The best one I’ve ever heard is they like the Microsoft wallpapers. Yes i told them you can use them on linux too. But they argued with me that they wouldn’t be compatible.

  • Bronzor@lemmy.ml
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    7 hours ago

    “I don’t want to learn something new”

    How tf am I supposed to respond to that?

  • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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    1 day ago

    This was quite a few years ago, but a friend of mine said he’d tried Linux but had switched back because some clipboard feature he was used to using didn’t work (sorry, I forget the details). He was a programmer to, so perfectly capable of troubleshooting or finding some alternative tool. I just stared at him dumbfounded.

    • AppearanceBoring9229@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Sadly its really hard to change habits. But it goes both ways, every time I need to use windows I find myself grunting for every minor thing that doesn’t work as expected.

    • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      I get him though, mouse wheel click for a secondary copy buffer is one of the main things that’s extremely annoying to me when I have to use Windows, I can never retrain my brain to stop doing it and I get annoyed that it doesn’t work until I remember why.

  • data1701d (He/Him)@startrek.website
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    19 hours ago

    I think I made the mistake of pushing my grandfather away from Linux. He’s retired but does some professional photography; he’s used Photoshop for years, but said he’s open to leaving Adobe.

    One day recently, he told me he heard about “this Linux thing” and asked me if it would be a good fit and run Windows applications well. I told him his main issue was probably Photoshop, and that even switching, he’d still need some stable, consistent way to open past PSD files. In retrospect, maybe I should have looked more closely at his use case to see the complexity of his edits and if they might have worked well in another program that runs on Linux.

    • Little8Lost@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I know that at least krita can psd.
      A lot of other programs could also support it but dont hope for every feature of psd as it can quite litterally be PtSD for them (its atrocious)

  • Decency8401@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 day ago

    “Linux isn’t made for professional use” - Colleague from Work who is an Apple stan. And yes he bought the Apple™ Cloth for iPhone.

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    2 days ago

    “Never used Linux,” They say, typing on a chromebook or android phone, before picking up their steamdeck.

    • yoevli@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      Not to interject, but when people talk about using “Linux” they’re generally referring to desktop Linux (usually GNU/Linux). ChromeOS and SteamOS are Linux distros of a sort under the hood, but they’re also highly curated experiences. Android technically uses the Linux kernel but architecturally it’s so drastically different from basically any other system using it that it’s quite misleading to call it “Linux” in the colloquial sense.

    • TerHu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      19 hours ago

      my motherboards drivers don’t come with windows, and so when i tried to install it and it forced me to connect to the internet, i just couldn’t. luckily i found a usb dongle to ethernet which worked ootb.

      never had a weird mono driver issue like that on any linux distro i tried.

      • abuttandahalf@lemmy.ml
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        11 hours ago

        I did because the laptop I had bought had a brand new processor and not all the drivers were in the kernel version that was in the distro’s newest ISO. I had to plug in a keyboard, screen, and network adapter to install the right kernel.

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    2 days ago

    Some years ago, mentioning Linux for daily non-gaming use:

    Guy: “Installing Linux is complicated though”

    Me: “It wasn’t bad 10 years ago, and now it’s as hard as clicking Next a few times, even faster than Windows”

    Guy: “Well duh, you have ten years of experience installing it!”

    Difficult to argue with this non-logic.

  • hawgietonight@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Most silly excuse was my boss refusing to install Linux because he just had a friend give him original windows 98se licenses for the PCs we just bought for the company.

    Well it gets less silly thinking that getting the eprom programmer software and orcad 4 working on Linux was probably impossible.

    Then it was outright the best decision ever, because those machines never required a reinstall and worked flawless for the 5 years I was there working. Never understood the bad rep W98Se had. Never used it on my personal rigs of course.

  • pirateKaiser@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    A friend of mine finally decided to heed my advice and try it out. He successfully installed fedora and was pleasantly surprised by the ‘clean’ design (of gnome). He then enabled his Bluetooth headphones and DMed me that they won’t connect. The BT menu wouldn’t show them.

    Now, I wouldn’t call him stupid, so I committed a grave sin of troubleshooting when I decided to not offend his intelligence. We hopped on a call and started debugging. Looking at drivers, support for his hardware, logs for any errors… He didn’t have another device to connect through BT at the moment and I was out of ideas, so we called it a night and decided to try again tomorrow.

