I should’ve used it sooner rather than last year when they announced AI integration to Windows. Every peripheral I tried is just worked without needing to install drivers, and it works better and faster than on Windows, just like today when I tried to use my brother’s 3D printer expecting disappointment, but no, it just connected and was ready to print right away (I use Ultimaker Cura), whereas on my brother’s Windows computer I have to wait like 20 seconds; sometimes I have to disconnect and reconnect it again for it to see and ready to use. Lastly, for those who are wondering, I use Vanilla Arch (btw), and sorry for bad English.

  • Mia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    28 days ago

    Every time I see someone write “sorry for my bad english” their writing is several times better than many of the native speakers I interact with on a daily basis.

    • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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      28 days ago

      my ukrainian coworker always apologizes for her bad english. meanwhile she can, and does, write poetry in all four languages she speaks

      • Khanzarate@lemmy.world
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        28 days ago

        Probably a habit from when they really did have bad English, but they learned, and surpassed the average american at this point.

        • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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          28 days ago

          i think it has more to do with dialect than anything. i speak appalachian dialect so sometimes i’ll use an archaic word. the irony is she usually figures it out faster than most other english speakers since our archaics are largely eastern european in origin, but to her in that moment it feels like “oh, i don’t know what this native english speaker is saying, i guess english is still a skill i’m working on”

          i always am like “oh no, i talk funny” but it’s been happening more as she’s become closer friends with me and my fiance and we all talk on metaphysics and shit

          • NoXPhasma@lemmy.world
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            28 days ago

            “oh, i don’t know what this native english speaker is saying, i guess english is still a skill i’m working on”

            I’m no native English speaker as well, and that’s how I often think as well. In my mother tongue I know so many words, their meaning and their sound. In English, however, I’m still learning new words now and then, and it opens my world to the language every time. This is true for dialects as well.

            Learning a new language is quite hard in the beginning, but it’s so satisfying and world opening when you start to actually use a new language.

            edit Ohh, and sorry for my bad English ;)

    • The Giant Korean@lemmy.world
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      28 days ago

      “I proffer my contrition for any infelicities in my English articulation, as my proclivity for linguistic precision may yet be inchoate.”

    • ocean@lemmy.selfhostcat.com
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      28 days ago

      When I TA-ed, I swear 75% of the non-Americans students wrote almost perfect papers whereas less than 25% of Americans couldn’t even write and less than 5% had comparably good essays. Honestly depressing.

      • Mia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        27 days ago

        American culture is one of the few I’ve found to be actively “anti-knowledge”. It’s not just their educational system being bad, it’s a genuine cultural tendency of not just dismissing experts, but straight out refusing to learn and snobbing those who do.

  • Matt@lemmy.ml
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    27 days ago

    Most of my library just works under Linux.

    1000046693

    Plus it is a pleasure to code under Linux.

  • Redex@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    My personal experience has been frustrating each time. I’ve tried to switch over at least 3 times over the years, but I always gave up. This time, I installed Ubuntu and immediately had to spend 3 hours trying to get my Xbox controler dongle to work, but just couldn’t do it. Found a driver online that people said would work, it didn’t because it wasn’t properly signed, tried to sign it but the signing app just didn’t create the certificates needed. Gave up, I have Bluetooth so I’d live, though I’d rather use the dongle if I can.

    I then immediately encounter another problem that couldn’t be fixed (for the life of me I can’t remember what it was exactly) and just gave up.

    The previous time I tried it I remember that among other things, one of my main problems was the lack of clipboard history (which I use extremely often). I tried installing an app for it but all of them either didn’t work or didn’t work the way I want them to or I just didn’t like their look and feel.

    I also hate the font rendering on Linux, it always looks blurry compared to Windows, and the double titlebars most apps have (e.g. Discord, at least on Ubuntu), I like my screen real-estate.

  • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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    27 days ago

    Yeah. I’ve been trying to get the word out.

    I’ve been screwing with Linux for decades, but somewhere along the line, Linux got easier and more reliable than Windows. I was as surprised as anyone. My last couple Linux installs were a cake walk.

    I also like Linux more than Mac, but I’m a tinkerer at heart, and Mac’s (relative) lack of fiddly bits (customization options) has kept me from staying on it long.

  • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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    28 days ago

    I use Vanilla Arch (btw), and sorry for bad English.

    Sure buddy… Is the “bad English” in this thread with us right now?

    • ColdWater@lemmy.caOP
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      28 days ago

      Haha thanks but it’s not actually my first distro, I’m distro hopping on my first week of switching to Linux, my first ever distro is EndeavourOS>Nobara>Fedora>OpenSUSE>Vanilla Arch

      • flubba86@lemmy.world
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        28 days ago

        That’s a lot of different distros in one week. How do you give each one enough time to evaluate it before you choose to move to another?

        • ColdWater@lemmy.caOP
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          28 days ago

          At the time my main goal is to have to all of my games working, while I can make it run on every distro I tried, I found Vanilla Arch is the better one in terms of performance and ease of use (yeah call me weird for saying Arch is easier to use than other distros XD), so I keep using it ever since.

  • datavoid@lemmy.ml
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    28 days ago

    I wish I could experience this pain free Linux I keep hearing about on this website. Programs constantly stutter and glitch out, and if the computer goes to sleep while running my Linux partition it absolutely will not wake up again. I know this is a skill issue, but I’ve already spent many hours troubleshooting this… I’ve tried several distros as well. Even the steam compatibility everyone raves about only seems to work for me if I don’t use wayland. I can say with certainty that the average person would be completely unwilling to deal with the experience I have had.

