I'm once again begging people to stop blaming the victims of shitty techbro nonsense.
-
@jwcph @JessTheUnstill My mother is past 80 and the most computer illiterate person ever. She's been using Ubuntu for over a decade and couldn't even tell you. There's a browser, there's a mail program. Everything else is well hidden. It just doesn't do unexpected things.
@menos @JessTheUnstill Sure - but did she switch, i.e. install Ubuntu on her own computer, by herself?
-
@menos @JessTheUnstill - except the "similar situation" is nearly every time (in my experience actually every time) on Linux vs. edge cases on corporate systems (Mac & Win both).
Add to that that most user can, in fact, get some help for their corporate systems, especially if they just bought them, while finding help with Linux as a non-techie user is almost impossible & the "you can easily switch" claim just isn't true.
@jwcph @JessTheUnstill Mine was very much not an edge case. I wanted and bought a school computer for my son. They let me create an AppleID for a person under 16yo just fine. Only when I tried to actually use it, I ended up with a completely useless error message and no way to use the app store or even install updates. Wanna try to get support for that from an electronics discounter?
I also have a scanner here that I got as a gift because it's just not supported any more on Windows 10. "GTFO, it won't work, ever" is one way of supporting the user to avoid opening a terminal of course (just kidding, you don't even need to do that on Linux, just plug it in).
In my experience, " just try Linux" is virtually always an offer for help if people like my mom should feel clicking "next" a bunch of times is too technical. I mean, everybody gets their Windows preinstalled as well so I provided that service, too. -
@jwcph @JessTheUnstill Mine was very much not an edge case. I wanted and bought a school computer for my son. They let me create an AppleID for a person under 16yo just fine. Only when I tried to actually use it, I ended up with a completely useless error message and no way to use the app store or even install updates. Wanna try to get support for that from an electronics discounter?
I also have a scanner here that I got as a gift because it's just not supported any more on Windows 10. "GTFO, it won't work, ever" is one way of supporting the user to avoid opening a terminal of course (just kidding, you don't even need to do that on Linux, just plug it in).
In my experience, " just try Linux" is virtually always an offer for help if people like my mom should feel clicking "next" a bunch of times is too technical. I mean, everybody gets their Windows preinstalled as well so I provided that service, too.@menos @JessTheUnstill Thanks for proving my point.
-
@menos @JessTheUnstill Sure - but did she switch, i.e. install Ubuntu on her own computer, by herself?
@jwcph @menos @JessTheUnstill this is the question.
It's not about using Linux when it is already working on your PC.
.it's the work you need to invest into a proper backup, alternative softwares, deletion of your windows and then installation of Linux
I am fine using Linux. I am having trouble doing the whole process.
-
@jwcph @menos @JessTheUnstill this is the question.
It's not about using Linux when it is already working on your PC.
.it's the work you need to invest into a proper backup, alternative softwares, deletion of your windows and then installation of Linux
I am fine using Linux. I am having trouble doing the whole process.
@cy @menos @JessTheUnstill Exactly! I was starting to think I wasn't making myself clear
This is also why I want to start out dual-booting, because running Linux off a USB stick isn't going to feel like a "real" user experience - IMHO every switching guide should start with that.
If you can find a switching guide remotely understandable by non-techies.
Which is incredibly difficult.
-
@jwcph @menos @JessTheUnstill this is the question.
It's not about using Linux when it is already working on your PC.
.it's the work you need to invest into a proper backup, alternative softwares, deletion of your windows and then installation of Linux
I am fine using Linux. I am having trouble doing the whole process.
@cy @jwcph @JessTheUnstill If that's the remaining threshold: when Windows tells you it's time to buy a new computer because your old one won't be supported now, just buy one preinstalled with Linux. You'd have to solve the backup problem with Windows just the same so it must be possible.
-
@cy @jwcph @JessTheUnstill If that's the remaining threshold: when Windows tells you it's time to buy a new computer because your old one won't be supported now, just buy one preinstalled with Linux. You'd have to solve the backup problem with Windows just the same so it must be possible.
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill That would be great! Of course, a regular computer user will want to buy from a shop they know & few if any computer stores sell machines with Linux installed.
