| ▲ | Ragnarork 9 hours ago | |
> nearly everyone has some niche thing they like, some 5% that isn't covered by the FOSS I'm interested in where that estimate + number are coming from. And I'd like to point out that I don't nearly see as many people pushing back against say MacOS for "not being Windows", despite the fact that the same issue would be there. I wonder why Linux gets special treatment in that regards, when modern distros make usage very accessible. > And that doesn't even get into gaming. Gaming on Linux works very well. And if something doesn't, it's usually by choice (e.g. BattleEye customers not enabling it on Linux) or by sheer incompetence / malevolence (e.g. EA Games and their shitty EA App that breaks often even on Windows, and even worse on Linux in a Wine environment). | ||
| ▲ | chocochunks 6 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
Linux unfortunately needs to be a Windows that's better than Windows to a lot of people unfortunately. It must support all their hardware and software perfectly and can never have any issues, only then will it be an accepted alternative. Probably because it's free and they want it to work on their existing setup. Mac users paid money for their choice, so ironically they are more forgiven for the inability to run some Office VBA macros, work with that random MST dual display dongle or whatever. They rationalize their expensive purchase as a good decision and that it's good enough and possible to solve issues encountered like spending 5 times as much on Thunderbolt dock to do what the $30 MST dongle did or learn some entirely new $10 app to do what they did on Windows with something else. | ||
| ▲ | carlosjobim 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
MacOS has the software people need, hence why there's not that same push back. Just as nobody is pushing back against Linux when it comes to server software, or pushing back against PlayStation when it comes to games. | ||