this post was submitted on 21 Jan 2026
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cross-posted from: https://discuss.online/post/34247715

Curious on the experiences of those recently migrating to Linux from Windows 10, Intel-based MacOS, etc. How is it being on Linux? Anything surprise or frustrate you?

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[–] meathorse@lemmy.world 11 points 3 days ago

So painfully, boringly good.

Day-to-day, it just works, I don't have to fight it. It doesn't do anything I don't want it to do. I don't miss office, everything is clean and snappy.

I have managed to play almost every game thrown at it (Bazzite) - the only one that didn't work was an older DX7 title. DOS games just work - they took more effort than this under Win9x.

I have got a couple of minor issues but all fixable.:

  • I encountered a issue where it wouldn't wake from sleep - fixed by selecting a different color profile in the display settings.
  • I managed to break something in fstsb trying to setup a persistent network drive. Very easy to roll back, I'm 100% sold on immutable until I need something more customisable
  • Recently my Bluetooth kb/mouse would drop off when the PC went idle, wouldn't reconnect/wake up until power cycling the PC. Fixed by disabling BT hibernation/sleep

Having said that, last week I had to install Win11 on the kids laptop to be ready for school - I hadn't installed 11 outside of a controlled Corp environment with solid group policy control since the early days. God-damn Win11 is a dumpster fire! The install UI looks nice but the noise is turned up to 11, popup, wizards, setup this, setup that, backup, OneDrive, give us all your information and sign away any privacy.

Regardless of any minor issues I bump into on the way, I am never going back!

[–] The_Picard_Maneuver@piefed.world 57 points 5 days ago (3 children)

I started with PopOS in September (?), ultimately replacing Windows on every PC in the house. It's been going well. I've had to troubleshoot a few things, the biggest of which being a boot failure, but that turned out to be hardware related, not Linux's fault. Feeling like I own my computer again is great.

Since then, I've gotten into self-hosting and now have a NAS, a Debian Jellyfin server, and a ton of storage space. Right now I'm just backing up basic stuff for the family, as well as streaming movies/shows/music within the house. I've ripped so many old DVDs and CDs in the past few months...

Next steps will probably be: books, audiobooks, and archiving family photos/videos in a way that is easier to browse than just files on a hard drive. I will likely de-google eventually.

In short, I'm having fun and should've done this a long time ago.

[–] lectricleopard@lemmy.world 9 points 5 days ago (3 children)

Im on a similar self hosting journey. What do think you'll use for de googled phone photos and videos? Im not sure where to even start looking.

[–] lietuva@lemmy.world 9 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I've set-up Immich recently, moved 400gb photos from Google Takeout, works flawlessly so far.

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[–] FancyLad@lemmy.world 41 points 5 days ago (2 children)

I have been on Linux for almost 9 months now and I miss nothing about windows. I tried a bunch of distributions, starting with Fedora, but now I have settled on an Arch based distribution and am happily running Manjaro.

[–] Sammy@infosec.pub 10 points 5 days ago

Manjaro is so nice for daily driving. I switched to CachyOs maybe... Two years ago? And despite having some hiccups, I'd rather have it a million times over Windows.

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[–] adp1314@lemmy.world 38 points 5 days ago (4 children)

I'm perfectly happy using Mint. I'll explore more distros eventually but I miss nothing about Windows

[–] EtnaAtsume@lemmy.world 15 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I started using Mint a few months ago, and this is basically my experience as well. On the occasion that I have to use a Windows PC, such as for work, I am just reminded of how awful it is.

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[–] Xenny@lemmy.world 10 points 4 days ago

It's amazing! Full customization beyond what I'm used to and it all just runs my hardware perfectly.

My only issue is getting VR to work nicely with my specific setup but I imagine when steam frame comes out there will be a lot of VR specific updates to Linux drivers.

[–] gwl@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Mostly really good, I feel like I've traded a lot of major problems that I can't do anything about for a few tiny problems that I can actually solve

[–] Stabbitha@lemmy.world 4 points 4 days ago

That's how I feel as well, and it's nice not to have random background processes randomly slowing the system down. I really like that if shit doesn't work or I don't like it I can just try a different distro. I started out on Bazzite, but it didn't play well with my hardware. Now I'm on Pop! running Plasma desktop, everything works, and I've got it heavily customized.

