The best one I’ve ever heard is they like the Microsoft wallpapers. Yes i told them you can use them on linux too. But they argued with me that they wouldn’t be compatible.

  • data1701d (He/Him)@startrek.website
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    8 hours ago

    I think I made the mistake of pushing my grandfather away from Linux. He’s retired but does some professional photography; he’s used Photoshop for years, but said he’s open to leaving Adobe.

    One day recently, he told me he heard about “this Linux thing” and asked me if it would be a good fit and run Windows applications well. I told him his main issue was probably Photoshop, and that even switching, he’d still need some stable, consistent way to open past PSD files. In retrospect, maybe I should have looked more closely at his use case to see the complexity of his edits and if they might have worked well in another program that runs on Linux.

    • Little8Lost@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I know that at least krita can psd.
      A lot of other programs could also support it but dont hope for every feature of psd as it can quite litterally be PtSD for them (its atrocious)

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    18 hours ago

    This was quite a few years ago, but a friend of mine said he’d tried Linux but had switched back because some clipboard feature he was used to using didn’t work (sorry, I forget the details). He was a programmer to, so perfectly capable of troubleshooting or finding some alternative tool. I just stared at him dumbfounded.

    • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      I get him though, mouse wheel click for a secondary copy buffer is one of the main things that’s extremely annoying to me when I have to use Windows, I can never retrain my brain to stop doing it and I get annoyed that it doesn’t work until I remember why.

    • AppearanceBoring9229@sh.itjust.works
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      16 hours ago

      Sadly its really hard to change habits. But it goes both ways, every time I need to use windows I find myself grunting for every minor thing that doesn’t work as expected.

  • Decency8401@discuss.tchncs.de
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    19 hours ago

    “Linux isn’t made for professional use” - Colleague from Work who is an Apple stan. And yes he bought the Apple™ Cloth for iPhone.

  • apostate9@lemmy.libertarianfellowship.org
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    22 hours ago

    The whatchacallit, terminal with super cryptic commands is too hard. When I go on the internet and say my system has a problem and they tell me to type sudo pacman -Syu, I need something more easier than that. You know like-- with more steps. And five modal GUIs. And buttons.

  • mikerr@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    “Never used Linux,” They say, typing on a chromebook or android phone, before picking up their steamdeck.

    • yoevli@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      Not to interject, but when people talk about using “Linux” they’re generally referring to desktop Linux (usually GNU/Linux). ChromeOS and SteamOS are Linux distros of a sort under the hood, but they’re also highly curated experiences. Android technically uses the Linux kernel but architecturally it’s so drastically different from basically any other system using it that it’s quite misleading to call it “Linux” in the colloquial sense.

    • TerHu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 hours ago

      my motherboards drivers don’t come with windows, and so when i tried to install it and it forced me to connect to the internet, i just couldn’t. luckily i found a usb dongle to ethernet which worked ootb.

      never had a weird mono driver issue like that on any linux distro i tried.

      • abuttandahalf@lemmy.ml
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        13 minutes ago

        I did because the laptop I had bought had a brand new processor and not all the drivers were in the kernel version that was in the distro’s newest ISO. I had to plug in a keyboard, screen, and network adapter to install the right kernel.

  • hawgietonight@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Most silly excuse was my boss refusing to install Linux because he just had a friend give him original windows 98se licenses for the PCs we just bought for the company.

    Well it gets less silly thinking that getting the eprom programmer software and orcad 4 working on Linux was probably impossible.

    Then it was outright the best decision ever, because those machines never required a reinstall and worked flawless for the 5 years I was there working. Never understood the bad rep W98Se had. Never used it on my personal rigs of course.

  • Yaky@slrpnk.net
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    2 days ago

    Some years ago, mentioning Linux for daily non-gaming use:

    Guy: “Installing Linux is complicated though”

    Me: “It wasn’t bad 10 years ago, and now it’s as hard as clicking Next a few times, even faster than Windows”

    Guy: “Well duh, you have ten years of experience installing it!”

    Difficult to argue with this non-logic.

  • PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    Why you out there telling people to install it? Those who want it will find it. This isn’t an evangelical mission.

    • audaxdreik@pawb.social
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      1 day ago

      Isn’t it?

      The arguments of preference and convenience are falling by the wayside as megacorporations take more and more control over not just your hardware but your behavioral patterns by dictating what you can install and how it functions. They suck up all your personal, private data for AI training without your consent.

      I get it, shit sucks. It really does, but we have to remember who is to blame here and it’s not each other. There has to be some urgency here because this is a battle and we, the consumers, the ordinary people, are surely losing. It’s not about being holier than thou, it’s about lifting each other up.

      • saigot@lemmy.ca
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        22 hours ago

        If Linux gets popular the mega corps will just follow them there and then you’ll be asking them to uninstall Dell os or at least remove the Linux recall (powered by bing) that it comes bundled with. Just look at the modern state of android.

        • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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          14 hours ago

          Android is the way it is because Google is close sourcing more and more of what makes Android useful as a mobile OS. It would be infinitely harder for some megacorp to do the same thing for a desktop OS.

    • mostlikelyaperson@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Yeah like, holy shit the pseudo religious bullshit here is getting annoying. I like Linux, I am supremely unlikely to ever even touch a windows system again (minus the occasional time where I might have to for work when accessing client systems) but this weird cult behavior is aggravating.

    • Engywook@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      This. I don’t mind what other use, nor I feel the need to be annoying AF telling them what they should do.