Yeah until i run into one of 10000 random issues. Like not recognizing display specs correctly or at all. Linux does give you a lot of control. Unfortunately however it comes with needing to manually do so much trouble shooting that unless you are just using it for one specific use case or are just tinkering and messing around, you will end up spending so much time troubleshooting issues.
@@lockevalentine997 I'm currently plugged into a tv and it automatically recognized the display and picked the optimal size. Most of my experience on Mint at least has been smoother than Windows.
@@SirLad For one monitor it usually does *ok* but depends on the specs and monitor firmware. For multiple monitors though, I have found it to be incredibly inconsistent.
I hate MS, but in your example, Windows does that too. To update all software on Windows:
winget upgrade --all
@@TonyPombo You know... I mean... Look, here's the thing.... Idk man.
@@SirLad :) to be fair, it's still a new feature and not as good as apt-get
I hate windows, So I just use it inside a VM.
virt-start
virt-stop
gaming is also totally fine with steam
Yeah until i run into one of 10000 random issues. Like not recognizing display specs correctly or at all.
Linux does give you a lot of control. Unfortunately however it comes with needing to manually do so much trouble shooting that unless you are just using it for one specific use case or are just tinkering and messing around, you will end up spending so much time troubleshooting issues.
@@lockevalentine997 I'm currently plugged into a tv and it automatically recognized the display and picked the optimal size. Most of my experience on Mint at least has been smoother than Windows.
@@SirLad For one monitor it usually does *ok* but depends on the specs and monitor firmware. For multiple monitors though, I have found it to be incredibly inconsistent.
DONE!!
Hahah Linux is trash