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submitted 10 months ago by Fint0034@lemmy.ml to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

The only few reason I know so far is software availability, like adobe software, and Microsoft suite. Is there more of major reasons that I missed?

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[-] Chainweasel@lemmy.world 8 points 10 months ago

Some of those that don't find it intimidating do find it tiring. I grew up using MSDOS and later Windows 3.1 when it came out. Most of what we did was in command line and having everything in a GUI is just a QOL upgrade you don't really want to come back from.
I've been using mint on my laptop for a few months now and it's great, but like you said there's still some things that require command line tinkering and I just don't have the energy for it.
It's the same reason I like console games, they just work. Don't get me wrong, the console modding scene is non-existent and any kind of customization is generally out of the question, but it just works, and it works the first time every time.

[-] thirteene@lemmy.world 5 points 10 months ago

Full agree on tiring. I work as an SRE, my job is administrating Linux machines (containers these days). When I need to use a computer, I just want it to work out of the box and Linux doesn't offer that yet. I don't want to spend time getting it to work

[-] pkill@programming.dev 4 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Tbh for some people there's no going back once you learn it. Navigating a GUI and clicking through several buttons vs having a nice shell with completions and whatnot like Fish and learning piping at some point just becomes faster, same thing as using modal editors.

this post was submitted on 23 Jan 2024
124 points (86.9% liked)

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