Almost everything is already working on Linux, I can play all the games I like, there are good open source or free proprietary alternatives for all the software I use. I truly believe we are approaching the year of Linux desktop.
But he is correct, it is time to dump windows. But for all the reasons one would have to dump windows, half or more also applies to Apple.
So yes, dump windows and move to Linux or a BSD.
i absolutely concede the gamers dont have too much of an excuse anymore, unless you play some specific games that are windows-only (or, more accurately, where the anti-cheat malware is windows-only).
but for some reason, these announcements/conversations always leave out the biggest share of windows users, who also happen to be the slowest to change: governments and large institutions (banks, hospitals, universities).
it will be decades yet for them to switch off windows.
another often overlooked one: small businesses that use quickbooks (which is thousands and thousands of small businesses). or engineering firms that use solidworks (or other CAD)
so, yes, for home use it is a fantastic time to explore non-windows options, absolutely. but it aint the "year of the linux desktop" yet, and wont be for awhile, if you count government and institutions.
[1] https://www.itbrew.com/stories/2024/10/22/over-two-thirds-of...
WSL is a nice piece of engineering but it's nowhere near as seamless as MacOS X where the entire system is built on top of a BSD compatibility layer.
Also I suspect IT at my company don't devote as many resources to messing up Macs with malware and spyware of various sorts as they do with Windows.
The biggest issues with the platform had previously been one-off errors 'Audio switcher doesn't work' or the annoyances of desktop environments. I don't want to browse stack overflow during my free time. LLMs solve this entirely. Claude solves these problems trivially, and helps me take advantage of the platform without bogging me down on its ux failures.
Unless you’re a gamer or have other specific use cases, that’s it. 500$ and it does what you need.
From a corporate pov, I know I’d rather support 500 Neos over 500 generic laptops. One vendor is responsible for everything. No bickering between Intel , Microsoft and Lenovo when things go wrong.
I reckon schools will get the Neo for 450 to 400 at volume. And app developers have to meet good software again, your end user only has eight gigs of RAM.
I wouldn't bet on it, especially in an corporate setting. IT departments seem to love filling every inch of their firm laptop's CPU and RAM with security and remote access stuff. I've seen that same thing happen in every company I've worked for recently: high-end laptops sitting at 100% ressource usage absolutely all the time.
Or clean up other stuff. Teams can be very ram hungry for what it needs to actually do.
I'm tempted to pick a Neo up and see how it likes Flutter applications.
Perhaps by that time the M3 will have better Linux support, but dealing with the 8GB memory size limitation will become more difficult as time ticks by.
According to this they're still supporting a 2017 IMac, 9 years is a decent amount of time.
Apple can always change their minds and extend this out with security only fixes indefinitely.
I've used Kubuntu as a daily driver at work several times - imo it's superior to a mac for development; Apple is so actively hostile to actually running open-source or custom software.
Typically, college students and teachers would get $500 dingy laptops from Asus, Acer, and Dell. A decade ago, those machines were fine. My mom used one for 7 years, right until they retired Windows 7.
Then the machines started becoming absolutely useless with Windows 8, 10, and now 11. 8GB machines are barely usable now, with constant Windows updates and all the background telemetry services maxing out the disk all the time.
Sure, people can turn off some of these rogue processes. But my point is - an OS should just disappear from the user’s view and let them work.
I don’t live in my home country and haven’t visited in a long time, but I’ve heard that people are really opting for second-hand MacBook Airs. Now with the MacBook Neo, more people will go that route.
Students are opting for cheap Windows machines and flashing them with Ubuntu to make them usable.
That was the moment I realized that Microslop will never make good OS. They are incapable of making good desktop OS. Each new version will only look different to justify the cost but underneath it will be same old rotten garbage that gets harder to use with every new version. Infuriated, I returned to my bedroom, uninstalled my Windows, installed DOS, and started looking for something better. I tried many OS over next couple years, even rolled my own, but in 2006 I finally settled on Ubuntu, which at that time had, for me, ideal combination of repository size, freshness and stability. I'm still on Ubuntu.
matheusmoreira•1h ago
> It is completely fungible to me, however, and the slightest nuisance and I would just move elsewhere.
GitHub's got something its competitors don't have: GitHub Sponsors. It's a nice way to support creators and a pretty good reason to stay on GitHub. If only it was more popular.
rolph•1h ago