• absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz
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      20 days ago

      Great comment.

      I switched full time in 2010, but was mostly using Linux from 2008…I don’t really miss my 20’s, maybe the physical side of being sub-30.

  • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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    20 days ago

    I just miss my social life. Back when I was on Windows I had a lot of friends and was banging people constantly in my free time. As a Linux user, I’ve pretty much been ostracized by my local community and my mojo no longer works on the daily trimmings. I might give Mac a try, but I’m just not sure how many tide pods I could possibly eat.

  • jollyrogue@lemmy.ml
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    20 days ago

    Support for auto cloud sync from vendors, or just auto cloud sync of setting between devices.

    DE stability. I keep a Mac around for times when Gnome is kind of broken.

    cmd shortcuts which don’t interfere with app shortcuts.

    Powerful desktop Arm chips.

    Gui to manage services.

    Gui to manage firewall.

    Easy fleet management tools.

    A real terminal services and Remote Desktop solution.

    Desktop icons.

    Tighter userland security.

    Tighter OS security. Mostly dm-verify and fs-verify.

    Tiling support. (There are extensions, but I need to experiment.)

    Not having to recompile out of tree kernel modules after a kernel upgrade.

    Base and extras being cleanly separated.

  • octochamp@lemmy.ml
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    21 days ago

    Good OS-native cloud syncing. The Windows Cloud Sync Engine is so useful and is now adopted by virtually every cloud storage provider, and crucially lets you keep your entire cloud drive visible as unsynced files and pulls them on-demand (ie. what Dropbox call Smart Sync).

    Thanks to being freelance and working for different companies I have different files I work on in Dropbox and Onedrive as well as my personal stuff being stored on Proton and my Synology NAS through Drive, and none of these have linux integrations that even come close to their Windows or macOS equivalents. Things like Syncthing and rclone will do selective sync, so you aren’t forced to sync your entire cloud drive on to your laptop’s tiny SSD, but that still means half your files are missing and have to be accessed through janky browser interfaces 🤢

  • Roopappy@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    I miss targeted advertisements. It’s important that my OS tracks what my interests are, so that I can be served more relevant advertising.

    Advertising that doesn’t know my interests doesn’t hold my interest, and having no ads means that I have no idea what I’m supposed to purchase next. It’s crazy.

  • Lichtblitz@discuss.tchncs.de
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    21 days ago

    OS-level support for cloud storage. OneDrive, Dropbox and all the others work seamlessly on Windows through the Windows API. You can browse all the files on the file system and once you access them, the OS will call back the cloud provider to download them. It works through all applications, all cloud providers. I am aware that some tools on Linux have something similar to work around the issue in user land. Some solutions are less worse than others but none of them are as good as on Windows.

    • communism@lemmy.ml
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      20 days ago

      Nextcloud works that way for me. I access my Nextcloud files at ~/nextcloud without any hitch, and changes sync immediately. You do have to self-host, but I’m sure there are also some public instances you can use. I know Disroot hosts one.

        • communism@lemmy.ml
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          20 days ago

          Oh you mean without downloading the files. I thought you just meant cloud sync. Yeah I have my entire Nextcloud downloaded and the folder is synced by the daemon, so I do just use the files as normal local files. Never tried without downloading all the files

          • Lichtblitz@discuss.tchncs.de
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            20 days ago

            My (self-hosted) cloud storage is larger than the disk drive on my laptop. On demand sync is important to me. I really, really hope Linux will catch up to Windows in that regard.

  • sunshine@lemmy.ml
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    20 days ago

    On Windows, there used to be (possibly a third-party application) a desktop widget that had a “turtle”, and if you clicked on the widget it would drop a little pixel of food, and the turtle would slowly walk over to it and consume it. I thought that was really cool.

  • Maxxie@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    20 days ago

    Windows’ lightweight photo editing thing. Great for highlighting screenshots.

    All image editing software on linux (that I’ve tried) is 10x more clunky.

    • Zahtu@feddit.org
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      20 days ago

      Yeah, even after owning a Steam Deck for a year and recently switching my Desktop to Linux, its very hard to get the settings right. Things Like uplay working in Steam Deck but Not out of the Box in my Desktop seems so insensical to me.

          • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            19 days ago

            All of them… Lol. Way too big of a back log.