[–] LoafedBurrito@lemmy.world 7 points 4 days ago

It's been GREAT! All my torrenting related stuff works better than it did on windows 10. I am slowing loading old 2000's windows PC games on my Mint installation and so far it's been working well.

My computers are MUCH faster on linux and updates take 20 seconds instead of 15 minutes.

[–] tresspass@lemmy.world 5 points 3 days ago

I switched from windows 10 to pop!_os on my thinkpad p15s almost a year ago. My biggest surprise was thinking I would still need windows for anything when I haven't needed to think about it since.

The most frustrating part is that I'm requires to use windows 11 for work and it just feels so broken. But in all seriousness the biggest issues I've had were a couple driver issues that were easily fixed from the debug.

Honestly my biggest regret was not switching sooner. The learning curve really wasn't bad. Just read the forums and docs. I run it on everything now. I game with it, I run a small homelab with it, I'm productive with it. I dont think there is anything I would miss. Everything works as well if not even better.

[–] Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone 24 points 5 days ago (2 children)

I switched from Windows to Mint at the tail end of September, and I’ve only had minimal issues. I backed up everything I cared about and just nuked Windows in one go, since it wasn’t compatible with 11 and I don’t want security problems. I expected my Nvidia graphics card to cause huge issues, but it literally just worked.

I did have an issue getting my Steam games to run, but it was fixed by figuring out how to change the compatibility settings on Steam (the incredibly complicated operation of right clicking on the game title).

I’ve been taking classes as well, and using Libre Office has met basically 100% of my needs. I did have some issues with converting to .docx when images were involved (resulting in images going on walkabout), but I consider that 50% a Windows problem.

[–] Naho_Zako@piefed.zip 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I also use Libre Office for college. If your professor allows it try submitting a pdf of a document instead of converting to .docx. Documents generally suck as a file type, and so I've had many professors take only .pdf for submission due to formatting issues.

[–] Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone 2 points 3 days ago

That’s exactly what I wound up doing! As long as Turnitin recognizes it, none of my teachers have cared about the format so far.

[–] Pondis@lemmy.world 10 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Absolutely the same experience I had, but I'm dual booting windows.

Literally everything just worked with no issue. I know Mint is like Linux Lite, but I love that it's been so easy to move.

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[–] Bytemeister@lemmy.world 20 points 5 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (3 children)

Switched from Window 10 to Linux Mint about 3 weeks ago so I'd have something familiar to work with.

Honesty, so far Mint works just like Windows should have worked. I'm surprised at how much stuff has been made automatic and easy for a lifelong windows user. Some specific games have a performance issues, Alt+Tab to switch apps doesn't work if you are in a full screen application.

I would encourage anyone on Windows to buy a small drive (I used a 500 GB SSD I got for like 40 bucks) load a Linux distro on it and give it a shot. You probably won't be back on Windows.

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[–] julysfire@lemmy.world 4 points 3 days ago

Pretty damn awesome and loving every minute of not having to use Windows

[–] JGrffn@lemmy.world 5 points 3 days ago (2 children)

My steam wrapped for 2023 is fully windows, 2024 has about 40% windows 60% Linux, purely from the moment I switched halfway through the year, and 2025 is fully Linux.

I regret nothing.

Caveats:

  • I built a new computer in early 2025, knew I'd be making Linux, went AMD 7900xtx. Worked right out the box flawlessly.
  • I started out self hosting stuff and got somewhat comfortable with Linux in those instances, so when I eventually threw endeavouros into my laptop, it all just worked for me. I had a couple of "laptop won't boot because its battery died mid update" events, which is about a couple more than there ever should've been, but it wasn't too hard to recover the laptop every time, with help from chatgpt
  • switched to Bazzite for my new desktop and work framework 13 laptop, but hold endeavouros in my heart with great affection, because it is awesome and Linux is awesome no matter what flavour you pick (restrictions apply, research what you're getting into when picking a distro, and compare a bit but don't overstress)
  • Linux may or may not radicalize you heavily. The liberating feeling sometimes might make you mad that you put up with all that Apple/Microsoft/Adobe bullshit for all those years. Self-hosting intensifies radicalization. Don't come blaming me when you find yourself in a shadow war with the Mossad over your email server getting shadowbanned throughout the Chilean Patagonia due to attempting to create an ex-engineers' farming commune and a regional meshcore network there.
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[–] lechekaflan@lemmy.world 8 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Nothing eventful. It's just a straightforward OS.

