

That’s okay. Just remember that if you had a larger bed, they’d consume all of that too.
I make videos on MakerTube! I also post random stuff to social media and never know when to stop talking.
MakerTube: https://makertube.net/a/richie_g/video-channels
Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/richiegolds.bsky.social
Mastodon: https://cyberplace.social/@richiegolds
That’s okay. Just remember that if you had a larger bed, they’d consume all of that too.
I had that very experience somewhat recently. I had to set up Windows 10 on a laptop for a friend. I had been using Linux on my main PC for probably five years at that point, so I was “un-used to” Windows. Oh boy that was a dreadful experience. It was a lot like “no, no, no, no, don’t want that, stop it, turn that off, be quiet”, and then logging in and getting the final pieces finished? Headache-inducing. “Try this!”, “try that!”, “did you know you could do THIS?”, “subscribe to this product you should use!”
And then the preloaded “suggested software”, the search bar with “suggested/trending” garbage I did NOT want to see? Yeah it was not pleasant. I think unless I’m doing it professionally? I’m not going to accept that task again. I’m glad I do not have to use that software on my main PC anymore. It seemed to have gotten worse since I stopped using it five years ago.
I use Garuda, which is an Arch-based distribution. Regressions are inevitable, though in my experience any actual issues arising from updates are quite infrequent. I’ve only once ever had to use Snapper to restore my system after a borked update in the some three and a half years I’ve used it. Keep in mind that this is a rolling release distribution, so new code isn’t always thoroughly tested before it’s sent out. I generally prefer new software, because I like playing games so new features and enhancements are important to me (on my main PC. I often install Arch for fun on other computers, but I thought for my ThinkPad? It’s older, maybe I’d like it to run Debian).
But any time I have a minor hiccup (that usually gets resolved after an update or reboot), I remember how much worse it could be. I’d much prefer the rare slight complication to the ads, telemetry, nags, intrusive updates, excessive bloat, and lack of control.
I’ve said before, that after using Linux on my main PC and not touching Windows? Windows really does feel like I’m not using my PC, something I never really noticed before I made the switch five years ago. I used to have no problems with modern Windows, but now it’s hard for me to tolerate. Old Windows is generally okay. I collect old computers, so versions like Windows 95, 98, 2000, and XP are fun.
I’ve actually never been banned on Reddit for anything, anywhere. I’ve always been careful of where I went and what I interacted with there. I only just recently deleted my Reddit account, because I stopped using it long before I got myself setup on Lemmy. I’ve been on a roll of abandoning the “big” platforms (YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter/X) and replacing them with decentralized services. Reddit is just my most recent example.
I made the switch back in 2020 when I learned how much Proton had improved Linux gaming. I tried it out of curiosity to see if I could make it work for me, and after a week, I had gotten settled. Most of my games worked, some right away, some with tweaking. Some didn’t work at all.
Fast forward to 2025, and now those few games that didn’t work (I wish I remembered which ones they were) do, and I almost never have to do any tweaking to make games work. I’m so used to the way my distribution works that going back to Windows for anything is jarring. I bought a used ThinkPad a while back, and the previous owner “helpfully” installed Windows 11 on it for me (which I promptly wiped and installed Arch Linux, later Debian onto). That was the most I used Windows 11 (about 5 minutes, to make sure the machine worked). I am glad I do not have to use it on my own machines.
I recall another recent time where I set up Windows 10 on a laptop for a friend. It was… not a pleasant experience for me. Again, I was glad I didn’t have to use it.
Linux isn’t ready for everyone, but it sure as hell is ready for me. It was ready for me years ago.
I learned how far gaming on Linux had come, so during COVID I decided to try it out. I wiped my Windows 10 installation, and installed Ubuntu on it (later Pop!_OS, then Garuda, and Arch on other machines), and got to work figuring things out. I didn’t know if it’d stick, because I was still unsure of it as I wasn’t sure I’d get all of my games working. But, I got settled within a week, and over time things just got better. At that time I was so used to Windows’ bloat and other… “features” that I became blind to them. After more than five years using Linux, using Windows even for a few minutes is quite the shock!