| ▲ | ruszki 2 hours ago | |
If you just install MacOS, Windows, or any major Linux distros, all work okay with default settings and drivers, almost all the time. Problems start when you want something else or more. It’s like when you want Docker on MacOS. Helpful people will say that you should just use colima. Yeah it works perfectly well… until you want to open udp ports (this was the case half a year ago). All 3 OSes are like that, just the flavor is different. If you know how to find “reject all” on all cookie banners, Windows will be easier for you. If you know networking and pf, then MacOS will be easier for you. If you know how to debug driver bugs, Linux will be easier for you (and fun as hell imho) Anyway, if you don’t want to do much more than internet browsing/video playing/basic gaming/basic coding, it simply doesn’t matter. // I would still say that the default network/firewall settings for MacOS is sketchy as hell however | ||
| ▲ | JCattheATM 42 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |
Personally I can't stand the dock paradigm...no way to tell if a program is running or not at a glance, and it's not easy to switch between one application with multiple windows. A lot can be changed even if it requires third party add-ons, but I'd say it's the least intuitive OS there is. | ||
| ▲ | DustinEchoes 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
What’s sketchy about it? | ||