Hey everyone,

I am exploring switching over to Linux but I would like to know why people switch. I have Windows 11 rn.

I dont do much code but will be doing some for school. I work remote and go to school remote. My career is not TOO technical.

What benefits caused you to switch over and what surprised you when you made the switch?

Thank you all in advanced.

  • @sorrybookbroke
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    11 months ago

    I was having issues with windows, and hate the look of windows 11 so I decided If I was going to have to re-install and deal with a new OS’s problems I might as well deal with linux issues and learn something new.

    I duel booted, and two months later thought back and found I hadn’t gone into windows since the install.

    A year and a half later and I can say that the issues I’ve had on linux have been easier to fix than windows. Two separate problems I’ve had on both. Linux was easy and took about ten minutes, windows took a day, and a month each.

    with windows I get esoteric error codes that mean something generic like “failed to update windows” when it stops at 3% for two hours and crashes. The solutions for it including two magic fix all commands (didn’t fix it), restarting it ‘correctly’ (nope), and copying a regedit value from another computer (did work). This all coming from the end of a random windows 7 forum post. My computer was on windows 10.

    On linux it told me my arch keyring corrupted. When I googled the error I got an explination and the arch-update-keyring command. This worked.

    With a swap file (167gb for some reason on windows) I got a greyed out GUI and twelve re-starts, 4 to get the screen up, 8 to make the change happen. On linux, I copy pasted a few commands.

    Apologies for the rant, jt’s early, but this is why I switched and stayed. I also like customization, alot