this post was submitted on 05 Oct 2025
166 points (93.2% liked)

Linux

58791 readers
905 users here now

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).

Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.

Rules

Related Communities

Community icon by Alpár-Etele Méder, licensed under CC BY 3.0

founded 6 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Why did you switch to Linux? I'd like to hear your story.

Btw I switched (from win11 to arch) because I got bored and wanted a challenge. Thx :3

top 50 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] JBrickelt963@jlai.lu 1 points 4 hours ago

Because open source, like the right to privacy and the diversity it can offer, always has something for everyone.

In the end, W*'s recent choices, such as ReCall, and the intrusions into our privacy, finally convinced me to begin my transition.

Until now, I had been observing opinions for the past five years.

The fact is that I am not a programmer or a specialist in these subjects, just a very small amateur, and Linux has long been off-putting.

Having the time and a computer to experiment is not that easy. But with an old computer, I finally have the opportunity to test Linux Mint... Others will undoubtedly follow.

I always say that to change operating systems, you first have to figure out how to replace proprietary software or applications with open source ones, because most of them are also available on Linux.

That's what I did on my mobile, and now the next step is to choose a custom ROM such as Lineage or /e/OS, etc.

[–] Nikki@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 8 hours ago

cuz windows sucks major balls and i was sick of it breaking itself (and the spyware)

[–] PragmaticOne@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago

It was easier for work.

I had been thinking about it for a while. I had played with linux before on an old laptop, but not seriously, though I had been getting more frustrated with windows every time it updated it seemed. I then got the urged to play an old game of mine that i had picked up on a steam sale recently that i hadn't played in years. It took hours of tinkering and web sleuthing to get it to run, then i played 20 min had to run to town, so I shut down my PC and bam. Windows update. Game no longer worked again. The next weekend I installed Linux mint, then Fedora, then the weekend Bazzite the weekend after that. The game I wanted to play on windows worked right out of the box on Proton. I've had less problems overall with Linux than Windows too. Most of the problems I did have early on were also self inflicted. Pro-tip don't try to remove then re-install the lastest python manually in mint. It breaks everything apparently, luckily (unlike Windows) its very easy to re-install. It's been about 7 months now.

[–] AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago

Windows didn't work, linux did.

3.11 and Slackware respectively.

[–] abbiistabbii@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 10 hours ago

Went to Linux when I was a teenager, went back to Windows.

My return however is a lot more bittersweet. One of my cats died. The other cat went into mourning. Wanted to keep him company while doing my shit, so I took my old laptop and installed Xubuntu on it. While I was using it I realised that Linux had come a long, long way since I last used it and I could use it as a daily driver. Got a new laptop soon after and installed Mint on it.

Then Windows on my main PC started demanding I update. Realised I couldn't afford to, both software and hardware wise, so I decided to go full Linux. Never looked back. Typing this on my Laptop running Fedora while I try kill time before an interview.

TL;DR: I came back to Linux because I wanted to hang out with my cat while he mourned.

[–] orenj@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 9 hours ago

My old laptop was struggling with windows and it was losing support, so i consigned myself to finally unlocking the fourth greg within my soul: Open Source Greg.

[–] t0fr@lemmy.ca 2 points 9 hours ago

My dad was a software developer so growing up, there were Linux textbooks in the bookcases. Sorry if was inspired by my dad to try Linux in and off in my teens. Was fun a kid failing and then succeeding to install Linux and distrohop through the various flavors of Ubuntu and what not.

Then in university my cheap laptop was running poorly on Windows 10 say I started experimenting again with Arch, Mankato since I didn't really need any fancy proprietary software.

Finally, now in 2025, just pissed off with Windows and decided I'd go all in with Linux on my desktop gaming PC. It worked well enough or my laptop and my home server, and really considered that it was not games that required anti cheat that I really loved, so I just dove in with Bazzite.

[–] varjen@lemmy.world 2 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago)

I switched because freeBSD didn't have drivers for my voodoo3 gfx card. I switched to FreeBSD from windows because I messed up my litestep config that was setup to pretend that it was an X desktop and I thought I might as well use the real thing. Dualbooted for a while for games though.

[–] zurchpet@lemmy.ml 3 points 12 hours ago

Back in 2002 it was eye candy.

