Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
A) Windows 10 might grow on you. I have come around to it pretty thoroughly and no longer miss much of anything in Mac/Linux. It has its annoyances, but so do both of the others - it's all about which annoyances you're used to, y'know?
But also...
B) Installing Linux is VERY easy on most modern PC's including almost all laptops. Installing Ubuntu on my XPS 15 for dual boot was like a four click process.
My vote? Get a laptop that you confirm in advance supports Linux - the XPS 13 is great though I am partial to Thinkpads in the smallish laptop market - but get it with Windows. Install Linux in dual boot config (not hard I promise), but keep the Windows too. Some software will still run best that way, and if you ever want to factory reset and sell it, Windows makes more sense.
Alternatively, I can sell you a 1.5-year-old MacBook Pro soon for a good price, but full disclosure my wife is selling it because she hates it and wants to go back to Windows! She is, in fact, getting a thinkpad. My take is that Macs have taken a dive in quality in recent years as Apple is moving more and more focus to iOS.
The hardest part about installing Linux is if the hardware isn't well supported (typically the WiFi adapter). If the hardware is supported it's super easy with Ubuntu and most distros.
You could also look at System76. They they a variety of laptops with Linux-preinstalled. Thinkpads tend to be pretty popular for Linux as well.
I think Windows 10 is fine for the most part, but it makes software development more awkward (unless you are using a Microsoft toolchain), and you have to deal with anti-malware software a lot more.
Gud have you fiddled with the Linux subsystem stuff on Windows? That plus VS Code's integration with it apparently has solved a lot of the annoying dev stuff with, e.g., Ruby. I'm planning to test it out at some point this summer. That's one of the few reasons I'm still holding onto my Linux partition so if it works well I might get my 30 GB back.
Thanks, Gris and Gud! I'll take a look at System76 and some other Linux-ready options.
Does anyone have any idea why I might not be able to send email in Outlook under an email alias that I'm all set up for? This is driving me and my admin nuts.
Does anyone use Chromium? It refuses to play most videos, like anything embedded in a Twitter or Tumblr timeline. It does play YouTube. (Edit: It won't stream Pandora either.)
Searching gets me a lot of info about Linux, but since I'm not running Linux, I can't tell if/how it's applicable to me.
I do have Firefox. I use it to silo my fannish stuff from my RL stuff, and I'm trying to get away from Chrome.
I always found Chromium to feel unpolished. I have used Brave and Edge (the new Chromium version) and Opera, all based on Chromium, with better luck, Edge being my current browser of choice, though I still hit the occasional site where Chrome has magic the others don't, like [link] (for making nice printable graphs for math tests).
I was using Brave, but apparently the Brave people are kind of hinky. But trying to switch to Chromium has been enough of a pain in the ass that I may give up and go back.
Could always try Opera or one of several others. For me the killer feature is easy built in profile switching, which chrome and edge have but when I last used it Opera did not.
There's also Vivaldi. It's a pretty cool Chromium-based browser.