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  • I switched due to the following problems with Windows and benefits with Linux:

    • Recall, the most privacy invasive software I have ever seen being spun as a "feature" which was shown to be insecure as well. It used to be that if you didn't pay for something, it meant you were the product. Now Microsoft wants you to pay them to be their product.
    • Fucking ads everywhere in the OS itself
    • It's slow as all hell
    • I would try to do something as simple in the UI such as hitting "Sleep" and Windows 11 wouldn't do anything until the 4th click
    • Windows no longer has a monopoly on games or music software - proton and DAW's like bitwig should now be forcing Microsoft to compete to make their OS better, but because capitalism doesn't work, they don't, and so I have no reason to stay with their OS
    • Linux is fast as fuck. Games like Armored Core VI and Death Stranding run better in an emulated state on Linux for me than they do natively on Windows because Linux isn't running 1500 telemetry tasks at all times.
    • Linux gives you choices of window managers. Don't like the UI in Windows? Tough luck. Don't like a UI in Linux? Change it in 2 seconds if you're using KDE Plasma, or switch to another WM like Gnome, XFCE, Cinnamon, etc so that the computer works the way you want. You want to have some WM functionality only sometimes that no one WM offers? Install 3 WM's, choose which one you want when you log in. Make the computer work for you.

    On Windows 11 the final absolute last straw for me was when it stopped installing updates for me and gave me this:

    So I couldn't even trust the system was secure anymore.

    Windows is stagnated because all of their development focus has turned away from making a competitive OS with good and useful features for the end user, and instead focuses now on how to get more dollars out of each minor action a user could possibly take when using it. Linux just feels more modern, more powerful, more useful, more secure, faster, prettier, cleaner, and cost effective than Windows now because it is 98% of the time.

  • I switched a year ago, after trying and failing multiple times over the years whenever I gave it a try.

    1. Linux has massively improved, systemd is a lot cleaner than the mess of disparate shell scripts it displaced. Network Manager is also a lot nicer now than I remember it being when it was first introduced into Red Hat.
    2. Windows hasn't, in a lot of ways it was actually regressing. I used to get multiple shell crashes a week with no insight as to why, friends would claim it was just me but then receive an update and start having similar crashes. Also noticeable UI issues that went unfixed for multiple revisions, made it felt cheap.
    3. MS went all in on AI garbage and was jamming it into everything, kept getting popup notifications and the like to try Copilot, notifications went from being useful to just being an ad delivery mechanism.
    4. Gaming on Linux massively improved, last time I tried it OpenGL support was a mess. Now OpenGL is very mature, and all the D3D translation stuff uses Vulkan which has been rock solid for me. I've found games run better than they did on Windows on the same hardware, and the only game I've had an issue with was Destiny 2, which is intentional on the devs behalf (Luckily the game's boring now)

    I find I'm a lot more willing to let issues slide though, like I've had some Thunar crashes which I'm cool with since there's like 4 devs maintaining it, vs. the multi-billion dollar company working on Explorer which I expect better from. Also unsurprisingly the only actual shop-stopper issue I've had was with a memory leak in the Nvidia drivers, the actual FLOSS stuff has been great.

  • Because Microsoft insists on treating its users with contempt.

    With Linux, you don't need to replace your computer if it is capable of running Windows 10. For many, hardware upgrades are a requirement if they wish to stick with Microsoft. Installing a Linux distro will extend the life cycle of an older machine, at no cost.

    That's too much value at zero personal cost to ignore.

  • For me it's because it seems evident that Microsoft wants Windows to be saas and here's the thing: I don't like Windows that much. For over 20 years now, I've preferred Linux for server stuff and Mac for daily driver stuff, I've only tolerated Windows, mainly for gaming.

    Since Windows 7 died (I skipped 8 altogether and reluctantly have been dealing with 10 with lots of hacks to keep it locked down), I have only been barely tolerating it - and games were the sole reason.

    Well, Proton has now obliterated that, conveniently right as Microsoft has decided that what people REALLY need is for them to be 100% shit. I refuse to install 11. So I'm out.

  • The user experience. The Windows user experience just gets worse and worse while Linux gets better and better.

  • Win10 EOL is surely driving some people away, but it's difficult to put a number on that. Measuring by market share is tricky and can be misleading. Steam Deck popularity may be driving increased usage, but those users aren't necessarily migrating their main OS, just adding a new machine to the mix. But maybe "migrating" their time spent in a given OS counts? It's messy.

  • Quite a few people have come to their senses. It's taken thirty years but .. hey .. Rome not built in a day.

124 comments