What came to mind when I saw that stock photo
What came to mind when I saw that stock photo
What came to mind when I saw that stock photo
this post made me consider getting off lemmy
this post made me consider getting off
Oh, now I understand. They were just missing a comma between "off" and "lemmy", super sweet! :)
Top notch shit posting.
I wouldn't call it Stockholm syndrome. The problem is that even a single application that's critical to your workflow can keep you from switching, even if everything else is much better.
I've switched to Linux on my laptop about 6 months ago and the overall experience is pretty good. A few annoyances that I can't seem to fix but overall pleasant. But there are still some things that keep me from doing the same on my main workstation:
All those problems can be solved with enough patience but to be honest, I'm in my late 30s and free time is getting rare so I'd rather spend it on something that brings me joy or on learning something entirely new instead of relearning an existing skill.
And no, this not a criticism against Linux or its community. I'm just trying to give an insight into how small problems can make the switch incredibly hard, even for someone who has a degree in computer science, has worked with Linux machines for about 20 years now and would love nothing more than to leave Windows behind.
Real talk now, I know there are use-cases where Windows is mandatory unfortunately. Video editing and civil engineering/architecture are two good examples.
Maybe switching to Mac is an option, but whether that's any better is debatable.
However, most people I know that suffer from these issues are in neither field of work and aren't necessarily even hardcore gamers. Yet they don't even want to try anything else.
I've also had some difficulties fully switching to Linux a decade ago, but nothing that couldn't be solved or I couldn't abstain from (e.g. modern games, back in the day).
All it takes is the will not to be bullied by a corporation at home every day.
I think something that is often underappreciated is the level of independent technical knowledge needed to install and use Linux, let alone troubleshoot it, even today.
Microsoft has a support hotline, and staff that will help you, it comes pre-installed, and every tech store under the sun will help you along.
With Linux, that's a bit harder. Plus, although it's often a criticism for some people, windows' hand holding won't let you truly fuck up, and will always have a backup ready.
Linux on the other hand will let you run it into a brick wall, and completely delete your whole laptop.
Those are generally still really good reasons people want to stick with Microsoft or Apple, since there's a far more accessible support network around it.
And in my experience Linux portals and forums are quite gatekeepy if you're not aware of what's going on. That's not the most fun place to be if you're stuck and don't know what you're doing.
Linux is great and I personally would recommend it to a lot of people, but definitely not everyone, and it's definitely not just downsides. There's plenty of legit cases where it's the better option, even if the tools and everything function equally.
Completely agree with your comment about "hitting a wall at running speed" . I switched my music production PC to Linux in a fit of pique at Microsoft. I have used Linux/unix for 25 years at this point, but this move and the resulting technical hurdles took my output to 0% and it hasn't recovered in a couple of months.
I don't want to switch back but I also really miss my hobby and main creative outlet
Excel.
Business LIVE by Excel. They have processes that automatically output and input via excel.
Users spin up spreadsheets with tables, every day, for quick analysis of large datasets. Open Office devs refuse to ever implement tables.
There's no way an extant business can switch to even Open Office, let alone Linux, and realize an actual cost savings in a reasonable time frame.
Now, we can implement new back end/middle systems using Linux as appropriate.
I've been dualbooting linux for a while now and my biggest problems have been:
Still 90% of the time I boot up linux instead of windows but I don't see a more casual user putting up with all of this
the sad thing with Windows apps is for example my sister does want to switch to Linux as Win10 is gonna die and Win11 isnt supported. But she cant because she needs MS Teams and Office for school :/
I just use the webapp version
say what now? please elaborate?
I use teams on Linux for work, and office365 in the browser is acceptable if she really does want to switch
i personally dont like teams in the browser, so i'd rather have her finish school and then switch to linux. instead of having linux a slightly worse experience. i think you understand what i mean
Even after years of being used as a meme template, this stock photo is still as aesthetically pleasing as a Renaissance painting.
I'm that XKCD meme about being new to something old. 1st time seeing this one.
Same here actually, I first saw those photos in a recent post a few days ago, just can't remember which one, though.