    • highduc@lemmy.ml
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      28 days ago

      I think this “it just works” experience depends much on the hardware and software you use. But no matter what, in the long term, if you’re not willing to put in time and learn how stuff works, how to troubleshoot, how to check logs, use the terminal, etc. I think you’re going to have a bad time and be disappointed.

      I’ve used Linux exclusively for the past 10 years, both at home and at work, and I wouldn’t advise anyone who wants a care-free “it just works” experience. Linux is not good at that, and I think anyone who claims it is does more harm than good.

      Linux is good for tinkering, self-hosting stuff, connectivity and flexibility. Most people want their games to work, not this. For me, I love it and I use it for everything including sim racing and VR games.

      • datavoid@lemmy.ml
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        28 days ago

        I am more willing to learn things than the average user I’d say - I work in IT and answer incredibly stupid questions more or less daily. Also, im not a shell expert, but I definitely know my way around bash/zsh/cmd/PS, given the system. I have also been using Linux on and off for around 15 years as well - I had things work well in the past.

        I’m guessing my custom built PC might be making things harder. The Nvidia card probably doesn’t help, but I feel like my MOBO is probably responsible for my sleep issues. Maybe I just need to try Pop again, I’m currently running NixOS which is my favourite OS in theory, but in practice configuration is a brute force guessing game.

        • highduc@lemmy.ml
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          28 days ago

          I haven’t had as bad of an experience with Nvidia as people say - but ofc your mileage may vary depending on your compositor, the apps you use, the distro you use, etc.

          I also experienced issues with my system completely freezing after waking up from sleep - for me the issue turned out to be due to bluetooth/wifi drivers, and with this workaround things work fine again: https://github.com/alimert-t/suspend-freeze-fix-for-mt7921e/tree/main
          My card is mt7922 (found that out with lshw -C network) but I guess it’s having the same issue, because after applying that fix it all works now.

          It was really annoying and it took me a while to find the issue, because if you just try to google it you find lots of people with lots of different issues, all manifesting in the same way.
          If you’re lucky this is your issue too, and the fix above should do it. 🤞

          • datavoid@lemmy.ml
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            26 days ago

            Thanks for inspiring me to search around GitHub - I managed to successfully resume from suspend after an hour or so (still doesn’t work in Wayland, but I’m making progress i guess).

            Next up is addressing the weird horizontal tearing in all my games!

  • flamingo_pinyata@sopuli.xyz
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    28 days ago

    Welcome!

    For a while now Linux has been better at most personal computing things except gaming. And for server uses an even longer time.

    There are some specific hardware/software situations where you’ll need Windows but it’s unlikely to happen at home. Unless you have very peculiar hobbies.

    • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      28 days ago

      Unless you have very peculiar hobbies.

      Or you take your photography a bit too seriously! Good noise reduction software is next to impossible to do on Linux. It’s the only reason I have a windows box in my house

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      28 days ago

      Gaming is my struggle, right now. On x11, I get stable framerates, but even though my benchmarks show 60+ fps, it sure looks lower to my eye. On Wayland, gameplay is smooth, but I keep getting this weird thing where after 20-30 minutes of gameplay I’ll get this weird input lag, where my mouse movement stops and then “catches up” every second or so, resulting in choppy gameplay despite the smooth framerate.

      If I can figure that out, I’d happily drop my Windows partition.

      • rtxn@lemmy.world
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        28 days ago

        mouse movement stops and then “catches up” every second or so

        I had that issue with a wired G502 mouse. It was caused by an excessive polling rate, and setting it to 125 Hz fixed it.

            • pizzaboi@lemm.ee
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              26 days ago

              Sadly, no, though I’m curious how the other lemming changed their polling rate. I used Piper, so maybe different methods have different effects? Idk. I’ll have to keep tinkering.

  • LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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    27 days ago

    Can anybody comment on their experience using Arduino and ESP with Linux? Especially does Linux handle COM ports better than Windows? There’s a seemingly immortal problem of COM ports becoming unusable until you go into Device Manager and uninstall them (again and again) - and if that doesn’t work, reboot Windows. I experience this less often now than say 5 or 6 years ago, and sometimes it’s my fault, but jeez.

    • zzx@lemmy.world
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      27 days ago

      COM ports as handled by Windows is misery anyways. Linux definitely does it better

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      27 days ago

      You might have issues with permissions for serial ports on some distros, but there are loads of easy to follow guides for that. Linux definitely handles them better than windows though. I never had issues where they just stop working like on Windows.

    • fluxx1@lemm.ee
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      27 days ago

      Yes, com ports work way better than in windows. I’ve done a lot of embedded development on linux and it’s way more pleasant than in windows. One thing you do have to keep in mind is that access to com ports (USB and real) requires root access by default, but once you’ve set the udev rule up, it becomes accesible to normal users and/or group of users. After that, it works flawlessly. Android dev also works great and imo better than on win. Proprietary jtags may be an issue, but I’ve never actually had an unsolvable situation.

      • LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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        27 days ago

        Thank you, that’s massively helpful! Pasting your comment into my ESP32 project notes so when I soon move to Linux I can remember to figure out the udev rule and jtags.

        • StorageB@lemmy.one
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          26 days ago

          Running this command was the only thing required for me to get access to the com ports. After that, everything worked perfectly.

          sudo usermod -a -G dialout $USER

          (note that $USER is part of the command - do not replace that with your actual username)

        • lemming741@lemmy.world
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          27 days ago

          I’ve had wemos d1 boards from AliExpress show up as a brltty and the braille teletype driver grabs the device. Just something to look out for on some distros

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    27 days ago

    Lucky. I couldn’t get HDR working properly, and most of my GPU features were missing because Nvidia refuses to support Linux (and AMD GPUs can’t keep up). So I had to go back to Windows.

    Been trying to switch to Linux since 2004. I’ll try again in 5 years.