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An amazing insight — 4 Comments

  1. I’ve been using Linux for decades. Started with SuSe, then Ubuntu, Mint, CentOS and I’m now using KDE Neon. (And if you want themes, KDE Plasma has it in spades – everything is customisable.) I stopped dual booting when I went over to Mint, haven’t found a need for Windows for years. As you say, it’s free, no viruses & is sometimes a challenge but that’s part of the interest. I’m not sure how my wife would cope with it if I wasn’t here though.

  2. I’ve toyed with Linux several times over the years and in general have been impressed, although the challenges of the command line back in the day were a little off-putting.
    But for the last 10 years I’ve been self-employed and the main software I need for my work only works on Windows or mac! At a mere snip of a price (£2500 per annum), and apple can go fu, whistle.

    What really grinds my gears is the per year bit, if I don’t give Autodesk my hard earned, the program stops working!! You can’t just buy it anymore, only rent. Software as a service should be illegal! Its equivalent to obtaining money with menaces FFS.

  3. Played with Linux near 30 years ago, but not used for real work (for that Sun workstations). By 00s it was good for servers but not quite complete for personal work (but thankfully OSX came along so I could ditch Windows). For twenty years now I have used nothing but Linux and people no longer ask me to look at their windows problems (Just as well as I can’t even make find my way around the menus now.). RedHat, SuSE, Gentoo, Ubuntu, currently Mint Xfce.

  4. This comment was posted from a laptop which has been successfully running on a Linux platform for over a year.

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