this post was submitted on 13 Feb 2025
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    submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
     
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    [–] [email protected] 110 points 2 months ago (94 children)

    If the average person can not use your OS, it is not ready. Period.

    For example:

    Windows - Open File Explorer > Add Network Drive > Find/plug it in > Enter creds > Bam. Ready to go and will automatically log you in at boot. Very nice, very intuitive UI.

    Linux - Open Dolphin (or whatever) > Network > Add Network Folder/Find it > Enter creds > Does not automatically mount the drive when booting the computer back up > Must go into fstab to get it to automount > Stop, because that is ridiculous

    In my own experience, I was able to get the hang of Windows with no one showing me how a computer ever worked, at the age of 10! Intuitive enough a child can do it.

    On Linux, you have to read manuals/documentation, ask random (mostly rude) people on the internet, or give up because why the fuck would I want to go and enter 5 commands just to have something as simple as auto mount a network share? Not intuitive, therefore not easy to learn as you go.

    I get it, Linux people like knowing how their computers operate, they like ensuring everything is working the way THEY want to, and that's awesome! What's not awesome is recommending Linux to the general populace and then getting upset at them for asking why they can't do something or why don't they just do these steps to do whatever it is they are having issues with. Then, you have a person who doesn't even know what a terminal is confused as hell because they were told Linux is so much better than Windows.

    Until we get a more intuitive (GUI focused) way of doing what I would consider normal computer tasks, it will not ever be ready. That's just the way I see it.

    [–] [email protected] 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (4 children)

    You are confusing the average user with the mids... average usage is equally easy to windows:

    Open a file Edit a file Copy a file Open a browser

    Most people i know does not care for anything else.

    [–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago (3 children)

    eh, depends on the situation.
    I wanted to print a paper. Very simple, right? (cue collective sighs from all I.T.)

    On Windows it's literally just "find printers on network" -> click mine -> print

    on Linux id've had to input like 7 different commands depending on the distro and look through it.

    I tried, got errors, got up, went to the family computer running windows 10, and printed from there.

    There are situations where Linux is easier, but if you're new to the UI and you Google something like "how to connect to WiFi Linux" (ie what a normal person would) you'll get command line results that the person doesn't understand and they'll just give up

    [–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago

    Printing is one of the few things that I find much easier and more reliable on Linux (and Mac) than on Windows. Automatic discovery of a printer has always worked for me. Both at home and at work. With printers from Brother, HP, Samsung, Epson and Oki.

    On Windows however, the same printers only works for about 30% of print jobs. My family's Samsung printer only printed from my arch and fedora workstation.

    At my office recently our print server kicked the bucket and windows user couldn't print anymore. Mac and Linux users (both use CUPS) had no issues talking to the printers directly.

    Just anecdotal evidence ofc.

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