Hopefully this, too, will change as more & more people, organisations & companies make the switch
-
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill That would be great! Of course, a regular computer user will want to buy from a shop they know & few if any computer stores sell machines with Linux installed.
Hopefully this, too, will change as more & more people, organisations & companies make the switch
@jwcph @cy @JessTheUnstill As long as only the small, regional nerd outlets such as Dell and Lenovo offer preinstalled Linux, we can only hope for a better future where they offer Linux laptops on the shelves between the beer and the charcoal at your corner store. Then, maybe.
-
@jwcph @cy @JessTheUnstill As long as only the small, regional nerd outlets such as Dell and Lenovo offer preinstalled Linux, we can only hope for a better future where they offer Linux laptops on the shelves between the beer and the charcoal at your corner store. Then, maybe.
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill I've never seen those here - it's not enough that those vendors have them, the retailers need to offer them, too; the regular user isn't going to ask & risk getting into a debate with the shop guy over it.
-
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill I've never seen those here - it's not enough that those vendors have them, the retailers need to offer them, too; the regular user isn't going to ask & risk getting into a debate with the shop guy over it.
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill - also, I just went to Lenovo's website to check if it's a regional thing & even though they have a page labeled "Linux Laptops", those machines appear to still ship with Windows installed... https://www.lenovo.com/us/en/d/linux-laptops-desktops/
-
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill - also, I just went to Lenovo's website to check if it's a regional thing & even though they have a page labeled "Linux Laptops", those machines appear to still ship with Windows installed... https://www.lenovo.com/us/en/d/linux-laptops-desktops/
@jwcph @cy @JessTheUnstill It says "Shop laptops and desktops computers with Linux preloaded at Lenovo". I only know one person who ever ordered one but that's what she got. I suppose they still include a license for Windows because MS bulk contract conditions.
-
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill I've never seen those here - it's not enough that those vendors have them, the retailers need to offer them, too; the regular user isn't going to ask & risk getting into a debate with the shop guy over it.
@jwcph @cy @JessTheUnstill If *asking a shop assistant* is too hard to get out of what you call "tech woes", I'd say you don't really have any.
-
@jwcph @cy @JessTheUnstill If *asking a shop assistant* is too hard to get out of what you call "tech woes", I'd say you don't really have any.
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill You don't understand - if a regular user goes into a shop that doesn't carry Linux machines & tries to order one, the clerk is 100% going to try to convince them to buy one they have in stock, running Windows, instead. It will instantly turn into a Win vs. Linux debate.
That's something you or I could do, but most people are already utterly terrified around computers; they *might* stand their ground over a washing machine, but never over a computer.
-
@jwcph @cy @JessTheUnstill It says "Shop laptops and desktops computers with Linux preloaded at Lenovo". I only know one person who ever ordered one but that's what she got. I suppose they still include a license for Windows because MS bulk contract conditions.
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill That's good for that one person - but once again, if a regular user comes to this website trying to buy a Linux computer & the description still says Windows, it's going to do absolutely nothing to allay the insecurity almost every normie has around computers...
-
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill You don't understand - if a regular user goes into a shop that doesn't carry Linux machines & tries to order one, the clerk is 100% going to try to convince them to buy one they have in stock, running Windows, instead. It will instantly turn into a Win vs. Linux debate.
That's something you or I could do, but most people are already utterly terrified around computers; they *might* stand their ground over a washing machine, but never over a computer.
@jwcph @cy @JessTheUnstill I thought I was doing a bit of a caricature with my "between beer and charcoal". Now with the argument being imaginary debates with stubborn clerks who'd prefer to fight you rather than sell you the thing you want (even though clerks aren't even involved in about 50% of computer retail to begin with because it's online), I recognize I wasn't.
-
@jwcph @cy @JessTheUnstill I thought I was doing a bit of a caricature with my "between beer and charcoal". Now with the argument being imaginary debates with stubborn clerks who'd prefer to fight you rather than sell you the thing you want (even though clerks aren't even involved in about 50% of computer retail to begin with because it's online), I recognize I wasn't.
@menos @cy @JessTheUnstill What the fuck is wrong with you?