen in the terminal, although it's common to use the latter to initiate the former and see its progress and log
- A lot of commands work without sudo. You can even install packages from Nix to your user without it
- I don't think a terminal station is bad. Also, the word being used for bad things isn't really indicative of it
🤓 well, actually: the promt "sudo", is only applied for certain type of distros, depending on what kind of package manager it uses. i use garuda os, with is based on arch btw,
so in my case, the promp "sudo" is changed with the prompt: "pacman."
yes, that pacman. and i even got a little pacman animation with it, while i installing or updating my stuff.
Fun fact here, the terminal on macos actually uses a fork of bash (zsh), the default "terminal" for linux
Which means a lot of commands on mac are the same, and, yes, sudo is also a thing on mac
zsh isn't even based on bash and macOS uses bash these days, not zsh. macOS used to use tcsh
All hail SUDO. I love my wobbly windows. Im a Linux user and thought this was pretty good
I like the new haicut at the end of the video.
That's hi-larry-us.
But don't worry. Project X is working on a brand new way of installing applications, while Project Y is working on a brand new graphical interface and Z is going to create a new distro to fix some of these issues. Of course, none of them is going to have nothing to do with the other and may not work together at all, but at least you get the *choice* and the *freedom* of choosing what in your system is not going to work.
Something something updating a repository * adds a repository*
Never came across your channel as far as I can remember, but the title made me watch: You had me there for a moment! But then I realized who your parody was really about!
BTW: I use Arch and KDE PLasma with the wobbly windows, cube effect... and I love it! Microsoft and Apple would have to pay me a crap load to even consider using anything they make!
Oh the Apple Fanbois in these comments here are hilarious!
As a Linux user, terminal is my most favorite app on MacOS
"What the hell is this.. ahha but apple no, that's soooo Linux!"
It's funny because with macOS being a Unix derivative, sudo also exists and does the same thing on mac.