Compiz compositor. The 3D cube and wobly windows.

And still Linux can be the most beautiful UI of all OSes out there.

[–] biofaust@lemmy.world 2 points 12 hours ago

I tried many times before, mostly pushed by friends nerdier than me. Always failed.

Now I am on Mint since a few months pushed just by myself not accepting AI slop force fed to me by my computer and having become very protective of my privacy since GDPR (I am the DPO at my company).

I must say it has become incredibly user-friendly (at least on Mint CE) and as a gamer, I am very satisfied with both performance and variety (I would have said GabeN be praised one month ago, but I am slowly moving my library to GOG/Heroic, for similar reasons, so the praise has to be shared).

[–] D_Air1@lemmy.ml 10 points 19 hours ago
[–] gerryflap@feddit.nl 4 points 16 hours ago

Because windows has become spyware and enough shit works to be worth the hassle. Don't get me wrong, it's still a constant struggle. I have many hobbies, and for some of them it's really annoying to be on Linux. Programming is awesome on Linux, gaming is for the most part fine, music production gets a lot more iffy and some of the photography stuff isn't really cooperating. But I'll just have to endure it, I'm almost one year in and for the most part everything works in some way or another. I only start Windows once in a few months now.

[–] bufalo1973@piefed.social 1 points 12 hours ago

I started by hating Microsoft even before Linux. It was the day I saw the 3.5" disks of Win3.11 didn't have the tab to write them. My reaction was "those are OUR disks, not Microsoft's". I was using then DRDOS and later OS/2. Also I used an Atari STE. So not much love for Windows. And when I saw KDE (maybe 2.0) I installed Linux.

[–] RabbitMix@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 17 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago)

In high school in like 2007/8ish my friend told me you could get a free disc with an operating system called Ubuntu on it sent to you in the mail, so I requested one out of curiosity and put it on the iMac in my room, and fell in love with it. I still have the disc, even though I'm more of a Fedora person now.

[–] BigDiction@lemmy.world 3 points 20 hours ago

I literally just wanted a login with a password experience with no ads or sketchy telemetry from my OS. Like how Windows 7 worked or at least how I thought it worked.

[–] waspentalive@beehaw.org 4 points 22 hours ago

Dark patterns, kajouling, telemetry, settings that reset on upgrades, and the overall feeling that my computer is not truly mine.

[–] oddlyqueer@lemmy.ml 2 points 19 hours ago

My computer was getting older and slower and I couldn't afford a new one and wanted to squeeze as much performance out of it as I could. That and, I heard it was all the rage with hackers and I fancied myself a bit of a hacker.

[–] st3ph3n@midwest.social 2 points 19 hours ago

Because of the continual enshittification of Windows 11 with each major update.

[–] TipRing@lemmy.world 2 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

I had a meeting at work with a product team lead at Microsoft. Went home and installed Linux that evening.

[–] WbrJr@lemmy.ml 1 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

That's wild. More details please :D

[–] TipRing@lemmy.world 2 points 6 hours ago

We had a fundamental disagreement regarding the role of technology in business operations. In my view, technological change in an enterprise exists in tension between the business desiring a solution that perfectly fits their process and the flexibility of a technology package to approximate the business requirements in a cost-effective way. Ideally, technology should fade into the background so that you don't even notice or think about it as it facilitates your work.

Microsoft seemingly disagrees.

My specialty is telephony, a space that Microsoft has only recently ventured into with a competitive and cost-effective, if feature-poor, offering in Teams. Telephony is a complex topic and the way telephones are used in business today is varied from people who barely use their phone (but want it when they need it), to people who depend on specific telephony functionality to do their work.

The meeting I had was in a beta-user group for new tech in that space, it was me and about 40 other admins from a variety of large businesses and a team-lead in Microsoft product house. Basically, it was a group of customers becoming increasingly exasperated at the arrogant ignorance of someone in charge of developing telephone technology at Microsoft who didn't only have limited experience with enterprise-level telephony, but insisted that business units conform their processes to fit what Microsoft was willing to develop, and I want to emphasize here, that the audience was more than willing to meet the vendor halfway here, it was Microsoft insisting that people didn't really need basic things like busy-indicators.