            But I just picked up Tape to Tape and it’s super fun. Giving me vibes of old 16bit hockey games. What else…

            I finally got Neon White on PC. Got it way back when it came out on Switch and played a little, but really prefer mouse and keyboard for fps. Very fun game.

            Lorn’s Lure is another one I’ve been playing a lot. Amazing game, nothing quite like it.

            Was enjoying UFO50, but haven’t picked it up in a couple weeks. Gonna go back to it.

            What about you

            • pineapple@lemmy.ml
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              18 days ago

              So far I’ve tried space engineers, counter strike and beamng.drive although I haven’t gotten any of them to launch yet except counter strike but I have had terrible frame rate and stuttering that made it unplayable.

              • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                18 days ago

                Maybe it’s your hardware? I recently got a Framework laptop, and Bazzite has a distro image tailored specifically for the hardware, and I think that makes a big difference.

                But even still, I ran Arch (well EndeavourOS) on my old Laptop, and it ran the games that the specs could run…

                When you launch a game for the first time are you letting it go for a bit (sometimes a minute or two even) while it seems like nothing is happening? This is just for the initial launch, but in my experience, it can seem like it’s not working but if you just let it go it will load. Then every time after that it’s right away.

                Also, check your Steam settings re: compiling shaders and uncheck the setting to have them compile while playing. This will compile the shaders before the game launches (a pop-up will show you the % complete), and it prevents stuttering.

                Other than that, all I can think is hardware… Or maybe you’re just super unlucky at picking games. I do always check ProtonDB first, so that could be why I’ve had nothing but good experiences.

                I have beamng, but the one that plays like Wipeout, and I believe that one works. Though I think I’ve only tried it on my Steam Deck and not on Bazzite. Also, I understand it’s a different game.

                Edit: Yeah, looking at protondb it looks like Space Engineers is one people have some issue with. Sometimes you can get it to work using solutions on there, but I guess every now and then you don’t. Hasn’t happened to me yet.

                • pineapple@lemmy.ml
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                  17 days ago

                  Update: I got space engineers and beamng.drive working it was probably a problem with not having write permission on my hdd(see comment I put above)

                  I am pretty sure i am running counter strike natively at the moment. How do I change it between running natively and running with proton? I think it might perform better with proton.

  • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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    21 days ago

    Been on Linux since 2007, so for me it’s kind of the opposite. You just get settled with your OS after a while, you’re used to how it works.

    For me the immediately missing features is customizability in window management. I’m not a tiling fan, but I still miss basic convenience features like middle click paste, press alt and drag windows around or press alt and right click to resize windows from whichever side is the closest to the cursor. The different way it arranges windows (Linux tries hard to make them fit in unused space whereas Windows just opens it in the middle of the screen). Another big one is if you have a window focused and try to scroll another window in the background with your mouse cursor over it, it’ll still scroll the focused window even though the mouse cursor isn’t on it. Focus steal prevention is non-existent so if you’re typing and another window pops open, it steals your keyboard input. The search bar is like, utterly useless, so is the Microsoft Store. The start menu doesn’t open instantly like it has to load it every time. When you uninstall something there’s still leftover crap of it everywhere.

    Thankfully when it comes to Linux apps, their open nature means the majority of them just have Windows builds anyway, and what doesn’t would work in WSL. So really all I can miss is the inherent flexibility and openness Linux gives me.

    • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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      21 days ago

      Focus steal prevention is the feature I miss desperately when I’m forced to interact with a non-Linux window manager.

      I feel the rage of Walter from the Big Kebowski each time an app randomly pulls focus because it fucking feels like it.

      It’s just bassic civilized behavior to leave my cursor where I put it.

      • RangerJosie@lemmy.world
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        16 days ago

        Oh. Half of it doesn’t work on Linux. Which isn’t really a big deal.

        Never been super into PC gaming. Couldn’t afford to get my foot in the door.

        • Fonzie!@ttrpg.network
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          16 days ago

          Oh. Half of it doesn’t work on Linux.

          That really surprises me, since Windows and macOS games can be virtualised with (almost) no performance overhead.
          Online games with anti-cheat software tends to block you, such as League of Legends and Valorant, but most offline, and non-competitive online, games just work.

          You may need to go into the Steam settings, the tab Compatibility, and choose a Proton version.
          Proton Experimental is recommended, this may sound weird but it’s just their rolling-release version and it’s very stable.