    By the time we reconnected the next day, he had already reinstalled windows, but was suffering from the same issue.

    And then it downed on me… “Did you pair your headphones?” I asked, afraid of the answer. He just blinked twice and the “what do you mean?” hit me so hard I couldn’t even laugh. “I’ve never had to do that before…”

    Some painful explanations later, or an argument really, and his headphones were paired. But by that time he had had enough and didn’t want me to bother him about Linux again. Needless to say, pointing out it was his misunderstanding of the technology that ultimately led to this outcome didn’t really help.

    This memory still injects fury in my veins as I fall asleep, right there with fumbling my words when speaking with my highschool crush…

    • 87Six@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      People blame everything on whatever the last change was

      Went to the mechanic for an oil change and now my AC doesn’t work? The mechanic must have fucked my AC while changing my oil!!! 1!1!1!1

      • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        All while claiming they did “nothing” when they f-ed up themselves.

        Around '98, a tech support guy got a call that their application didn’t work anymore. He tried to troubleshoot, but the system was a mess. “Did you change anything since yesterday?” - “No, we didn’t!”.

        What they did do, though, was running the Win98 update the day before. Which, at one point, after doing lots of things, complained that it could not continue for some reason, and offered to “undo” the changes…

    • Pope-King Joe@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      “I’ve never had to do that before…”

      Not trying to shit on the guy, but like, that’s literally the first thing you do with BT anything. 😄

      • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        I guess that really depends on the equipment though, some devices when you turn it on for the first time will automatically enter pairing mode, so all that had to be done is click it in the bluetooth menu, but it might not auto enter pairing mode when you turn it on after. So it’s unlikely the user ever knew they were pairing it, and just clicked through the prompts like many do

        • Pope-King Joe@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Yeah, no, of course. But that’s kinda my point: there was still an initial pairing. I’m not trying to be antagonistic or anything. I just find it a bit silly that one could research how to replace their entire OS with one they’re not familiar with but not realize they’re gonna have to re-pair their BT devices.

          Then again, I think we’re all guilty of sometimes missing small details. I once put a PC together for a buddy and couldn’t figure out why it wouldn’t post only to eventually realize I was a dummy who forgot to plug in the CPU power. 😂

          • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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            2 days ago

            We all have been there. First technical build I struggled for 45 minutes trying to figure out why I was getting a zero display whatsoever only to find out that I plugged that damn HDMI cable into the wrong port, and the board had disabled everything including post and splash from using the motherboards port

      • 123@programming.dev
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        2 days ago

        TBF Bluetooth sucks a lot. To this day I need to power cycle the phones Bluetooth connection and headphones connect button a few times for it to pair properly some times. Different brands and headphones, silly different issues for all. Want to use your headphones for more that a phone and laptop? Maybe on a third device like a TV or desktop? Fuck you.

    • otacon239@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I find a big part of trying to be the friend that transitions others to Linux is taking on the role of mentor. It’s something a lot of wish we could just hand to someone and dust off our hands, but that ultimately leads to experiences like yours.

      For a better chance of success, especially on first install, be on the line with them as they go through the steps, or in person is better yet.

      Answer all the questions you can and help them install all their usual stuff. Most people don’t want to have to go through this change, so making it fun and social goes a long way.

      • pirateKaiser@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        Indeed that was my intention. I just never thought that he wouldn’t be familiar with something so ubiquitous in today’s world, so I didn’t even think to ask. That’s why this situation is so infuriating to me, not so much that he didn’t know, but that my assumptions prevented me to resolve it

        • youmaynotknow@lemmy.zip
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          2 days ago

          We regularly believe that, because we know, everyone else knows, and that’s a failure I’m extremely guilty of. I gave my sister a Qnap NAS about 6 years ago and told her to just plug it in, plug in the land cable and set it up. 2 years after that she calls me asking for info on a data recovery service for her Mac. So I asked her why she needed data recovery, that’s what the NAS was for. Well, she did what I told her, but never configured backing up her files.

          So, yeah, now I assume everyone is ignorant and pass for arrogant some times over explaining.