我用了一年的Linux, 忘记了怀念Windows。
I spent a year on Linux and forgot to miss Windows

原始链接: https://www.theverge.com/features/861968/year-using-linux

2025年1月,作者永久从Windows 10切换到Linux(Ubuntu,然后是Fedora),他们对此决定没有后悔。由于对现代Windows不满,他们发现Linux不仅是一种摆脱,更是一个可定制、可控且令人惊讶的易用操作系统。 最初的学习曲线很陡峭,特别是掌握命令行进行安装和故障排除。然而,克服这些挑战培养了自信和自力更生能力。作者强调了Linux社区的支持以及独立解决问题的满足感,通常借助在线资源和人工智能工具。 一个主要好处是对系统拥有完全的控制权,避免了Windows Copilot之类的臃肿软件。虽然一些Windows独占应用程序需要变通方法(如Wine),但存在优秀的开源替代品。Proton兼容性也带来了强大的游戏性能。 尽管有优势,作者承认Linux并非适合所有人,提到了与某些反作弊系统兼容性问题以及需要一定的技术意愿。然而,对于那些寻求自由、定制和挑战的人来说,Linux提供了一种令人耳目一新的选择。

## Linux 采用与桌面体验 一篇最近的文章引发了 Hacker News 上关于从 Windows 切换到 Linux 的讨论。许多用户报告了积极的体验,尤其是在软件开发和游戏方面(在反作弊软件方面存在一些限制)。 许多评论者表示他们已经愉快地使用 Linux 多年了,并提到了性能优势和更深层次的系统控制。 然而,对话强调 Linux 并非适合所有人。它需要学习和解决问题的意愿,因此不适合不太懂技术的用户。建议初学者双启动。 虽然“Linux 桌面年”*尚未*到来,但有些人认为 Valve 的硬件(如 Steam Deck)以及用户对微软未来计划的潜在不满可能会加速采用。在 C++ 编译和模拟等领域的性能优势也正在推动专业人士转向 Linux,一些人表示他们不会接受需要 Windows 的工作。一个共同的主题是 Linux 提供了强大的功能和灵活性,但需要用户更积极地参与。
相关文章

原文

It was an overcast January morning in 2025 the day I decided to delete my operating system.

The Ubuntu installer warned me that it would remove everything on my hard drive, permanently wiping the entire Windows 10 installation I’d been running for years at that point. I hesitated for a second — maybe I should just dual-boot? No, I’m going all in! Finally, I hit the button to install Linux. One year later, I still don’t regret that choice. I even resurrected an old Windows 10 laptop by installing Linux on it.

My decision to try out Linux was driven by a growing dislike for modern Windows more than anything else. However, I’ve come to appreciate Linux as more than just an escape from Windows. Linux hasn’t been as intimidating as it’s often made out to be, and I’ve found a lot to love about it, despite (and sometimes because of) its challenges.

The hard-earned lessons of Linux

My first night on Linux was rough. Getting all my apps installed and set up was exhausting, especially because I had no experience using the command line. For those who haven’t stared into the dark void of a Linux terminal before, it’s where most system management happens — installing apps, running updates, and the like. It’s an unavoidable part of the Linux experience, even with more App Store-like platforms popping up, like the Snap Store and Flathub.

After so long on Windows, it was also a shock to my system trying to learn how to navigate Ubuntu (although I luckily didn’t have any mouse issues like my colleague and fellow Linux user Nathan Edwards). I couldn’t figure out how to get a second SSD connected properly that first night, and ended up just rage quitting and going to bed, thinking I’d probably have to reinstall Windows the next day.

But in the morning, I logged back into Ubuntu and realized what was wrong with my SSD. I hadn’t created an entry for the drive in my file systems table, or “fstab,” which is where you configure how disks and storage devices are mounted to your PC’s file system. After fixing it, I started to think maybe this whole Linux thing isn’t so bad after all.

Linux isn’t especially complicated on a daily basis, but you have to be willing to solve your own problems

It’s mostly been smooth sailing ever since. I’ve rarely run into issues on Linux, and when I have, they’ve never been apocalyptic. They’re always little things that are annoying, but fixable with some research and trial and error, like a Flatpak app not working because I need to change its permissions, or an AppImage refusing to run because I’m missing a library.

If anything, that first night on Linux prepared me for one of the biggest takeaways from this year: Linux isn’t especially complicated on a daily basis, but you have to be willing to solve your own problems when they come up.

