How to minimize pain of Windows in work environment?
Hello all!
I began working today, where the work is closely related to programming. Despite this, the work computer is set up as Windows (eww). I want to look for work-arounds, as installing linux on a work machine is a no-go.
I wonder, what is the way to minimize pain from having to use windows? Either that, or a way to maximize work done on linux-like stuffs. A linux server is given for us, and I think I can install WSL. Any recommendations on this setup?
Especially, I miss the virtual desktop feature, is there any way to use it? Is there a way I can run compositor through WSL? Also, should I install Pop! OS for the feature, or is it available on e.g. Ubuntu (default WSL)?
Sorry to ask a non-exclusively-linux question, but I think, hopefully, many linux people have experience to give me pointers what to do with a windows work environment.
VirtualBox itself is under GPLv3. Only the Extension Pack has a wonky license, and you only need that, if you want to e.g. pass a USB port directly into the VM. Or are you not allowed to even just use GPLv3 software?
VMware was also good a few years ago, although of course paid software. Since we last used it, it has been acquired by Broadcom, though, and I have read that the prices are now rather extortionate, but I don't know, if that also applies to the desktop software.
And I don't know how you'd actually use Hyper-V without a frontend like VirtualBox or VMware.
But honestly, if it makes your VM run, it's probably good enough. The main thing you need for dev work is a CPU and to my knowledge, CPU passthrough is a problem solved by all mainstream hypervisors, meaning you get close to 100% of the CPU speed inside the VM, no matter what you use.
The trickly part about Virtualbox is that they like to trick you into using the guest addons. Also last time I checked copy and paste didn't work without the addons but it has been a while. Hyper-V has its own console and its own tooling if you are fine with it. It isn't bad but I don't personally care for it. VMware pro is free now but I would rather avoid Broadcom.
Linux virtualization is better by far. I wish there were more options that were actually multiplatform.
You're mixing things up there. The Guest Additions is something different than the Extension Pack. The Guest Additions is just a package that gets installed in the virtualized/guest OS, which yeah, makes the clipboard work and sets the resolution correctly and things like that. As far as I can tell from the source code, the Guest Additions are under MIT license, though I didn't check every file.
And VMware Pro is only free for personal use, so at least for OP, that wouldn't work.