• Sweetpeaches69@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Suuure, let me know when Revit, Civil 3D, ArcGIS, OpenRoads Designer are operable and supported on Linux.

      • Lemonparty@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        I knoooooooow. I know arcgis is working on it at least. I’m a geologist, a ton of our geospatial programs require windows.

        But I’m about ready to experiment with a dual joot for my home set up! I really never need windows for that anymore

        • arglebargle@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          Postgis and Qgis don’t require windows. ArcGIS is such bloat ware. They live by the cult following rather than merit.

          • Lemonparty@lemm.ee
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            7 months ago

            I mean yeah, same with adobe and loads of other enterprise software suites. Unfortunately, most of us have no way of convincing our enterprise to move off of their shitty suite. I personally use open his for as much as possible, but professionally I’m stuck with what my work makes me use.

        • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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          7 months ago

          A bunch of our civil engs happily use qGIS.

          I’ve noticed Ala lot of the features on ArcGIS actually originate from qGIS after having built some mapping tools.

        • Sweetpeaches69@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Ah, I didn’t know that about ArcGIS!

          Still, the others are arguably more important to the civil industry as a whole. I personally don’t believe Autodesk or Bentley will ever support Linux, so us civil folks are stuck.

        • Sweetpeaches69@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I have 800 users at my work that would say otherwise. Those are software that the entire civil engineering, geospatial, and architectural world rely on to make infrastructure. So, I’d say many users need those.

          • oce 🐆@jlai.lu
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            7 months ago

            A professional environment will certainly have requirements that differ from the common people.

            • Sweetpeaches69@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Yep. From my point of view, it would be nice to at least have to option to switch users over. Tired of Microsoft’s shit.

          • 1984@lemmy.today
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            7 months ago

            Yes but it’s relative. I have 800 users right here that doesn’t use any of that stuff. Just saying it’s not really a block for 99% of users because all they do is surf the web and play games.

            • Sweetpeaches69@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Over a hundred million people use Autodesk products; Bentley systems is around the same size. Entire essential industries are built on these software. Pinning that all on 1% is disingenuous.

              My overall point is that until Linux or the software developers do something about the incompatibility/nonsupport, Windows is here to stay. Some of us have no choice.

                  • Captain Janeway@lemmy.world
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                    7 months ago

                    Oh I didn’t realize that wine was so bad at supporting Windows applications. I’m not a frequent user of it so I just knew it as a “replacement” for windows apps.

                • peanutbutter_gas@lemm.ee
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                  7 months ago

                  Exactly what I was wondering. I main Linux since 2019. A buddy of mine sent me a unity demo game that he made ( basically a hello world ). I just did wine hello-world.exe and it ran just fine ( auto downloaded .net runtimes and everything ).

                  I don’t expect everything to run flawlessly, but wine has come a long way. Especially with valve support and investment into proton for gaming.

                  • sheogorath@lemmy.world
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                    7 months ago

                    When you’re working on enterprise level stuff, it can be difficult to run any software that you want. There are layers upon layers of accountability that are needed for legal purposes.

        • Aux@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Every person with a job needs some kind of app which doesn’t work on Linux. If you’re a teen still studying in school, then yeah, use Linux.

          • Patch@feddit.uk
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            7 months ago

            I use Windows at work (it is a corporate laptop) but I don’t use a single app which is Windows-only and irreplaceable. My current job isn’t technology-focused, and I don’t really use anything except standard office-related software.

            In my previous job I was a software engineer and also used Windows (same reason; corporate laptop) but again everything I used would have worked in Linux.

            People should use whatever platform works best for them. I’m a Linux user at heart, but I’m all for using Windows if that’s the right tool for the job. But it’s not a “grown ups need Windows only teenagers can use Linux” thing. Most working people would do fine with Linux or Mac.

    • dwalin@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I just installed Ubuntu (the more mainstream ofnlinux distros) to replace my windows OS. I was greeted by a cryptic error. After a quick search for some tecno bable, i had to start on safe mode and install the video drivers.

      Do you think a “regular user” would be able to do this?

        • dwalin@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Yes, thats was the issue. I know about the proprietary drivers and the typical NVIDIA bullshit.

      • 1984@lemmy.today
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        7 months ago

        Don’t use Ubuntu desktop, it’s really buggy and full of snaps. Please try Pop OS and you will come back and say how smooth it is, and how you loved it.

        • dwalin@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Yeah, i belive you (despite the ltt fiasco), but to say that any distro is ready for the average person is just wrong. Thats just my point

          • Cosmic Cleric@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            but to say that any distro is ready for the average person is just wrong.

