Signal Desktop now includes support for a new “Screen security” setting that is designed to help prevent your own computer from capturing screenshots of your Signal chats on Windows. This setting is automatically enabled by default in Signal Desktop on Windows 11. If you’re wondering why we’re on...
I’m slowly moving everything to Linux. Currently working on getting my nas running.
Been on Linux for 18 months as my daily driver. Can’t possibly love it any more.
Why not? 😡
Because my crusty heart knows not but an abundance of hate, greed, and darkness.
But maybe I’m give it a try later today, I dunno.
You are cute.
Been on Linux for 18 years as my daily driver. Hate it significantly less than all the other options.
Probably closer to 25 years here and I can only remind everyone who switches to Linux that Windows and Mac are quite painful to use when you don’t use them often too so don’t go by first impressions of comparing what you used for years vs. something you only used a couple of hours.
Also most people who have only used Windows, bought their computers with Windows pre-installed, where the manufacturer loaded a custom Windows image that already has all of their drivers installed and configured. So it’s not just that they’ve never used Linux before, they’ve often never actually installed any operating system from scratch on any computer and had to deal with the setup process.
Not too long ago I was messaging with someone who kept complaining that Linux was taking HoUrS to get drivers configured and how it clearly wasn’t for them because Windows “just works”. Meanwhile I’m sitting there thinking of the last time I installed a Linux distro on a machine it took a few minutes to install the proprietary Nvidia drivers and I was done, while the last time I installed Windows on a machine it took ~4 hours to get all of the drivers loaded properly, including blacklisting the f*****g Windows Update utility so it would stop trying to replace my network driver with a broken version that kept taking down the network connection on the machine, and the insanity of having to update, reboot, update, reboot, update, reboot, update, reboot over and over again for half a day until finally all the updates are actually installed and running.
You’ve been through the wilderness, friend.
I keep dual booting just because sometimes Linux does crap itself.
I have been troubleshooting what’s going on with my kde desktop (both x11 and wayland affected) for about 8 hours no with no success. I have a zoom appointment this afternoon so I am glad I can still boot into (retch) Windows.
What distro are you using? And what is the problem(s) you’re having?
I ask because there’s a bunch of really smart I dividuals with extensive experience in Linux (not me, sorry) and from my experience, most people here love to help others troubleshoot Linux (along other OSs).
I created a dual boot to test the waters for a HTPC, and haven’t had to go back once. But Linux mint did shit the bed just once recently where the wifi drivers died. Only solution was to connect a cable, download a kernel update, then back to 100%.
Finally got mine fixed, something in .config was breaking the desktop. Narrowed it down to a few items and just didn’t restore those.