It is truly a work of art.
Wow! I just saw it this week, and I've been on the internet for like 25 years, at least!
If this is what you thought of when seeing this picture, it's a sign that it is time to reevaluate your priorities.
Is there a name for this meme template?
Wasn’t this a stock photo first posted like a week ago? As part of a sequence of stock photos featuring more of these same bullying girls?
Yeah it's from a series of stock photos but it's been going around the internet for years. I was just wondering if it had a specific name so I could search for it more easily.
if that is what first came to your mind, you are either a gay male or a straight woman.
mayb e i shoudl reinstal windows,,,,,, 😳
I agree with all the things they are doing recently are making it way worse as a product, but I never really agreed on the whole "broken updates" thing. As someone who has used Windows forever and also an administrator at work, I can only recall 1 time where updates caused an issue when they were pushed through WSUS, and we quickly stopped the update. Personal use i have never had an issue.
If anything, I've experienced way more issues whenever updating a Mac. They break stuff all the time, especially when its a newer OS update.
24H2 was pretty bad at launch, but the rollout was very slow so very few people ran into issues. But if they did, you'll be damn sure they're gonna yell about it .
Super anecdotal, but I've seen a few instances of those in my time as sysadmin.
Whether it was just failed or malfunctioning updates, I can't tell, but I've had to deal with Windows not starting correctly after automatic updates multiple times.
Then there was the whole bricked HP laptop story recently, where automatic updates just randomly killed a lot of systems. We have multiple HP laptops in the company, though none were affected, but I can't say I wasn't sweating a little bit those days.
Updates have broken far more things for me than anything else.
Every update cycle I cringe to see what we have to mitigate.
I thank Microsoft from my job security, I'd have far less to do without their updates regularly breaking stuff.
i've had more issues with forced updates from pc manufacturers--whether via their own update mechanism or through windows update, including bad bios updates that literally bricks a pc to the point a board swap is needed.
windows ones almost always 'install' correctly.. it's often more a question 'why tf do i want this shit?'
the 'automatic' updates should strictly be security patches and critical non-security bug fixes. new and substantially-changed features should be optional or deferred to.. ya know.. the big updates each year called 'feature updates', and not rammed down users' throats every month.
Windows is what came to mind first? Really?
I guess I've been on the Internet too long. Stay pure, OP.
Technically, the title doesn't say "first", but yeah, kind of. :)
Well, bless you anyway :)
Here is the problem, I work in a Windows machine. The effort to spend 40 hours a week in a windows and then change to a linux in the weekends in to great. I already have little to none leasure time, don't want to spend it using the wrong shortcuts. But I do use a less than official windows version, so there is that
Okay, how do I run this on Linux?
(No "but GDB has a V$hitCode plugin" argument please)
My big ones are: Autodesk/CAD. Nothing in the Linux world comes close to the professional CAD stuff today.
Excel. No open source spreadsheet app does tables. That's a no-sale.
System controllers - stuff that uses a licensing dingle, or has to control specific hardware - all of that is built for Windows.
Most end users can barely use Windows after growing up with it, using it in school and college. They don't want to understand systems, just what to click on.
It's really funny that someone would look at that meme and think "yea, I am being bullied".
Windows 11 the plumber:
I come round, and I've brought a few friends who start rifling through your photos and desk; I state I can fix your toilet, but only if you agree to always use me to fix your toilet, and pay £120 a year even if your toilet never needs fixing.
Meanwhile, I change your aircon settings, sign you up to a new expensive energy supplier, cancel your streaming subscriptions and sign you up to mine. Oh, and I give my weird mate a copy of your house key so he can photograph you and your loved ones daily.
But don't worry, the toilet is fixed. Every 6 months or so I'll come back to your house and break a random appliance, just so you feel I'm value for money.
The girl in the middle is wearing 5 layers on top. Just.... why?
So each of her gf's can pull something off with their teeth.
Baby, it's cold outside.
Every service keeps gifting her jackets attached with tracking devices and it would be rude to not wear.
love some good ol' heatstroke