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[–] MagnificentSteiner@lemmy.zip 8 points 4 days ago

Everything is fantastic. Switched my laptop (a surface go 2 lol) to Mint, then my desktop to Arch, mini PC to Batocera and built a server that I put OpenMediaVault on.

So far, I have notes (Flatnotes), RSS (FreshRSS), ebooks (Kavita) and recipes (RecipeSage) self hosted as well as media (Kodi) and qBittorrent. Despite being responsible for server admin it's been quite painless overall.

[–] 0xD@infosec.pub 3 points 3 days ago

Been with EndeavourOS on all my devices for the past year and it's pure bliss.

[–] kepix@lemmy.world 3 points 3 days ago (1 children)

tried cachyos. a game froze. restarted the machine. doesnt boot up anymore. found 2 post about it. no solution. i might try pop and nobara next weekend, but i dont see myself dailydrive linux in the next 10 years.

not goin well.

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[–] lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 4 days ago

Going real well. My gaming PC (5800X3D/7900XTX/32GB) is running LMDE6 and so far none of my games have complained; Steam+Proton is great.

I also have a laptop (i7-10750H/1650Ti/16GB) running LMDE7, and that's been my portable gaming machine for a while. Doesn't play nice with RPCS3, but honestly that's not a dealbreaker.

[–] BradleyUffner@lemmy.world 16 points 5 days ago (2 children)

I'm Loving Fedora! All hardware works flawlessly. Games play great.I couldn't be happier.

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[–] brb@sh.itjust.works 14 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I switched from Windows 10 to Kubuntu some months ago and it's been pretty rough mostly. I've been having issues with but not limited to: multi-monitor setup, nvidia gpu, network dropping, game/software support, hardware support (headset working poorly, motherboard not reporting any sensors), poor performance in some cases...

Still better than spreading my cheeks and letting Microsoft fuck me in the ass though

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[–] a_person@piefed.social 5 points 4 days ago

Great, using arch (btw) as my daily for school and its perfect!

[–] Baggie@lemmy.zip 12 points 4 days ago (3 children)

Linux is great so far. It's been a bit of a trick learning the ins and outs, but now it's getting close to a year I've ironed out most of the kinks and have a stable functional computer.

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[–] mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca 4 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

https://lemmy.ca/comment/21276696

I just put an old SSD and Linux on my decade old laptop, and it's like a whole new computer

ofc, it was probably mostly the hard drive that was the problem to begin with, seeing as it took 10 minutes to boot up and log in, and another five before it would open a web or file browser...

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[–] fusionsaint@lemmy.world 4 points 4 days ago

Made the jump to Linux about a month ago. Too much bloat on Win11. With the forthcoming AI bullshit I decided to take the leap and see how much I liked it. I installed mint on an old laptop. I had to test it out and was surprised at how easy it was decided to dual boot my main gaming PC because there are still some games that require anti-cheat that I can’t play on Linux. But Once they figure out how to do that, I’ll be a complete convert. It’s amazing how much faster and smoother. My PC is running fedora.

[–] Xyphius@lemmy.ca 4 points 4 days ago

It's been amazing. My RAM is singing praises with how much better the OS is at handling memory.

[–] redwattlebird@lemmings.world 4 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Fantastic! Just switched my main PC to Cachy OS the other day from Linux Mint (previously W10) because I started to find it too restrictive. Tried out Hyprland for a bit and it was a lot of fun but I don't have the time to fully customise everything, so went to Plasma. I'm saving Hyprland for when I retire.

My laptop is still running Mint Cinnamon (dual boot W11) but I'm contemplating on another OS that's more friendly to Unity and Unreal game development. Any suggestions? I keep getting burst compiler errors in Unity, even on the latest LTS.

[–] Rebels_Droppin@lemmy.world 13 points 5 days ago (4 children)

Switched to Bazzite from windows 10 a few months ago since I read that it supports Nvidia cards well and I'm in no position to buy a new GPU. The only applications that I miss are the DAW that I used for music and Titanfall 2 as that's through the EA launcher and have yet to find a reliable way to make it run without it falling apart. My partner (Who is not tech savvy at all) is even starting to get used to it and dislikes when she occasionally uses the windows 11 laptop (been using it for said DAW)

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[–] one_knight_scripting@lemmy.world 7 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Love it. I use Arch... btw... And while I will gladly admit, my setup isn't exactly easy, it's quite beautiful.