I spent about an hour getting more and more angry to the point where I just wanted to get rid of everything Microsoft, but I couldn't torpedo Teams at work, so I went home and installed Mint on all my PCs (and later switched to Garuda).

[–] owsei@programming.dev 7 points 1 day ago

I wanted to code in C. I saw some tutorials for windows and found it very complex, but I saw one in linux where the person just gcc hello.c. And since then I've fallen in love

[–] EarlGrey@discuss.tchncs.de 4 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

Because Windows XP was a hot pile of garbage.

One day, my network driver broke. None of the discs worked. None of those incoherent "wizards" Windows loves to use worked. Reinstalling Windows broke more things. I couldn't get online for about 2 months.

One day I was at the bookstore and saw a Fedora Core book with an OS disc. I thought it was cool so I convinced mom to get it. Went home, blundered my way through the install and everything just worked.

I cannot for the life of me understand how XP is routinely loved by everyone. It looked like a muddy fisher-price toybox.

[–] 4am@lemmy.zip 2 points 22 hours ago (1 children)

If you had spent any time with Windows ME at all, XP is as big a jump as the move from XP to Fedora (with the caveat that the bar was much lower, of course)

[–] EarlGrey@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 17 hours ago

I had used 95, 98, and 2000 at that point. All of which I mostly enjoyed. Me I used in my grandmothers computer and yeah...it was rubbish.

However I'd say it was less of a "Big leap" and more of a "Quick give us something that's almost as good as 9x!"

[–] folaht@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Homework.

College used linux because I did computer science.
Topic: concurrency. College then gave us a programming assignment that required adding a code library, which I had never done before or even heard of, and thus did not understand.
Since this was a library that was platform-specific, they had made one library for linux and one for windows.
Way too late I got the gist of it but still couldn't install the library.
Since the question contained the linux directory structure I was convinced that the windows library was broken and every other college student finished this task in Linux.
Thus I installed Linux.
Ten years later I understood and finished the assignment.

[–] rapchee@lemmy.world 1 points 13 hours ago

task failed successfully

[–] LaSirena@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago

My heat was out and I needed a way to warm my apartment so installed Gentoo on my Dell XPS. /s

That was around the time Windows 2000 was coming out and I couldn't afford a copy. I'd been dabbling for a year or two before. That was my first and last dual boot computer. MythTV really sold me on linux.

[–] manmachine@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

FreeBSD didn’t have working nvidia drivers for amd64 in 2006, so, Linux it was.

[–] WbrJr@lemmy.ml 1 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

Are things not compatible between them? I though both were Unix based systems?

[–] manmachine@lemmy.world 1 points 11 hours ago

The deeper into low level kernel stuff, the less direct compatibility.

[–] djsoren19@lemmy.blahaj.zone 9 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I really, truly, seriously hate modern implementations of AI and am willing to make concessions in my life to avoid using it. Windows 11 forcing Copilot was my last straw for using Microsoft.

[–] mko@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 1 day ago

Opening up Win11 and finding out that the simplest of apps - Notepad - now has Copilot integration just enforced my stance that switching to Linux was the right move.

load more comments (1 replies)
[–] Croquette@sh.itjust.works 3 points 1 day ago

Tired of the constant pop ups in windows 10. The constant upselling of their product.

An OS shouldn't get in the way of what you are doing and Windows was always popping up some bullshit.

[–] Crozekiel@lemmy.zip 3 points 1 day ago

SSD died that had windows 10 on it. During the re-installation process I got fed up with onedrive and skype popping up every reboot despite being told not to start with windows multiple times. Attempt to disable, the next round of windows update brings them back. I didn't even have the absolute basics up and running before I lost all patience for it. Downloaded several distros, setup like 10 different USB sticks to boot them all. Cycled through them for a bit poking around and testing out. Landed on Garuda Linux kinda by chance, but it has been great. It was so refreshing to have a computer feel like it's mine again.

[–] golden_zealot@lemmy.ml 11 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

I was not about to put up with windows co-pilot or recall and had already put up with enough ads and bugs.

I had been running Debian on my laptop for a year without a problem and then finally Windows 11 started doing this when I was trying to update:

Click check for updates? Same result. Wait a week and try again? Same result.

