I’m curious—what’s been your best interaction with Linux? Whether it’s a specific distro, a killer feature, or just a moment when Linux impressed you, I’d love to hear your stories!
Which Linux distro were you using?
What feature or aspect made the experience stand out?
Did it change the way you use Linux or tech in general?
Looking forward to your responses!
My story is a simple one.
I turned on my computer I logged in, did some work, played some games then I turned it off.
No one tried to murder me (force updates), or put me in a potato (notification ads), or feed me to birds (change my defaults). I had a pretty good life.
The speed of transcoding video using FFMPEG on a non-GUI installation of Debian, on an old small-form-factor PC - 2nd-generation i7, 16GB ram, 240GB SSD.
is this irony?
It makes me feel like I own my PC.
Bend to my will, silicon golem, for I am root!
When I fully switched 2 years ago, I thought I’d try doing all my gaming in Linux and was really anxious wondering which and how many games I wouldn’t be able to play. Imagine my surprise when all of them ran. I haven’t found a single game I couldn’t get running. Hell, I even beat one I couldn’t get running in Windows! That being said there’s a bug preventing VR from working that I’m a little sad about. Apparently Steam only supports Ubuntu, I use Endeavour.
Everything. Software, usability, customization, community, you name it. Using Linux has advanced and keeps advancing my computer literacy skills. This would have never happened if I kept using Windows. There’s also the “activist” angle. By using Linux and other FOSS software, I feel like I’m disengaging the worst parts of modern life and society and taking power away from the corpos even if it doesn’t have huge impact.
Q: Which Linux distro were you using?
A: right now, kickesure a Debian based distro focusing on security and privacy. Before that, used started with Knoppix and, mandrake and then many other Debian based distros (maontky Xubuntu and Mint)
Q: What feature or aspect made the experience stand out?
A: smooth, stable, fast, secure
Q: Did it change the way you use Linux or tech in general?
A: not really but made me more interested in learning about my OS to serve my privacy better
Did my PhD on a like $500 Linux box 20something years ago. My lab was dysfunctional and I was a WFH pioneer of sorts.
This has the feel of a marketing questionnaire. “Are you not ready to give a 5-star rating to Linux? Click here and we’ll get right back to you!”
Oddly enough, I’m struggling to think of a single experience or feature. The decisive benefit of Linux specifically and FOSS in general is something less tangible: it’s the feeling of empowerment and control you get. A computer of any kind is always something of a black box. Knowing that you have full control over it, even if you don’t understand everything, is revolutionary. I’m certainly not going back.
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NixOS and its declarative approach irreversibly changed the way I think about system configuration and maintenance. Home manager and flakes are really important puzzle pieces in that as well.
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The steam deck is an amazingly well thought-out Linux computer that just anybody can use intuitively.
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From a UX standpoint, I love being able to remap keys on the system level with Interception Tools. (e.g. CapsLock is Esc if pressed and Ctrl if held on all my hardware for all users.)
ooh. plus one for steamdeck. should have mentioned it in my comments.
I still haven’t found any home manager feature I can use
Same!
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I worked tech support for a software company. In the summers things were slow and they allowed a little leeway for working on personal enrichment projects.
I was aware of a room near IT that was filled with outdated computers and hardware. I asked if I could play with them. A few 100 hour weeks later and a coworker and I held a demonstration for IT and management. We proposed using all the old hardware as PXE boot thin clients (1GB RAM + Small HD + PXE NIC) using a modified Debian that would run all the tech support agent software via Citrix. It went off without a hitch in the demo setup.
Management loved it as they could see the cost savings. IT loved it as they’d get another ProLiant Server to house the Citrix and VMWare tooling. It also meant significantly less time dealing with Windows issues on all the agent machines. Ended up rolling it out to 50 agents that year and it was a success. They eventually moved to HP Thin clients, which built on the original idea.
For a lowly tier 2 tech support agent with a passing knowledge of linux, it was a proud achievement and got me noticed in the company.
Project 2.0 was an Asterix box. We were spending a ridiculous amount of money on international calls. Was able to route all the international calls in the office with logic routing on the primary Tadiran PBX (which ran OS2/Warp…lol) to a little Dell workstation with a Digium telephony card and FreePBX. Costing actual pennies on the dollar. It was like magic!
Linux was the wild west back then.
bazzite in general has been great as an all purpose os including gaming
i did disable almost all the gnome extensions it installs but apart from that it’s been super reliable
It’s my daily driver since University and I like Fedora best. What I really love about Linux, is that it empowers you to manage your PC (and even your phone) on your own and without BigTech. No Microsoft, no Apple, no Google … that is invaluable!
It’s been my daily driver for 26 years. 40 years or so if you include Unix before.
I’ve just bought a custom PC.
Impossible to make the darn network card to work on that Windows.
I installed Void from the Network…
I “lol” 'ed big time on that one.
Build it yourself next time. It’s not difficult.