87 points

LOL not sure if this is because Windows warns you about dumb shit or because Linux will totally just allow you to nuke your entire OS with a single command.

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12 points

Windows error messages are usually something to pay attention to if they generate a popup. But you can ignore most errors and warnings in the event viewer.

Linux is the same. If you get a popup, look into that, but if you see warnings or errors in a logfile then they can most likely be ignored if the app is working

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22 points

Yes?

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28 points

To be fair, you can nuke your entire OS with a single command on Windows too.

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-9 points

Well I never used command line in 30 years of Windows.

It’s pretty much a requirement for Linux that you copy and paste random commands you don’t understand from strangers on the internet.

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7 points

Well I never used command line in 30 years of Windows.

That’s 30 years of using closed source software from strangers (Or do you have many good friends at Redmond WA USA ?) :-)

It’s pretty much a requirement for Linux that you copy and paste random commands you don’t understand from strangers on the internet.

Maybe decades ago it was. Nowadays that’s not a requirement as there’s GUI applications for a lot more things than before. And as a Linux user I simply find it much more convenient and faster to share some commands with another person than making screen shots and creating a howto of a few pages or making a video. Also documentation has improved. For the average Linux user the Arch Linux wiki is a nice resource, even when not using Arch Linux.

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22 points

To be fair I never downloaded 20 sketchy looking zip files from some ODM manufacture website just to get my hardware working. I also didn’t need to reboot my computer 40 times while installing drivers, software, and updates.

I didn’t have my motherboard, mouse, and fan controller auto install junky apps that never works and advertised new products constantly. I didn’t have to try to uninstall adware just to find out you can’t uninstall half of it. I didn’t have to Google some esoteric regedit voodo just to add features back or disable anti-features.

I don’t get full screen ads for OneDrive and office 365 begging me to switch to a Microsoft account every other update. I don’t have to go to each and every manufacturers website to search for updates. Or create an account, login to it, and have it run in the background 247 just to not work when an update needs to be applied.

Have windows install updates in the background while playing games, or doing CPU intensive tasks like transcoding / video editing(often crashing the application).

Having to use the terminal on my Linux install every once in a blue moon crosses the line though. I might switch to windows and deal with all that instead.😂

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3 points

How?

I dual boot and use the command line a similar amount in both. cmd and powershell in windows are super useful for troubleshooting things that don’t work, or setting configuration options that are just not possible from the GUI, like disabling the hiberfil

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2 points
*

CLI is a bigger necessity on Windows than Linux

It’s just unnecessarily verbose on Windows and on Linux help pages are from people that know what they’re doing

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19 points

It’s pretty much a requirement for Linux that you copy and paste random commands you don’t understand from strangers on the internet.

No.

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5 points

This is what got me started on linux lol

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14 points

Don’t even need a command. I’ve seen people brick their windows install messing around with registry keys. Most of my coworkers and friends think I’m some sort of wizard because I follow the instructions to the letter if I have any reason to run regedit.

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61 points

Windows constantly says “this could harm your computer.” Just about any time you install software it does.

Remember when Linus Sebastian blew up Pop!_OS? As a Windows user, “This is likely to break your computer, do not do this unless you absolutely know what you’re doing. To proceed, type “Yes, do as I say.”” is something to walk right past.

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13 points
*

Damn so thats why he ignored the warning… I never understood how he could write Yes, do as I say! by ignoring the obvious warning.

It seemed like he intentionally brick the system just to complain linux is bad

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17 points

I’ve done big forensic write-ups of it in the past and mapped it to the FAA’s accident chain model. It just so happened that he was using a distro with a weird forked DE (Pop!_OS) and just so happened that the version of the Steam package in the apt cache from when the install image was made was bugged in such a way that it would uninstall Xorg, and it just so happened that Pop!_OS didn’t run an apt update when launching their GUI app manager.

When Linus saw “failed to install Steam” he turned the petulant child up to 11 and started bitching about how you always have to use the terminal in Linux, and instead of googling the error message to find out “do an update and try again” he found a page that told him how to sudo apt install steam. Most instructions like that tell you do to an apt update before an apt install, so I don’t know if he either aggressively skimmed, deliberately ignored the update command because he’s used to how painful Windows updates are, or if he found a source that didn’t include it.

APT spat out a lot of stdout about all the packages it was going to remove, with a highlighted plaintext warning at the end which he failed to read or failed to heed.

Linus’ bad attitude was a major contributing factor to the incident.

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2 points

One you actually care about while the other… blows wind.

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-9 points
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Removed by mod
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28 points

Windows warning is like the check engine light in your car, ignore till it starts being a problem lmao

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6 points

So you’re telling me I should just turn up the volume instead of fixing my install ?

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37 points

For the record, if your check engine light is ever blinking, you need to immediately shut off your engine.

Shit is going very very wrong in your engine at that point, to the extent that it might cause an energetic catastrophic failure.

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9 points

Interesting, I’ve never heard of that. What does it blinking signify?

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13 points

In my case it meant the cilinders were scrapping against the block with zero lube

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1 point

Typically it’ll happen when your engine misfires due to an ignition coil crapping out. So the engine is now firing on only 3 cylinders if it’s a 4cyl

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3 points

Imminent catastrophic failure.

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2 points

Misfiring in my experience

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5 points

It can mean a misfire too.

I had an old accord that basically lost a cylinder (blew a valve or something) but could still drive down the road with check engine blinking because that cylinder was “misfiring.”

It happened far away from home too. I drove several dozen miles with my unintentional 3 cylinder swap.

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26 points

My favorite error message of all times:

You don’t exist, go away!

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