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I Don't Think I Can Go Back To Windows...

0h 28m video Transcribed Jun 10, 2026 Watch on YouTube ↗
Beginner 12 min read For: General tech enthusiasts and Windows users curious about switching to Linux.
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AI Summary

After a month of daily driving Linux, Elijah, Luke, and Linus share their final verdicts. They discuss the highs (speed, gaming compatibility, community support) and lows (middle mouse behavior, anti-cheat blocks, search quirks), revealing that Linux has improved dramatically but still faces compatibility hurdles. Ultimately, all three are staying on Linux in some form, with varying degrees of commitment.

[01:47]
Speed and Snappiness

Linux felt snappier than Windows, with quick application launch times, likely due to less bloat and no mandatory CoPilot check-ins.

[02:16]
Supportive Community

The Linux community was generally helpful and keen on assisting new users, despite occasional toxicity.

[03:36]
Gaming Compatibility Surprise

Gaming on Linux via Proton worked surprisingly well; most games ran without needing to check ProtonDB, though some with kernel-level anti-cheat remain blocked.

[04:40]
HDR Handling

Kubuntu handled HDR output flawlessly, even better than Windows, with zero hassle.

[05:05]
External Launchers Work

External launchers like Xbox Game Pass worked on Bazzite, allowing games like Forza Horizon 6 to run.

[05:30]
Fun and Tinkering

Linux problems felt solvable and fun, unlike Windows' frustrating, design-by-annoyance issues.

[06:16]
Driver Management

Linux handled drivers seamlessly out of the box, while Windows Update felt archaic and clunky.

[07:34]
Package Management

Linux package managers (Pacman, KDE Discover) provided a smooth, ad-free experience, unlike Windows Store.

[08:16]
LLM Troubleshooting

LLMs helped solve Linux issues quickly, though they sometimes gaslit users; old forum posts were often outdated.

[10:04]
Middle Mouse Button Issues

Linux's middle mouse paste behavior conflicted with gaming and browsing; fixable via browser settings but annoying.

[11:12]
Unsupported Game Errors

It was hard to tell if errors were due to Linux or the game itself, as Proton is an unsupported layer.

[11:50]
Search Frustrations

Bazzite's search was terrible, with unexpected behaviors like typing 'sleep' putting the computer to sleep.

[13:27]
Distro Choice Paralysis

The abundance of distros and passionate tribal communities made choosing and recommending Linux difficult.

[14:34]
Wayland Display Capture

OBS on Wayland had issues remembering display capture sources, requiring reconfiguration each time.

[15:48]
Anti-Cheat Blocking Games

Kernel-level anti-cheat in games like Marathon prevented them from running on Linux, causing frustration.

[17:30]
More Games Work Than Not

Despite anti-cheat issues, the majority of games work on Linux, encouraging exploration.

[19:00]
LLMs Over Community

Elijah preferred LLMs over Reddit/Discord for troubleshooting due to toxicity and unsearchable info.

[20:20]
Missing Windows Hello

Biometric authentication like Windows Hello was missed; community responses were often unhelpful.

[21:10]
Teams App Issues

The non-Ningez Teams app worked well initially but eventually hit a login loop.

[22:00]
Elijah's Verdict

Elijah is staying on Linux (CachyOS) but dual-booting Windows for games like Marathon and video editing.

[23:33]
Luke's Verdict

Luke is staying on Linux (Mint) for his laptop permanently; desktop uses a dual-boot setup.

[24:49]
Linus's Verdict

Linus found Linux ready but needs Windows for hardware reviews; plans to de-bloat Windows or distro-hop.

All three hosts are staying on Linux in some capacity, citing improved speed, gaming compatibility, and a desire to escape Microsoft's dark patterns. However, compatibility barriers and niche use cases keep Windows in the picture for now.

Clickbait Check

85% Legit

"Title accurately reflects the sentiment; all three hosts express reluctance to return to Windows full-time."

Mentioned in this Video

Study Flashcards (8)

What was one of the biggest positive surprises about Linux gaming during the challenge?

easy Click to reveal answer

Most games worked without needing to check ProtonDB; compatibility was much better than expected.

