• rivalary@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I don’t get it. If a product sucks, why wouldn’t you switch away from it?

    “Don’t suggest I leave my abusive husband, instead I’ll complain about him to my friends until he magically gets better.”

    Christ, you guys sound like you have Stockholm syndrome.

      • tabular@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        If the alternatives are not there or lacking then people can’t switch. If people don’t use it and contribute (e.g. reports, donations) then it is difficult to justify creating alternatives.

        This is not a stalemate however. It is a slow transition of pioneers frustrated with the status quo.

      • LexiMax@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 year ago

        More importantly, the reason why all of those apps don’t have Linux versions is not because of some anti-Linux conspiracy, but because Linux userspace has for most of its existence prioritized distro-packaged-and-provided software, at the expense and sometimes even exclusion of binary software distribution.

        This is not just a technical limitation, but I’d also argue a cultural one, driven by folks who consider proprietary/nonfree software irrelevant and not worth supporting in a first-class way. Unfortunately, the companies who make both the software that entire industries are built around and the games that you play when you get off work disagree. Valve was probably the company in the best position to make native Linux games a trend, and the fact that they’re more focused on Proton these days is pretty telling.

        The only developers in the Linux ecosystem who I feel are taking the problem seriously are the Flatpak developers. They do amazing work, with great tooling that builds against a chrooted runtime by default. But it needs more widespread usage and acceptance, as well as better outreach to developers from other ecosystems who might’ve had horrendous experience making Linux builds in the past.

        There is a future out there with native Linux builds of industry-standard tooling and even games. But it’s a future the Linux community has to willing to actually work towards.

        • tabular@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Is it not “serious” to work towards a better future because that’s more difficult to obtain? There is a future out there where more industries are dominated by software that respects user freedom. The games industry has changed over the years and it is my hope people will not tolerate it forever. Even if I achive no impact with my games I can look back and see I tried for what I thought was the better moral outcome.

          • LexiMax@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            1 year ago

            Is it not “serious” to work towards a better future because that’s more difficult to obtain? There is a future out there where more industries are dominated by software that respects user freedom.

            I do not believe that distros ignoring the problem of binary software distribution is actually accomplishing anything productive on that front. All it does is put a gigantic KEEP OUT sign for most outside developers who might have briefly considered porting their software. Package maintainers are also incredibly overburdened, and are often slow to update their packages even on rolling release distros.

            Worse, it also inconveniences their userbase, pushing them to solutions their that bypass the distro completely such as third-party repos, Steam, Wine, Flatpak, Docker, or even running Linux in WSL. All of them function as non-free escape hatches, but all of them are inferior to distros getting their act together and deciding that binary software distribution is a problem worth collaborating on and solving together.

            • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              I tried to get wine to work on my RX580, and the card could t even support it. It’s only the last few AMD video card generations that do.

          • XPost3000@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Why not both? I don’t see how proprietary software on Linux will slow down FOSS at all, and it’ll only bring more users to Linux who otherwise have to use windows for their software, so overall more FOSS users in the community

            And programs like Blender have already matured to a professional level, so I’m pretty optimistic that other FOSS apps will eventually follow, too

            • tabular@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              If the goal is software freedom for everyone then proprietary software working on Linux isn’t the end goal. Maybe it’s good - a step towards the end game - but I worry it’s a peak which is difficult to get down and up to a higher peak. Proprietary software on Linux is convenience above freedom.

              • XPost3000@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                Yeah, that’s what I’m getting at, proprietary software on Linux is just a step forward towards a fully FOSS future

                For the most part, there aren’t many professional fields that have a good FOSS option, so in the meantime their only option is to keep using the industry standard until a good alternative matures like Blender has

                At the very least, people would have the freedom to not use microsoft or apple while still working professionally in their respective industry, so that’s more free overall

              • PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                AutoCAD has been industry standard for 40 years now, and it’s never going away. Can’t run it on Linux. It and Revit are 100% mandatory in construction/ arch / engineering

                • tabular@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  I have heard of those examples before but I have no use for that so I have not learned specifics to talk about.

                  Would bet it is harder to combat that “this will never change” mindset in the userbase than actually making alternatives. For 20 years from the 50’s it was normal for ALL software to be public domain. Times change, and it’s up to us users if they want better.

        • lemme_at_it@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I think they’ve finally heard the appeal for functionality before idealist principles. Debian, since version 12, are following the trend of abandoning the purist approach of only offering FOSS at install. They now detect and offer to install proprietary drivers at install.

      • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I’ll add Visual Studio.

        And, no, VS Code is not a comparable replacement no matter how many extensions you add. I say that as someone who uses VS Code for almost everything…except C#.

      • rivalary@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Yep, definitely have to pick the right tool for the job. If you use these things, you’re stuck with Windows. Would be nice if you could install needed software on whichever OS you choose.

    • duckCityComplex@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’ve been running Linux on all the machines I own for years, but I still have to run Windows for work. Not everyone can just switch and I doubt there are many reading this who are unaware they could switch to Linux (or Mac, BSD, etc.).

      Oh I also have one MacBook running MacOS because Apple decided to only allow iOS development and parental controls, of all things, on Apple devices running Apple software.

      Yes MS and Apple suck but it’s not as simple as “just switch.”

    • Prethoryn Overmind@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Because the product doesn’t suck for everyone on the entire planet because you think it sucks.

      “Christ you guys sound like you have Stockholm syndrome.”

      You guys sound like a fucking cult sometimes. Like Linux is this perfect OS or that doesn’t break when a repository fails to update.

      Wanna know what my first time with Linux was like, Everytime my mouse moved the screen refreshed. Every, frame.

      Linux is not the answer for every person especially for my mom who barely knows how to send an email and the answer is to tell her how to boot from a live USB and expect her to understand partitioning a drive.

      Look, I love Linux just as much as you guys but I also appreciate Windows especially doing the work I do. Linux is not the damn answer to everything.

      And your analogy to abusing another human is honestly quite shit. Humans abusing another need to seek help.

      • rivalary@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        I disagree, Microsoft is very abusive to both its users as well as other companies. Just because you want to bury your head in the sand about how they have zero respect for their customers, build shit software, are anticompetitive and have a stranglehold on the entire industry, that’s on you.

        I’m not suggesting you use Linux, honestly every OS sucks, but Windows actively works against you. If you want to complain about these problems deliberately created by Microsoft but reject any suggestions of something that might be a better alternative, you’re just a whiner.

        But hey, at least Apple didn’t win the OS war. We’d all be stuck with only Apple hardware, no standards and walled gardens. I guess we can thank Microsoft for having an alternative to that.

        Anyways, use whatever works for you. And I guess you can complain without wanting a solution to your problems, a lot of people complain like that.

        • acr515@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Not backing down from your comparison of a computer OS change to domestic abuse is… definitely a take