            Would an average person install Windows on their machine?

      • OtakuAltair@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        Eh, I switched last year and it’s really not that different.

        I’d assume it’s actually easier now by comparison seeing how Windows has kept shoving in ads

        • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Good for you. You represent the entire computer user base, then?

          Now tell the millions of people that don’t want to screw around with different distros, broken repositories, software that doesn’t work on Linux, proprietary drivers, etc. etc.

          I like Linux a lot, but don’t make it something it isn’t. But this is Lemmy, so yay Linux.

          • Skimmer
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            7 months ago

            different distros

            Isn’t that a benefit of Linux, having all kinds of different distros and different options available? There isn’t a “one size fits all”. Just find the one you like and go from there.

            broken repositories

            How often does this actually happen? I can’t think of a time I encountered broken repositories within the last few years of using Linux as a daily driver, I feel like you’re exaggerating this. I think the repository system in general is amazing and installing software on Linux is so much better than Windows in about every way really.

            software that doesn’t work on Linux

            This is a fair point, it depends on your use case. If anything you need is only tied to Windows, then yeah you don’t have many options unfortunately. But I think for average people its probably fine since basically everything is on Linux nowadays, I guess biggest exceptions are like Microsoft Office and Adobe’s suite.

            proprietary drivers

            I assume you mean NVIDIA? You can just get a distro that includes them already installed and ready to go like Nobara, or just use one that makes them easier to set-up like Pop OS, if you’re uncomfortable installing them on a regular distro. (Though it really isn’t that difficult).

            Overall Linux isn’t for everyone, but I do think it’s improving more and more and about at a point now where average users could probably get away with using it instead of Windows in a lot of cases. But it does depend on your use case for sure at the end of the day. Hopefully I’m not out of touch here though lol.

            • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Computers are like cars. People want a car that goes from a to b, like every other car, with no fuss. If you’re really going crazy maybe you look for a manual transmission. They don’t want to mess with computers. They don’t want to know what’s under the hood. They don’t want to have to understand how the CVT works, or how to update a broken repository link via command line. That’s 99.5 of people.

              How often do broken repositories happen? Often enough. Biggest reason would be not updating systems and the old repository closed. “BuT WhY wOuLd AnyOnE NoT UpDAtE!!?!” You might ask? Because updating breaks shit. I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve had a distro set up exactly how I want, apt-get, now my gnome desktop isn’t working. Or Wine doesn’t work. Or whatever.

              Only thing you use is tied to windows… See, that’s the thing. You just tossed that out there like all the windows software has a direct and equally capable equivalent on Linux. That’s not true, and I refer back to my car analogy that 99.5% of people don’t want to screw around with trying to sort out workarounds.

              As far as drivers go it’s not just NVIDIA, but everything from touchpads to Bluetooth to fingerprint ID unlocks don’t all have Linux drivers. I actually find NVIDIA to be fairly well supported and haven’t had too much difficulty with it since Steam and gamers have decided that maybe Linux isn’t so bad and have made a lot of effort to keep things updated and compatible.

              Out of touch… maybe. Take a trip through the Ubuntu forums some time. Probably the most popular and relatively easy distro to use. There are a ton of posts that just don’t get answers, where people just give up, or have multiple command line entries suggested that deal with everything from permissions, different command modifiers, and extremely basic stuff that doesn’t work like config or make. Again, think about that 99.5% that simply doesn’t want to deal with that shit, much less open a terminal window. They probably don’t even know how to open an admin level CMD window on Windows or even the task manager. Think how computer illiterate most people are where even changing a setting in their cellphone is too much trouble.

              Look, we could discuss this all day. One of my chief complaints about the Linux crowd is that they just toss out that everyone should switch while completely ignoring the qualifications of the user base they’re asking to switch and putting that up against the thousands of choices and ways to break Linux that exist. That’s why people like Apple products. They’re hard to break by messing around with settings because Apple won’t let you do anything with the OS. You can still break windows, not as easily as one could before, and linux still breaks itself whether you like it or not.

              • Aatube@kbin.social
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                7 months ago

                This is why I use Arch

                I used to recommend Apple over Arch too for the exact reason, but then Wine and Proton drastically improved, especially GE. The only app I use that I can’t get to work or find a very good alternative for on EndeavourOS is

                Roblox

                (and my fingerprint driver, like you mentioned)

                though I don’t speak for all industries of course.

                My repositories have never broke for me, thanks to Arch, probably. If you’re really that worried about updates, you should probably use one of these dirty fixed-release LTS distros.

                I also have no idea how the kernel works.