03:36

What issue did Luke encounter with the middle mouse button on Linux?

medium Click to reveal answer

Linux's middle mouse paste behavior conflicted with gaming and browsing; it could be fixed via browser settings.

10:04

Why did Elijah prefer using LLMs over community forums for troubleshooting?

medium Click to reveal answer

Community forums like Reddit were often toxic and unsearchable, while LLMs provided quicker, more direct answers.

19:00

What was Linus's main reason for not fully switching to Linux?

hard Click to reveal answer

As a hardware reviewer, he needs Windows to evaluate peripherals with native apps.

26:16

Which game did Elijah want to play but couldn't due to kernel-level anti-cheat?

easy Click to reveal answer

Marathon.

16:14

What distro did Luke use on his laptop and how did it perform?

medium Click to reveal answer

Mint; it worked flawlessly with zero drawbacks for his use case (browser, PDFs, documents).

23:33

What was the issue with OBS on Wayland?

medium Click to reveal answer

Desktop capture sources would reset and need reconfiguration each time OBS was opened.

14:34

What did Linus plan to do instead of returning to vanilla Windows?

hard Click to reveal answer

He wanted to explore Windows de-bloating or distro-hop, hoping for an NVIDIA-capable SteamOS.

27:00

💡 Key Takeaways

Microsoft as a Creepy College Guy

Linus compares Microsoft's nagging to a creepy guy at a bar, a humorous and relatable analogy.

03:08

Marathon Disappointment

Elijah's excitement to play Marathon is crushed by kernel-level anti-cheat, highlighting a major Linux pain point.

16:14
💬

LLMs Over People

Elijah admits he prefers talking to LLMs because people are worse, a candid and surprising confession.

19:00

✂️ Creator Tools: Viral Hooks

AI-generated clip ideas for Shorts based on the transcript

No viral clips found for this video, or they are still being generated.

[00:00] For over a month, Elijah, Luke, and I have been daily driving some flavor of Linux. We showed you what we chose to install. We talked through some of the roadblocks that we hit. We even attempted challenges with varying degrees of success.

[00:15] But now it's time for our final verdict. Who will stay on Linux, and who will go crawling back to Microflip like a baby? That's a joke, of course.

[00:28] these are just our personal experiences and your year of the Linux desktop might come sooner or later than ours. There's no shame in me either. But one thing that we can say for certain is that the year is closer today than it was the last time these two did the challenge.

[00:45] So true. It feels like Linux has been moving forward at the same speed that Windows has been moving backward, which is, and both are pretty impressive. All three of us, spoiler alert, seriously considered staying on Linux rather than returning to that sinking ship.

[01:02] Just like we considered which of us would segue to our culture. Privacy. They let you make virtual cards to help you control who charges you and when, and get peace of mind every time you buy something online. Click the link in the description and make privacy part of your daily routine.

[01:16] I want to start by thanking everyone out there for your interest in this series, along with a special shout out for the folks who played along at home, Seeing the community rally around Linux shows me that at least some people really do care about important things,

[01:31] like freedom, privacy, and owning their own stuff. We did a whole video discussing how the legitimate threat that Linux now presents is finally forcing Microsoft to wake up and do something, take action.

[01:47] And this is just proof once again that competition is good for absolutely everyone and everything. So with that in mind then, let's kick off with the highlights from the first month. For me, the first one has got to be speed.

[02:00] Maybe it's just general bloat. Maybe it's because everything doesn't have to check in with CoPilot when I do literally anything. But BadSight just felt snappier than Windows. And quick application launch time made my system feel honestly brand new every single time I used it.

[02:16] I also did love how supportive the community was overall. I looked into Discord a decent amount, and if you ignore the couple times that they s*** on me before this challenge, the community seems really keen on helping get new users the best Bazite experience possible.

[02:31] Saying that, there were some other things... No! We're only doing positive right now. Positive things only. I think the biggest eye-opener for me happened every time I was back on Windows for some reason.

