I made the switch from Windows to FreeBSD and stuck with it for over a year. It was fun and exciting to use as a desktop system. It definitely had some issues you needed to work around, but it worked well.
When I got my laptop, FreeBSD was no longer an option. Not that it couldn't work at all, but they're quite behind in terms of the more modern consumer oriented hardware. I made the switch to Linux. I chose Ubuntu because they actually had a commercial offering for my laptop (XPS 15z), so for the most part everything worked. Definitely a few quirks, but again, nothing impossible to work around.
Then I went off to medical school with nothing but Ubuntu loaded to see how it could hold up in the non-testbed environment that was my house. The results were quite mixed. The more I used the system, the more I could see some of the faults. The thing that is the biggest problem for me is just the overall polish of the desktop environments. I have no doubt that the underlying components of the system (the kernel, the GNU OS, and the software that makes everything play nice) is solid, but it's so much of the user facing stuff that really brings the rest of the system down.
I'm pretty technical, and having used FreeBSD and a number of different Linux Distros for quite a few years, I'm comfortable enough that I can fix things and attempt to figure out why something might not be working. The problem is, I generally spend more time administering my system than actually using it, and since I have almost zero time to be mucking around with things because school is so hectic, I had to move back to Windows.
Is the polish seen in Windows and OS X limited to companies that can provide billions of dollars in support? With the direction Ubuntu is headed, I really don't want to stick with them, but when I switch to other Distros and other DE's, the system becomes even more difficult to use because I have to do even more mucking around.
Anyway, I'm not saying anything new, or anything really constructive. Just my random Sunday morning thoughts before I jump into some physiology. I still dual-boot with Ubuntu, and keep a bunch of VM's going so I can keep learning and hoping I can find something that I can stick with.
When I got my laptop, FreeBSD was no longer an option. Not that it couldn't work at all, but they're quite behind in terms of the more modern consumer oriented hardware. I made the switch to Linux. I chose Ubuntu because they actually had a commercial offering for my laptop (XPS 15z), so for the most part everything worked. Definitely a few quirks, but again, nothing impossible to work around.
Then I went off to medical school with nothing but Ubuntu loaded to see how it could hold up in the non-testbed environment that was my house. The results were quite mixed. The more I used the system, the more I could see some of the faults. The thing that is the biggest problem for me is just the overall polish of the desktop environments. I have no doubt that the underlying components of the system (the kernel, the GNU OS, and the software that makes everything play nice) is solid, but it's so much of the user facing stuff that really brings the rest of the system down.
I'm pretty technical, and having used FreeBSD and a number of different Linux Distros for quite a few years, I'm comfortable enough that I can fix things and attempt to figure out why something might not be working. The problem is, I generally spend more time administering my system than actually using it, and since I have almost zero time to be mucking around with things because school is so hectic, I had to move back to Windows.
Is the polish seen in Windows and OS X limited to companies that can provide billions of dollars in support? With the direction Ubuntu is headed, I really don't want to stick with them, but when I switch to other Distros and other DE's, the system becomes even more difficult to use because I have to do even more mucking around.
Anyway, I'm not saying anything new, or anything really constructive. Just my random Sunday morning thoughts before I jump into some physiology. I still dual-boot with Ubuntu, and keep a bunch of VM's going so I can keep learning and hoping I can find something that I can stick with.
