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3 points

Uhm actually its very easy you just

Sudo apt ant sofo lror irir 8 6 9 7778 k j hofor -76

And press enter and debug your missing dependencies for the next two weeks, I mean how hard is that?

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5 points

You’re so incredibly dumb. Smart people know that you should really write a script with vim and then run it. I only had to restart my computer once before saving!

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3 points

I once got stuck in vim. I had to kill it. Then I uninstalled it.

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4 points

I wish Nano was the default on everything. The fact that Git on Windows uses Vim is so incredibly annoying.

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2 points
*

More like:

Search in the app store, press install.

As opposed to the absolute nightmare of finding executables on random websites, downloading them, running an installer program, pressing next a bunch of times, then deleting the installer afterwards.

App management is something Linux does very well, and Windows very poorly.

On no other OS is it the norm to do it like you’re expected to do it on Windows.

I can chat about bad points in Linux all day, I’m not blind to the faults of any of these OSes, but a Windows user saying installing software on Linux is hard really does have me giggling

E: pictures say a thousand words. Here’s the difference:

Installing an app on Windows: https://imgur.com/a/QoLzZlk

Installing an app on Linux: https://imgur.com/a/prsi9ZW

Need I say more?

E2: people still saying installing apps in Windows is easier despite photographic evidence to the contrary cannot be helped. You’ve gone too deep. Next you’ll be saying climate change isn’t real and the earth is flat lmao. The evidence is right there in front of you!

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4 points

I’m afraid Linux is more complex for most regular people.

Yes, a lot of stuff is managed by a package manager (though you have to decide between 2-3 options of the same app, as one is flatpak and one is something else you’ve never come across before) and when that works, it’s great. But it’s far from comprehensive.

I’d rather press ‘next’ or ‘ok’ a few times than have to learn an entirely new and non-intuituve language and interface just to add an app or driver that is among the 20% of stuff that still won’t just work out the box.

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-4 points
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I really don’t know where you’re getting this impression from.

I search for software. It’s there, I see an install button. I press it. You can click a drop down to pick between, say, an RPM package or a flatpak, but it’s not something a normal user would do.

Installing windows programs, as I’ve already said, is a lot more than just pressing ok. It relies on knowing what site to pick, finding the download page, picking the right installer, finding the exe you downloaded, going through the install wizard, deleting the installer after.

It’s not easier. IMO app management is the biggest weakness of Windows. There’s a reason genuinely no other OS has that as the standard way to install programs.

I don’t understand the part about learning a new language either? What? I open the app store, I search, I press install. There’s no need for multiple languages? And the interface is a lot more intuitive than finding the right download on every single website, that all look different, and going through every installer, most of which look different.

Seriously, if you were talking about idk, HDR or gaming (outside of emulation where it’s a solid Linux win) or something, I’d be agreeing with you and saying Windows is easier, despite Valve getting Linux pretty close.

But installing programs? Nah, Windows is the one that’s a complicated clusterfuck. People are just used to it so they don’t really think about it.

E: lmao you people are downvoting yet you can’t refute it. Stop simping for a $2.8tn dollar company. I’ve already proven what I’ve said is true. Me criticising an OS isn’t a personal attack lol, stop fanboying.

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4 points

Tbf Microsoft wants you to rely on their store to install things. People just don’t trust it, for obvious reasons.

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4 points

That’s true. And if they actually did more vetting of their app store I’d probably use it!

But right now it seems to be full of software that isn’t updated as frequently as the separate installers for some reason, missing almost all apps, or has open source apps uploaded by someone who isn’t the original developer, and charging money for it…

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