[02:44] like when I jumped on the landfill laptop for instance. I go to sit down and boom! Do you want to use Edge? Do you like Xbox gaming? Would you like the one-time subscription? No! Just like the

[02:56] last time you were all up in my grill asking me about it. It drives me freaking crazy. Like if Microsoft was a guy at college he would be the kind of guy that the bartender would type

[03:08] up a thing and then show it to the girl sitting next to him. who doesn't say no for an answer. And I just found... Or yes, remember my login?

[03:22] It doesn't work for me. I just found that over the course of my month with Linux, my trust in it grew. And by comparison, my trust in Windows is just shattered at this point.

[03:36] I think the main thing that I was surprised to buy was actually gaming compatibility. because last time this was a pretty big issue. And for most of this challenge, you know, I started with every time before I was going to launch a game,

[03:48] I load up a browser, check ProtonDB, what are people doing to make it work? Didn't believe ProtonDB. Yeah, yeah. And then within, honestly, not that much time, I stopped checking. I stopped even checking forced compatibility.

[04:01] I just started pressing play and almost everything just worked. It's like roulette, but five of the six chambers are full. Yeah, yeah. It would almost always work. The problems were, I guess, no, no world was impossible.

[04:14] Yes, you are. So I'll stick with that. So what we can do is go to lmd.gg slash glowplane, where some of the free-flowing discussion might end up on the cutting room floor, but I've got a few more things that are positive. I did a trip to Sony where I was checking out a new T&D,

[04:27] and I realized, oh no, I can't use their display source because it's got copyrighted films on it. Sure. So I needed something to output to it, and I was like, well, I have HDR footage, but do I have an HDR-capable device?

[04:40] And I went, oh, gosh, it's my Linux laptop. Kubuntu handled it like a champ. Absolutely zero BS. Honestly, it was a better experience than Windows.

[04:52] Wow. I was floored. For me, with Bazite, I actually found a lot of positives came from external launchers, which was honestly really surprising, because obviously, Coloton is very tied with Steam, at least online, in terms of the narrative behind it.

[05:05] but there was times where I was able to get the Xbox launcher working, and I even managed to boot brand new Forza Horizon 6 on it. Interesting. I didn't. But we're not talking about that right now.

[05:17] No negative right now. This is positive. All right, all right, all right. I think, yeah, the other bit of positive is that it's just more fun. Like, the problems that I've run into on Windows for the last, honestly, years,

[05:30] like not a short period of time, has almost always just been really annoying. I felt like there are problems by design, whereas on Linux, I feel like there are problems by... We didn't get to that yet.

[05:42] Your HDR thing is so polished because some person out there was just annoyed about HDR and made it awesome. And just maybe someone hasn't been annoyed enough about the problem that you're dealing with right now, so it hasn't been made completely awesome yet, but you can probably fix it yourself.

[05:57] Shifting gears a little bit, as someone who has set up a lot of computers, the whole going through and getting the driver's rigmarole bothers me more than it probably should and on Linux it just isn't a thing if you've got a recent kernel it just everything my wi-fi my

[06:16] bluetooth all of my crap mostly just works and it blows me away that in the year of our lord 2026 Microsoft can't have a similar experience with Windows Update Windows Update was actually like

[06:28] kind of fascinating. Going from updating Mint and Cache to updating my Windows machine felt like I went back a decade. It was not only are you not giving those driver updates,

[06:40] but it's also not updating just all the software on your computer. In fairness to Windows, Chocolatey, Winget, these things do exist and the Microsoft Store does exist. It just doesn't feel like part of the native

[06:53] experience. And the parts that do, like the Windows or feel crammed down my throat and let they come with downsides. And like you're best off to try to avoid it. And speaking of that, I actually enjoyed using the built-in like bad night store

[07:07] because it worked very well There was no other ads shoved in my face Nine times out of ten I could probably find what I wanted You know you have to log in with your 2FA and then like randomly you have to log in again

[07:19] in the Minecraft launcher app that you downloaded from the Windows Store with the same credentials. Why? Yeah, it was just inherent. It was awesome to actually use a store that I kind of liked. Honestly, just the experience of getting software in general,

[07:34] on Linux feels pretty good. Like, updating with Pac-Man, you have a little animation of it, like eating little bits as it goes along. It just like feels good. And then going to update Windows after only like a week, not only took forever,

[07:47] but it's not entirely clear like what's even going on. Things will sit at 99% for 10 minutes. And it's so rewarding when you go to update. I have this experience with Cache all the time. It'll be like this big system update and it finishes

[08:00] and it's like net size change minus whatever. Like it just got smaller. Are you kidding me? And even when things don't work, okay, this might be a bit of a controversial take, but I was blown away by how quickly I could solve things with an LLM.

