Yes. My previous job used Linux (and OpenVPN), but I started a new job recently, which involves Windows 10 (and three separate VPN apps) on my workstation, and it’s driving me insane! I can’t even find half the settings in looking for, the start menu is a mess (until I found OpenShell which introduces an XP like start menu!), and the eternal requests to restart the damn thing. It drives me nuts.
When I tried the early free upgrade from Window 10 to 11, half my games wouldn’t work, and I couldn’t fix the UI to what was comfortable. Also all the control panels had another layer of simplified facade before it would let me see the Windows XP control panel window.
Also the games that worked had a significant framerate drop.
I swtched back after a day of frustration and every once in a while my Windows 10 nags me to try upgrading again because Win11 is much better.
I need to stop being a coward and make my switch to Linux.
I’ll need to find an equivalent to Autohotkey though. I’m left handed and depend on keyboard profiles to play games.
Currently typing this on my X1 Carbon Gen 9 with PopOS. It works great. Battery life is about 20% better than it was with Windows but Pop is optimized for laptops and most distros are a bit worse on battery.
Not sure about a solution for parsec but have you looked at onlyoffice? It’s been a drop in replacement for office for me and seems to do a pretty good job
I think windows 11 wouldn’t be nearly as bad if it didn’t force an online account on you. Yes, I know there are sometimes ways around it, but they are not for the average user to pull off. Especially the OEM laptops that ship win11 s-mode, where if it’s not the right patch, you gotta do bios edits, registry edits.
No, no it’s not. Maybe with a standalone iso. But an out of box machine from the majore OEMs like Dell and HP, it’s not. Even if you never connect it to the Internet it can be nearly impossible to get around.
That’s just not true to my personal experience with over 200 devices from Dell and Lenovo. Especially concerning the not connecting to internet. That is literally the only step you need to take if the OEM install wants to force a MS account to be able to install local accounts. “Nearly impossible” is absolute hyperbole and you know it.
I guess we’ve just had opposite luck. Cuz I work for an MSP, and deal with clients that insist on buying their own computers. 90% of the time it will be win11 home, and I’ll have to hope that the version of windows doesn’t include the various patches that close out the “I don’t have internet” option like win10 has. And lately even the F10 option to invoke the terminal is patched out. I’ve ended having to change secure boot options, then registry edits, then I can do the F10 option.
Even just installing windows is pretty bad. They include jack shit for default wifi drivers and won’t let you complete the installation without an internet connection (and a stupid Microsoft account to complete their data mining 1984 tracking system) unless you use secret command line bullshit.
KDE is highly customizable and themeable. It looks a little bland by default, but you can change that. That said, I always feel like KDE feels a little inconstant. Font sizes, padding, and other flourishes always feel off. That is probably a result of it’s costumizability.
Which looks very different if you choose any of the other themes. We have tons of choices, and each of us decides. Some may even want theirs to look like Windows.
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