| ▲ | eigenspace 3 days ago | |||||||
Yeah, it was mostly the stuff on iOS that drove me away, macOS can be used as a relatively open and okay laptop OS without their lock-in features, but I also found that those lock-in features were the only things that were really compelling to me about their laptops. Without their special stuff, I just find macOS to be an okay, but rather opinionated and frustrating OS to use, whereas I find KDE on Linux to be a bit less polished, but much nicer at least for me as a software dev. I think macOS is nice if you use it exactly the way that Apple wants you to use it, otherwise it's just painful. | ||||||||
| ▲ | Orygin 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> I think macOS is nice if you use it exactly the way that Apple wants you to use it Do you have an example? Apart from a few small opinionated decisions, I find Macos to mostly get out of my way. Of course it lacks the customization that Linux offers, and there are a few UX issues with the DE (switching desktop animations, window management, etc), but for a software dev, being UNIX is pretty good and opens lots of opportunities. Compared to Windows which is actively hostile towards its users, it's night and day | ||||||||
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