[08:16] Oh, yeah, yeah. Compared to, like, trawling endless, you know, ancient forum posts, because that's the thing about Linux, double-edged sword, is it's moving really fast, which is great for it, like, getting better all the time, but not great for the archive of information

[08:30] that's out there on the Internet. Something can be from six months ago and be completely irrelevant today. I also found that I did a bunch of LLM usage with trying to learn how to use Linux,

[08:43] but I tried to use it as an educational tool instead of like an auto-complete, but FF tab. I was messing around in there, but instead of just like, I would ask it like, what should I put here? And it would tell me, but then I'd be like, okay, well, there's like two random numbers in the end.

[08:57] What does that mean? I'm like, what is it that says no fail? What is it not failing? Why would I want it to fail? I mean, speaking of sales, it's funny you brought up LLM because of how much people made fun of you in part one for using it to decide your distro.

[09:12] I was so scared of that kind of reception. I cautiously was like, I'm not using an LLM to solve my issues. I broke that after like two weeks. Yeah, yeah. Because I tried what you said. I went through like old forum posts, old Reddit posts or whatever.

[09:25] And hey, six out of ten probably worked fine. Yeah. But those four out of ten that didn't drove me nuts. I also ran into the LLM just like gaslighting the heck out of me. Oh, of course. That's what happens.

[09:37] But you have to be aware of that as well. Now, we do have to move on, and I get it. Criticizing Linux feels a little bit like walking outside on a crisp autumn day to discover that some kind neighbor has raked all the leaves in your yard.

[09:52] Then tracking down that neighbor and explaining to them that you would have done it differently. However, we do have some ongoing sources of friction with Linux, even a month into our Switch.

[10:04] Why don't we start with Luke? Yeah, I've had some issues with my, like, pressing my middle mouse button, which you may not think you use that often. I like scrolling that way on really long web pages.

[10:16] I'm a middle mouse diehard. I love it. I don't know how many people are, but I am as well. And that just wasn't working anymore. I figured out that that's a settings toggle that you can do in browsers, so I was able to solve that.

[10:29] But like in Baldur's Gate, the way that you turn the screen is you press in your scroll wheel and then rotate the screen. Well, one of the ways you turn the screen. I just rebound the middle mouse version to a single key because it just wasn't working at all.

[10:43] I ended up looking into this, and it is a thing with Linux where drag select, copies whatever you select, and then pressing in the middle mouse wheel, paste it. And it's just like, okay, but I don't want that.

[10:59] And I tried to look at some resources online and then just figured out that, oh, okay, I'm going to change those settings in the browsers. That's 95% of what I need to change here. Another annoying thing that I had is I didn't get 4.6 working.

[11:12] There's kind of an issue here that I don't run into when I'm troubleshooting things on Windows, which is I couldn't tell if this error was because I was running Linux. or if this error was just an error with the game. That's a really good point.

[11:25] Whenever you're doing something unsupported, and let's face it, Proton, even though it's super cool and magical, is effectively, from the game developer's standpoint, an unsupported use case.

[11:38] You have no way of knowing, is this just me? Is this my weird flavor of Linux? Is this the game? Is it my hardware? I mean, speaking of things that don't just work sometimes, for me, it was search.

[11:50] And search on Bazite was surprisingly terrible. That is not the direction I was expecting this conversation to go. To be very clear, Windows search? Absolute ass as well.

[12:02] In fact, probably worse than Bazite. But the problem is that Bazite slash Linux, I believe this is probably under the whole roof, they sometimes make things different just for the fact of being different from Windows.

[12:16] I do get that sometimes. And so when I would type the word sleep to adjust my sleep settings, and because I typed sleep enter, my computer would go to sleep. That is a habit I still have not broken. It's such a minor thing, but it paints the bigger picture that I'm talking about.

