After a few questions about substitute programs, he hasn’t asked any more help.
He is literally Joe average user.
As Apple and Microsoft hand control of your computer to Big Brother, (May I demand your age?) Linux, variants thereof, will be the only OS without Big Brother inside, even if we have to create a black market in distros.
And the BSD family I hope. Kids should not be excluded from developer and educational opportunities because GitHub or other has “filthy dirty language” and who decides what is acceptable? THE GOVERNMENT!
Don’t forget that some state governments already forbid LGBTQ+ and “unacceptable religious” material. OS vendors have gleefully taken orders from the now discarded Pam Bondi.
I check regularly to see if ICEBlock has been restored to the Apple AppStore, after a court ruled that its removal was a travesty.
Well nowadays I'm stick with macOS not because it's pretty, but because a necessary to do my work as a mobile app dev.
I also notice this with people who are getting into tech but don't want to code or actually interact with the system/know more about it. Every other week, they'll put on a new distro, brick their device, rebrick it and then consider it as a hobby/"doing tech stuff." One of my friends is like that and he's insufferable. He keeps asking me what I think of xyz distro and if he should use it just because he knows I code for a living (which means I must be constantly looking for the perfect linux distro obviously because I "do tech stuff").
I have never used any distro outside debian and ubuntu which according to him is for "noobs". smh
isfttr•1h ago
All right, but who am I to talk about this subject? I’ve been using macOS since mid-2007, without dual boot with Windows until mid-2010. After that time, I mainly used Windows to run Microsoft Flight Simulator X, until I eventually returned to using macOS exclusively until mid-2018.
From 2018 onwards, I became increasingly interested in computers and eventually started using Linux on an old MacBook that still powered on at the time. This MacBook was very limited and, even then, wasn’t capable of running a light distro like Linux Mint with XFCE well. Later, I realized it was becoming complicated to continue using my MacBook Pro with macOS, which would soon lose support, so I decided to start using Linux full-time. This phase lasted until mid-2022, when I bought my MacBook Air M2.
As is the case for many macOS or Linux users, during almost all this time I continued to have contact with Windows, especially at work. And currently, I use Windows 11 daily. That said, I believe I can offer my perspective as a user who genuinely uses these operating systems for daily tasks, who no longer plays online or offline games, and just wants a computer that is fully functional whenever turned on. I believe this covers a good portion of these systems’ uses.