As was actually rare at the time i was born into a household which had a personal computer. As long as I remember, computers fascinated me. They still do. But that fascination came with an increasingly adverserial relationship with Windows and distrust of Apple. That changed in 2025, my first full year living with Linux as my primary OS and booting no Windows machines. I’m excited about computing again. I am more dedicated to FOSS than ever. Here are some of MY takeaways in listicle format for no reason:
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Working on Linux is VERY good. Office suites are great. I’m partial to
OpenOnly Office. Developing is a joy because everything feels like its made to work with a few commands. This is in strong contrast to whatever Office/“Copilot” is and my experience developing on Windows. -
I work in an IT-ish field and I’ve become a lot more knowledgeable about sysadmin and netadmin type stuff. Not an expert but enough to have more confidence when something does comes up. A lot of this comes from being in terminal more. I understand Windows is going in that direction too, but it won’t push users there. Some is from self-hosting.
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Multimedia is a mixed bag. Krita, Blender, and Godot are incredible tools but if you are a professional who relies on software for your job, some of the FOSS alternatives don’t fit a majority of users. I personally don’t think Darktable is reliable enough to replace Lightroom because I’ve had too many crashes on too many machines with it. Despite that, I’m still looking to get rid of Adobe.
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gaming on Linux is “good” to “great”, but not perfect. In some cases, Proton beats Windows, yes. In most cases, games just work on Steam. I think for the amount of tinkering I put in, I could run a barebones W11for gaming and get better overall performance than my CachyOS. I don’t because I can live with less than perfect and kernel level anti cheat can pound sand.
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I dodge an unknown but substantial amount of anguish from not having ads, ai, and surprise updates forced on me. I am sensitive to ads and am upset every time I see one. I’m always shocked to see them on other people’s computers. My work computers (Mac) have forced updates and forced restarts which are jarring. My computers feel like my own.
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I find and (hopefully) fix all kinds of problems. My discord muted itself randomly because of a Wayland bug a few times. There’s an open issue about dxvk getting framerate drops after about an hour of gameplay. That one sucks. One of my door sensors stopped working with homeassistant despite it being prefect in mqtt2z; it’s a confirmed bug as of 3 weeks ago. This stuff is annoying but I take it as the cost of not trusting black boxes with my hardware.
To wrap it up, I think Linux is better than ever, more accessible than ever, and probably better than Windows for most people. To me, I would recommend it to my mom who only uses basic office tools and a browser and have recommended it to my tech savvy friend who got tired of windows update ruining his super custo1. m W11 setup… but would obviously caution my DOTA-addicted DM or my dad who runs part of his business on Access ( cringe, I know). It feels human, empowering and is good because of the way it is today not just because of its ideals.
I hope this made you reflect on your Linux experience and maybe on how you can contribute to or help the community.
Edit: OnlyOffice, not OpenOffice Edit2: WHY did I post on memes?!? Someone take away my late night/early morning posting privileges


Can lead a horse to water, but can’t make it drink.
Totally. I wouldn’t even have the conversation with someone just because. I think what I meant was, for a user like her, mostly web and some office tasks, Linux is perfectly suitable.
Many people are like that, but are still slow to venture into FOSS.
Some of that may be from various user lock-in malicious-features.
Some may even be from things like Microsoft’s Sublimininal Messaging Subsystem in Windows. (Which I have toyed with to (unexpectedly effective) devastating effects.)
A lot of it’s probably from inertia and trepidation, comfortable with the devil they know, fearing the devil they don’t. If only live systems were more familiar, and it was trivial for the novices to discover and try, more would switch sooner.