[12:31] The hard thing about a lot of these frustrations is they could be like habit-based or based on just sort of the logic of operating systems that you're used to, like middle mouse expected behavior. And I don't know how to solve that, right?

[12:45] because on the one hand, you don't want all Linux distros to just be Windows clones. Like, that's the whole point. That's what we're trying to get away from. But on the other hand, if they're too different,

[12:58] it's hard for you to confidently look at someone in your life who uses Windows or Mac OS and go, yes, I recommend this Linux, fully acknowledging that I'm going to be the tech support for it

[13:10] when you run into problems with it. Which I guess is part of why so many different distros do need to exist. Even if that itself may continue to be a pain point for Linux and for me in particular.

[13:27] Enter any Linux distribution conversation and you will find at least half a dozen people who are confidently declaring that there are one distro to rule them all and solve all of your problems and it will be half a dozen different distros. So clearly, right?

[13:41] Like, whether I'm expecting a Windows clone or whether I'm expecting something totally different, not all of them can be correct. And that's something that I find difficult any time I encounter, like, a hyper-passionate community.

[13:54] The Linux user base, I think if I had to summarize it, is weird because collectively, the community is actually really great. And individually, they're really great.

[14:07] But it's like the little peaks, the little tribes that form and then things get kind of toxic. But even that, I feel like it comes from a good place. Like my goal of choosing a single distro for all of my machines was probably a mistake And the people berating me for not choosing their better distro The only reason they were going at me was because they wanted me to have a good Linux experience

[14:34] Not the right way to be welcoming. I Have one last right display capture in Wayland I wish it could be simpler. I also oh I ran into pairing issues with my Xbox controller

[14:46] The play capture in general is a little bit clunky on the Linux side I was like a little bit surprised you didn't do your streaming setup originally. That was probably the right call. Yeah, I wasn't going to go in two months without streaming. Yeah.

[14:58] Well, no, I've been streaming and it's been fine, but I have to kind of reconfigure things. Like I'll open up OBS and every single one of my desktop capture sources will reload

[15:10] and be like, what do you actually want to capture? It doesn't remember from last time. There might be a way to solve that. It doesn't take me that much time to reconfigure it, But when I was back on Windows, I open OBS and I click Start Stream. It's just a little bit smoother.

[15:23] But it only takes me 30 seconds to fix it. It's not the end of the world. But that also lies in that area where it only takes me 30 seconds to fix it. So I'm not going to spend the half an hour that could make it so I never have to spend the 30 seconds again.

[15:35] Because that's probably possible. Yeah, I'd say the 30 to 120 seconds is the danger zone for problems. The I will never fix it time frame. I'll just do this forever. on the subject of unsixable things,

[15:48] there was one final gripe for you, I believe. Yeah, it was some software. The Proton compatibility layer has made incredible progress. Even actually during our last couple of months, it's improved a lot.

[16:01] But it can't do anything about developers who block their games on Linux. And there was one gaming experience that was really negative on Linux, but only partially because the game itself didn't work.

[16:14] You see, I was really excited to play Marathon. I was excited, okay? I don't care what you think Deal with it I don't even care I was going to say there's no way he's played it

[16:26] There's no way Anyways, we started this challenge literally two days before Marathon came out And of course, it has kernel level anti-cheat That does not work on Bad Light And I was really, really bummed out

[16:40] And I kind of just ended up venting about it online and I was shocked at the number of people who responded with levels of copium that could only be described as delusional or who directly messaged me

[16:53] telling me to stop handing up this drama so that way I could make Linux look bad. Yeah, why do you hate Linux, Elijah? It's all my fault. And hot dogs. I love hamburgers. And it's a big problem

[17:06] because most people will not switch to Linux unless those games are working and devs aren't going to prioritize the Linux development, you know, if people don't switch over.

[17:18] I don't know the solution for this, but I do know that staying quiet and pretending it's not a problem isn't the solution. I mean, you just didn't want to play that game. No, I'm going to get loud because I'm going to put pressure on developers. Yeah, yeah.

