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Transition from Windows to Linux full time...

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I agree with you. Pretty much annually I'll grab distros normally ones I see mentioned in these threads and then try and install it on a 2-3 year old Dell to give it the highest chance of having drivers. Ill then update it and use whatever tools are on it.

I have yet to have an instance where everything worked out of the box. I am not against downloading drivers since I have to do that for Windows but even after that there is always some odd issue that results in me ending up on random web forums with 1/2 fixed solutions.

IE just getting it installed I have wasted time. Even though the distro is "free" it ends up costing more to just get it working right if at all. Free ends up costing more than a Windows license.
Let me jump on this train! I went through hell trying to find working wifi drivers for my 4-5 year old Dell laptop, and drivers for my canon all in one printer. Yeah, I got both working eventually, but it took hours to do so. I'm on Mint now, but tried Ubuntu & Zorin too.
 
I use Xen as Hypervisor, not VMWare.

I'm also extremely interesed in a method to attach a VM in fullscreen mode to a tty so I could change the focus from one VM to another using Ctrl + Alt + Fx, like you want too. Would GREATLY improve usefulness. It should be possible, don't see any reason why not, but requires some more configuration which I didn't researched about. In any case, a solution like that should be your best bet, as you step into Linux while simultaneously running Windows, so you don't lose functionality.

That's not possible because when you mix Linux and Windows and other 10000000s of OS, they would have all different implementations. The only way possible would be to implement a common standard for this, which I do not see in the future.

The only way possible I see this is some sort of IPKVM implementation but even then I see it highly unlikely.
 
Call me old fashioned, but isn't setting up Active Directory authentication in Linux still a pain in the ass? The user mapping configuration looks like a nightmare to maintain.
 
Call me old fashioned, but isn't setting up Active Directory authentication in Linux still a pain in the ass? The user mapping configuration looks like a nightmare to maintain.
Its gotten WAY better than before. Samba (more so version 4) really make easy.

Its not butter like Windows but hey, you know what you are doing 😉
 
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