this post was submitted on 07 Mar 2024
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    [–] faintbeep@lemm.ee 2 points 8 months ago (1 children)

    Yeah that's another difference. When something breaks on Windows people will do anything to fix it, including reinstalling Windows or buying another machine.

    When something goes wrong on Linux they decide Linux doesn't work and reinstall Windows.

    I've had Windows installs slow down till they take 15 minutes to start. I once clicked the wrong button in Visual Studio and the computer became some kind of remote driver debugging target, permanently. Half the settings broke and every startup it would autologin as a debug user.

    If anything like that happens on Linux it's proof Linux is too complicated, but on Windows it's just one of those things.

    [–] sexual_tomato@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 8 months ago

    The difference is that, for Windows, a million other people have seen your problem most of the time, so there's usually some kind of support article that can point you in the right direction on how to fix your problem without having to dive into the docs.

    Linux just doesn't have that luxury. If I were getting paid to solve the problem, sure, I'd probably have figured it out in a day or so as a Linux noob. But I'm not. My free time is limited. I don't need to know much about Windows because it works pretty much all the time (ymmv).