[17:30] And the good news is that more games work than don't on Linux. I know both myself and Elijah have been trying more games because of that. Sometimes I'll be like, well, does that work? and it's kind of exciting to even watch it.

[17:42] There's so much to explore, both in the ecosystem itself and in the game. It can be really fun. Like, in a way, I do see where people were coming from on the marathon thing. Sorry, I do.

[17:55] They just came at the person instead of talking through the issue. You are not crazy if you want to play the third part of the Final Fantasy VII remake

[18:07] on the PlayStation 5. that's not crazy. You're not crazy if you want to play Marathon on a Windows machine, but it's also not crazy to see Linux as a platform separate from those

[18:20] things that support these games. And framing everything in terms of what it doesn't support, I can see how people would find that kind of toxic. And I can

[18:33] see how you being blamed for a game you want to play, you might find that pretty hot trick. Yes? I'm going to both sides this one. This is honestly what largely pushed me more and more towards LLMs

[18:46] throughout the process, is that I would be having... Damn, that's an absolute truth bomb here. I'm being completely honest. I talk to LLMs because people are worse. I'm so happy right now.

[19:00] Okay, so the reason why is because I would be having fun with my experience. I would be messing around with things, enjoying toying with something. Like there was genuinely time where I would sit down at my computer fresh,

[19:13] excited to tackle something that I ran into the previous day because it reminds me of old school computing where you tinker with your system and you work on things. And I'd like that. I've been missing that for a very long time.

[19:26] And I'd be messing around and then I'd go, oh, okay, I need to look up something. And I'd end up on some Reddit thread and it's just 400 comments and people going at each other's throats. And I'm just like, I was having a good time.

[19:40] What is happening here? A lot of the information on the Internet right now is centralized on Discord, which is practically unsearchable, or Reddit, which is, I think, inherently flawed. A rough place to go.

[19:53] So if I couldn't find something in a select few different places, Level 1 text form is a fantastic option there. If I couldn't find something there, I would read it, I would go through there. That was a good experience. But if I searched something,

[20:06] and it was like seven Reddit threads in a row is all that came up. I would just be like, okay. And I would go over to MLM and just try to figure it out. One of the things I really missed from Windows is Windows Hello. Just easy, quick to set up,

[20:20] biometric authentication. And this guy right here, shout out this guy, is a classic example of the kind of toxic non-answer that is going to end

[20:32] people's personal limits challenges. I do want facial login. because I like the convenience. This is not your choice. This is my choice. I found that attitude as well sometimes

[20:44] with people telling me I don't want to do certain things or I should have these as solutions instead. For example, when I complained about not playing PUBG in part one, do you know how many people commented saying, hey, use GeForce now?

[20:57] And I'm like, dude, I'm trying to get away from Microsoft, whether it's because of the ad-infected hellhole that it's become or subscription-based services and you turn around and tell me to use a subscription-based service.

[21:10] Like, excuse me? Hey, I meant to check in with you. Yeah. My, like, non-Ningez Teams app actually worked really well for me the whole month until the very end when I ended up in, like, a login authentication loop

[21:24] that I couldn't get out of. And that happened to be when I was, like, reformatting to Windows anyway. But I was wondering, how did yours end up working? Mine ended up improving pretty significantly over the course of the challenge. that we have like opposite arcs Most of my issues with it I think really are just teams All right

[21:46] This brings us to the big moment. One at a time, starting with Eli. Who is staying on Linux? I am, but not on that, right? I'm actually going to be swapping over to cache EOS.

[22:00] Immutable operating system ended up coming back to bite me in the butt. I don't know what that might be a problem. In the later half. Saying that, I'm going to be dual booting. I'm going to be trying to make Cache my primary,

[22:12] but as someone who wants to stream the latest and greatest games, I can't have it be an issue and a block to not be able to play Marathon. Windows is going to be a dedicated, basically, just Steam launcher,

[22:24] so that way I can play some games that don't work on Linux. Well, you do some video editing as well, right? I do. That would be another thing. Yeah, I had issues with video editing in part one and part two. I just ended up paying video editors.

[22:39] So wait, you weren't willing to subscribe to GeForce now, but you would hire a person as a workaround, yeah? Hey, I gave someone a job. One last remaining question.