What I personally like the best about it is a tiling Windows manager. Instead of placing Windows one on top of the other, it places them split side by side. On a big ass monitor, it looks something like this:

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[–] EvilCartyen@feddit.dk 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Great. Only issue so far has been a specific VPN for work which does not have a Linux installer and no drag and drop replacement for Snagit. But that's just work stuff, everything on the private side works flawlessly for me.

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[–] Naho_Zako@piefed.zip 1 points 3 days ago

I started daily driving a year ago with Fedora Silverblue (Atomic) which uses GNOME because people said Atomic distros are friendlier to beginners, and Fedora already had a good reputation for working fairly well out the box. The only issue I had was a Bluetooth issue, and you can rollback to previous kernel versions to wait until a fix is made. If I was just a browse the internet and play games on Steam kind of person, I think I would have loved it. But I did try to tinker and do things that were far to difficult to figure out how to change on an Atomic distro, especially since I couldn't find instructions or documentation for my distro, so I moved to regular Fedora KDE after a few months and I absolutely love it.

No annoying pop-ups, no stalking, no weird shit being enabled by default, just an OS that does what YOU want it to do. I am comfortable with using the terminal due to taking a Linux course, but I feel that you could do a lot without having to use it. Plus, most sites and github projects give you basic installation guides anyway. The only two issues I have had were Bluetooth and my touchpad not working. The solution for these two issues were simple, but I couldn't find the information for literal months. I solved the Bluetooth issue by doing a power reset, apparently you have to do that when you get a kernel update. The touchpad issue was it disabled itself in the system settings one day. That's literally it. My computer hasn't blown up, my mic and camera always work, I have found FOSS alternatives for almost everything, I don't game much on laptop but I've gotten old Japanese 32-bit games to work on Lutris, etc.

Maybe I'll distro-hop in the future, but it's only for the pure curiousity and fun, not out of necessity or broken tech. In fact, Linux just makes tech fun. It makes my laptop feel brand new, and makes me go "Wow. I love using technology."

The only reason I still have my Windows partition is because my college uses Lockdown Browser for online tests, and I don't want to fuck up a no-retakes test or do testing in person. Once I graduate, I'm probably nuking that partition, I feel like barfing every time I boot into it.

[–] piranhaconda@mander.xyz 4 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Pretty good. But I've been dabbling in Linux for the past decade or so and already had a Linux based home server. But in the past year I finally swapped all of my non-work computers over to linux. If games won't run, I won't play them.

I'm running CachyOS on my desktop workstation, laptop, and my handheld Lenovo legion go. Unraid on my server.

Edit: the only issue I had with the CachyOS installs so far is my remote desktop solution, which admittedly I don't even use often. VNC is ok. I liked NoMachine for a while but it messed up my graphics drivers or something weird. I don't remember the specifics, I just flat out nuked it from my machines. I need to try rustdesk

[–] FluffMongo@lemmy.world 5 points 4 days ago

Been mostly smooth sailing with EndeavourOS, a couple of games anticheat hindered me from playing and some issues with disks because I can't be arsed to move my files around to switch the fs. And a strange issue with where my monitor flickers if it has a static image while VRR is active, so some loading screens in games are a pain to look at. Overall pleased :)

[–] ohshit604@sh.itjust.works 3 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Buddy of mine decided to switch to Debian like a month ago, I warned him it’s Linux but “raw” and warned him of outdated packages an such, he said no worries. Proceeds to AI his way through literally everything, broke numerous packages by going to Trixie Backports for newer drivers and has now installed windows on a spare 500Gb HDD so he can play Fortnite with a chick he met on tinder.

Want to take bets on how long his Debian install lasts?

[–] lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (2 children)

Buddy of mine decided to switch to Debian like a month ago, I warned him it’s Linux but “raw” and warned him of outdated packages an such, he said no worries.

Less "outdated" and more "this version of [insert software package] is stable, secure, and works well", which is the entire ethos of Debian to begin with. It's reliable specifically because of that, and is part of why it's so popular as a server OS. If you want new versions of everything, then Debian is not for you.

