

I never got used to it. Always felt gimped using it. At least with Windows I had shortcuts and virtual desktops.
I never got used to it. Always felt gimped using it. At least with Windows I had shortcuts and virtual desktops.
Your windows problems weren’t brand new problems and likely from there systems or integrations.
When I say there were issues with OSX, I mean brand new problems stemming from updates breaking compatibility with systems and software. Nothing like getting to work one morning and every single employee lost the ability to screen share, or suddenly the file system for your virtual machines was broken, etc.
“make it easier” meanwhile Steam is still only 32-bit
Edit: I forgot Lemmy users need everything explained - many package managers require manual intervention to enable multi-lib repos in order to install 32-bit software, hence why having 64-bit binaries would be easier. ✨
As someone who has had to use Windows, OSX and Linux as a daily driver at different points, OSX was by far the most challenging to work with. Every few months something broke. Fully on Linux now.
The only time I use Windows is for Fusion 360
If that doesn’t make it more difficult to use, then enabling Proton by default doesn’t either. Most distros I’ve used require enabling multi-lib repos in the package manager just to try installing steam - you’re telling me that isn’t added difficulty?