[22:52] You said you're having fun. Is that the primary reason you're switching? Because it's been more fun. No, the primary reason I am staying mainly on Linux is because it's Microsoft. When I... I have been actually only on Windows for the last two months

[23:06] because I didn't want to kind of give away that this is what I was going to do. My time on Windows is frustrating. There's been a lot of moments, like Linus pointed out, where I'd turn the computer on and it would bring me through three or four prompts

[23:18] and I'm just like... All full of dark patterns. Like, I don't care about being edged for Microsoft Edge. Like, stop it. Like, let me just play my video games, please. Yeah. Yeah, I'm staying and I'm staying on both systems.

[23:33] So I switched my laptop over for this challenge to Mint. That has honestly been like the biggest W. There has been zero loss. I have had zero drawback to Windows.

[23:46] I think it is only better. But a lot of that comes down to the use case is so simple. I'm just sitting in a browser. Every once in a while, I need to sign a PDF. Every once in a while I need to open a document.

[23:58] Both those things I can easily do. Other than that, I'm sitting in a browser. Every once in a while I'll be on a plane and I want to play Slaves of Fire. No problem. It can do all that kind of stuff. I've literally never ran into an issue.

[24:10] But any time I'm using another laptop on Windows, I'm like, oh, I just wish I was using my machine. So that's like a clear W, and I don't honestly think right now that I'm ever going back. On the desktop, it's a bit of a mixed bag, more similar to yours.

[24:23] So I have divided my machine kind of in half at this point. So I have... I think actually we're going to do a video on his kind of unique dual boot setup. So make sure you get subscribed.

[24:35] I was given a one terabyte for this challenge, which is actually running the distro. You know, you're supposed to get that bag. That's staying in there for you. Can we share? I was going to say, thanks. Bye, you. Thanks, Lauren. This is the payment for us having to do this for the last month.

[24:49] As for me, I was very surprised to discover that I can. I could. Linux is ready.

[25:01] And I think soon I will be too. I ran into so many moments throughout the last over a month. I mean, I didn't even bother removing my Linux installs after 30 days.

[25:13] I was pleasantly surprised so many times by how well something worked. but the compatibility barrier is still a tough one. If you're willing to be a Linux gamer, it's easier than it's ever been.

[25:26] There is so much to play that works either perfectly or well enough on Linux that if you start with, here's the platform that I have, I want something to do, it's easy.

[25:38] It's a very console-like experience and I actually mean that in a really positive way. However, I don't buy many consoles. and I do almost none of my gaming on the ones that I do.

[25:52] And if you want the broadest compatibility, and you don't want to think about it at all, Windows is still the king, especially if there's a social element to your gaming and if your group happens to want to play something

[26:04] that isn't Linux Pro. Like Marathon, another aspect of this, and the reason that I actually did just switch my system is because as a reviewer, the vast majority of the stuff that I need to do is Windows native.

[26:16] And so if I have a new Logitech SuperStrike X2 mouse or something, and I'm supposed to be using it and evaluating it, and what? I'm just going to give the only Linux perspective and hope that the third-party app that maybe will interface with this brand new hardware.

[26:33] No, come on. Be real. I need to be on Windows. I need to install the native app so that I can evaluate this hardware. And that happens a lot for me. With everything I just said out of the way, though, I'm not ready to go back to vanilla

[26:47] Windows either. It has been so refreshing to not be bothered a single time over the last couple of months that I happily extended my time without even thinking about it, and I think that my happy

[27:00] place is going to be to try and find the middle ground. I want to hang out in the Windows de-loading community for a bit. Then, if I can't make that work, I might distro hop for a few months and settle on Linux.

[27:13] I sincerely hope that by that time, Valve is ready with an NVIDIA capable SteamOS because I am like, super SteamOS-pilled still. I did end up with that in my home theater room and it just like, it's the most console-like

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[28:34] If you guys enjoyed this video, maybe go watch through the whole playlist. This one, and then also the first time we did it, if you want to see just how far we've come, how long ago was that? About over four years. It's almost five years ago.

[28:46] Four years. They have made four decades of progress. It's been insane. Actually. It's completely night and day.

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