I’ve spent dozens of hours combing through Reddit threads, analyzing old Stack Overflow solutions, and, in times of true desperation, asking AI chatbots like Mistral’s Le Chat and Anthropic’s Claude for help deciphering error messages. Luckily, the Linux community is also very supportive. If you’re willing to ask for help, or at least do a little troubleshooting, you’ll be able to work out any problems that come your way.

Linux has also helped me become more confident in my own troubleshooting skills. The issue that crushed me that first night on Ubuntu would be a quick and easy fix for me now. Learning how to make changes to my “fstab” file even once helped me get my PC out of emergency mode after a rare crash. On Windows, I might have just been stuck with a BSOD.

Everything I want and nothing I don’t

I stayed on Ubuntu for the first few months after leaving Windows, but eventually switched to Fedora, and it’s been my daily driver ever since. I use it for work, gaming, photo editing, recording and editing videos, and a little bit of coding for Arduino projects. I’ve also hopped between a few different desktop environments, including Hyprland (with ML4W Dotfiles), Cinnamon, and currently KDE Plasma.

1/4Image: Stevie Bonifield / The Verge

Every morning, I’m greeted by the calming, Nordic blue desktop I have set up in KDE, cobbled together from a mix of themes and icon packs. It’s one of my favorite desktop setups so far, but if I ever want to completely change how my homescreen looks, I can. I’ve spent whole afternoons just playing around with UI themes, pivoting from a retro Windows XP theme to a macOS-inspired look to neon-infused themes like something from Tron. Linux doesn’t care if my desktop theme is ugly, glassy, or outdated.

Customizing every visual element of my desktop has become one of my favorite parts of using Linux. It doesn’t offer any performance boost or practical benefit; it’s just fun. I’ve also customized my terminal to make it look cleaner and more colorful using Kitty, Z Shell (“Zsh”), Oh My Zsh, and Powerlevel10k. I’m not alone in this — there’s a whole subreddit (with an unfortunate name) where users share screenshots of their most impressive Linux homescreen customizations.

Image: Stevie Bonifield / The Verge

I’ve also appreciated having complete control over what is and isn’t on my PC. Until recently, Windows wouldn’t even let you uninstall Copilot. In contrast, Linux won’t stop you if you try to use a command that deletes every file on your PC (“sudo rm -rf /”).

I haven’t had to give up much for that level of control, either. There are some apps that aren’t natively supported on Linux, like Adobe apps, but I’ve been able to completely replace those with free, open-source alternatives, like LibreOffice instead of Microsoft Office and RawTherapee instead of Adobe Lightroom. In a pinch, some Windows apps will also work through tools like Wine, which I used to run iTunes when I was trying to revive an old iPod.

Gaming has been largely effortless as well. Everything in my Steam library runs great with Valve’s Proton compatibility layer, and I have yet to encounter issues with any of my numerous mice, keyboards, controllers, headsets, and mics. Occasionally, I have to tweak my Proton or launch settings for certain games, but that’s about it. I even got World of Warcraft running by adding the launcher to my library as a non-Steam game, allowing it to run through Proton (which is great, except now I don’t have an easy excuse to cancel my WoW subscription).

Is this the year of Linux for you?

I’ll admit, I didn’t really know what I was getting into when I switched to Linux. The learning curve was worth it, though. Linux has been great for my needs and a deep breath of fresh air compared to Windows. I can customize literally everything, control what’s installed on my PC, and run all the games I like with smooth and stable performance.

I love Linux. But I can’t recommend it for everyone. There are sacrifices if you switch, including some understandable deal-breakers. For instance, the majority of competitive multiplayer games requiring anti-cheat can’t run on Linux. I don’t play these types of games, so that didn’t matter to me, but I can see why it would matter to fans of Fortnite or Valorant. Likewise, if the idea of typing in a command to install apps is headache-inducing, Linux probably isn’t for you.

But if you want a little more freedom and a little less Copilot, if you want to test your troubleshooting skills, if you’re not afraid to try something new, or if you have some old hardware that can’t run Windows 11, maybe 2026 is the year of Linux.

Since joining The Verge in October, I’ve started using a MacBook for work and recently retired my 9-year-old personal laptop I revived with Linux (in favor of another MacBook), but I still use my Linux-powered gaming PC for everything else. MacOS is nice, but Linux is still drastically better for gaming. Up until recently, I was operating completely on Linux. While that isn’t the case anymore, I don’t plan on leaving Linux or returning to Windows anytime soon.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.
联系我们 contact @ memedata.com