| ▲ | danans 6 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
> I don't understand people who use anything else, to be honest. Most people don't make their coffee in an Aeropress either. I've also used Linux exclusively (in my case 25 years), but I also realize that with a few niche exceptions, there are few mass marketed products that feature the traditional Linux desktop as their primary UI. Desktop OS UI is hard. It takes investment in technology, product, and marketing all focused on a target market. Even with all of those most upstarts have failed to gain traction. Also consider that most people buy laptops for 2 reasons: 1) browsing the web and if they can afford it 2) as a fashion accessory. People will put up with a lot of BS from a product if they feel like the product gives them social status and acceptance. No Linux laptop really hits (2). Arguably only a few Windows laptops do either. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | worksonmine 6 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> Most people don't make their coffee in an Aeropress either. Stupid analogy, the Linux version of that would be whatever french press you want to use. Buy your coffee ground or as beans and grind yourself, depending on preference. And for my girlfriend there's always the Starbucks equivalent (Debian stable with Gnome). Apple would be picked by modern slaves and sold in a capsule at 100,000% markup and it only fits their machines. Windows comes with pesticides for the "benefit of the user". | |||||||||||||||||
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