That said, your buddy is a moron.

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[–] blitzen@lemmy.ca 11 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

My daily driver is a Mac laptop, so I wouldn’t say I’m fully switched. . But I did switch over my gaming PC to Bazzite and have zero regrets. I do, however, dual boot back into windows when the kid wants to play Fortnite.

Pretty damn good. Most of my issues are really minor. I feel a lot more secure and a lot less surveilled. Not perfect, but much better.

[–] Phelpssan@lemmy.world 11 points 5 days ago

Pretty good, running Kubuntu for a few months. Had some annoyances at first but they were all solved when I moved from LTS to 25.10.

[–] Wispy2891@lemmy.world 2 points 3 days ago

Way better than expected. Even if I was already using Linux on servers since decades, on desktop I preferred Windows. But my laptop was with 8gb soldered RAM and Windows 11 is basically unusable with that amount. I wanted to switch.

But my past experience was bad, too often stuff was broken. Used Ubuntu in 2016, couldn't stand it => revert to win10, tried Manjaro in 2019, one day I fucked with some AUR and it could not boot => revert to win10. I left thinking that Linux on the desktop is not ready.

Then last summer the constant updates on my windows laptop made it unusable. It simply doesn't leave enough memory to use a web browser with more than a couple tabs.

At the same time at work a windows 11 update introduced a very annoying bug: after standby, windows would switch the resolution of displayport monitors to 800*600 and destroy my window layout, with everything moved to the top left corner. I had to use a tiling window manager like glazewm as a temporary fix until Microsoft fixed the bug (still annoying waiting for a couple seconds to have the windows rearranged when the monitor went to standby) and I fell into the rabbit hole of tiling managers. I watched videos where some YouTubers showed how l33t is cachyos with hyprland with their magic dotfiles and I fell for the meme.

For the first few weeks it was awesome, then of course hyprland deprecates syntax without warnings and I started to get errors after the first update. Also the concept of using someone else's dotfiles is wrong as they're highly opinionated. They should do videos about how to make your Linux experience similar to theirs, not "clone this configuration as a black box", because then you would have no idea how to fix problems when the updates come. But it seems like their priority is getting stars on their GitHub, rather than actually helping people. "Just blindly run this script as sudo" is a wrong concept, IMHO.

Then when hyprland changed syntax AGAIN without warning, I was fed up, didn't want to spend hours to debug the problem so I spent hours to reinstall another distro. I read that Linus is using fedora with plain gnome and some frippery extensions because "it just works" and... OMG. It just works! I'm shocked how good vanilla GNOME has become since the last time I tried it in 2019! It's now fully usable even for a noob! And I like those extensions too. Modern but classic. Easy but powerful. And the apps in the GNOME circle are so polished. I was shocked to see pika backup, user friendly but not dumbed down.

[–] Buddahriffic@lemmy.world 1 points 3 days ago

I switched about a year ago to fedora cinnamon. Less frustration than windows, even though cinnamon kinda sucks compared to KDE that I switched to immediately after the first time I tried it (should have tried it months sooner, literally only took a few mins to install and check out).

While I wouldn't say that there were zero problems, I did notice that I spend less time troubleshooting or searching for how to change something on Linux than I did on windows by the end. Also, going from empty disk to gaming involved fewer steps, at least with an AMD gpu.

[–] spizzat2@lemmy.zip 4 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

About a year ago, I installed kubuntu on a laptop that couldn't officially support windows 11. So far, I've only had minor annoyances.

I had a program that wouldn't work when I first switched, despite being supported. I installed MakeMKV from the built-in repository, and it wouldn't detect my optical drive. I installed from a separate repo, and it still wouldn't work. I compiled it from source, and I don't think it even launched anymore. Then one day, while randomly flailing, some combination of uninstalling, reinstalling, and random commands I found online made it work for no reason I could discern. I haven't had a problem with it since.

If my optical drive can't read a disc, the eject button doesn't work. I have to either reboot or use the terminal to eject the disc.

Every once in a while, something (presumably Firefox) locks up the entire system. Mouse won't move, keyboard is unresponsive, the works. It's a decade-old laptop, but it had a decent processor for the time, and I upgraded the RAM, so that shouldn't really be happening as often as it does.

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