I could no longer trust that the OS was secure from even 3rd parties, so I pulled the trigger and installed Debian 12 - later upgrading to Debian 13 when it released.

There just is never any going back now - Linux is just waaaaaaay too good.

Now I just need something similar to happen with phones.

[–] krish895@literature.cafe 2 points 22 hours ago

Yes, we need new OSes in Mobile segment too.. As Android is going to close the doors and make every application to be loaded only through Play store.

[–] SteakSneak@retrolemmy.com 4 points 1 day ago

I have older hardware that would not be compatible with windows 11. I've recently started becoming a privacy nerd and thought this would be the perfect time to switch to Linux. I've been running Linux mint for a year and I will never go back, there is no reason to 😁 I wish I had done it sooner

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 2 points 23 hours ago

I learned to use linux decently in school. Used it for servers, etc at home.

Windows had its auto updatee, and eventually drove me mad enough to dual boot. When the updates started crash boot loops and I literally couldn't use it anymore... I finally swore off Windows.

Its not all sunshine and rainbows, but i have had a much better time woth Lonux, and feel much better about it.

Looking at all the sheisty things theyve talked about and/or attempted, such as screen recording everything for AI, contemplating ads in file explorer, forced one drive integration slowing basic operations down... I have no desire whatsoever to return.

[–] let_me_sleep@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 day ago

I started a masters program and I was assigned an an office computer with MintOS that contained all the software and data for my research project. Unfortunately, my advisor couldn't remember the password so my first task was breaking into the computer. You'd think being able to externally reset the root password would turn me away from Linux, but the ease and functionality of the terminal shell really made sense to me. Plus now I know how to better secure my Linux systems.

[–] Asfalttikyntaja@sopuli.xyz 5 points 1 day ago

It’s a long story. But back in the time, when there was a company called Commodore, I used Amiga computers, because I didn’t like Microsoft and MS-DOS. When Commodore went bankrupt and my Amiga started to fade away I was forced to buy a PC. And because I didn’t want to have Windows 95, I bought S.uS.E. Linux and that’s the way I am now. And I’m happy to be Linux user all these years.

[–] DegenerationIP@lemmy.world 2 points 23 hours ago

Simple. Windows caused a lot of Problems I simply could Not solve.

Besides that Microsoft became Something I do Not want to Support much longer or willing to giveaway my privacy.

And yeah. Linux Runs better.

[–] SOULFLY98@slrpnk.net 6 points 1 day ago

I saw fvwm in a magazine and it had a really cool 3D look to it and I wanted that. I had never seen anything like that. We were very poor and I only had an old computer, a 486, so it was either pirate software (and there was no version of Windows in our language) or use Linux.

I ended up on Red Hat from a magazine and then later Slackware. I liked Window Maker so I stayed on that for two decades. Learning Linux gave me a constructive hobby, introduced me to free software philosophy, and gave me technology skills. We moved to the United States. When I was 15 or 16, I helped a college math professor install hardware on Linux. When he found out that I was dropping out of a very racist high school, he provided support and I ended up graduating from their college. Those Linux skills came in handy and helped start a career.

I have only ever used Windows to upgrade firmware on a laptop or to download an ISO so I could replace Windows. Like everyone else, I was enamoured with macOS back in the 2000's but couldn't afford one and when I finally could, it couldn't do sloppy focus and that was a pet peeve of mine so I just returned it and got a used ThinkPad.

I moved back to Asia. Now I use sway on Debian and get to ride my bicycle to work and my kids grow up better than I did, so life is good.

[–] neclimdul@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago

It was a challenge I wanted to conquer too but also I increasingly felt like I didn't own my computer. The software was increasingly cutting me out of the ability to modify and use it the way I wanted.

I spent a lot of time in Gentoo early on where patching software was an overlay and recompile away and it was great testing early amd64 bugs and pushing the limits with gaim and reverse engineering chat protocols.

I was doing some dual booting then but as i built a career in web development, it became more and more my solo driver. Running the same platform you're developing for is incredibly convenient and Linux runs the web.

Now I can't imagine running windows. Using it and helping people on it is just a miserable experience for me.

load more comments
view more: next ›