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bigmclargehuge

@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world

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bigmclargehuge ,

I was on a GTX1080 for a long time. Nothing absolutely dealbreaking, but lots of small naggling issues that took lots of annoying troubleshooting to fix. Plus, abysmal DX12 performance (which is a limitation of the cards Pascal architecture as far as I know, not everyone experiences it but it's common enough).

Switched to an RX 7600XT and wow. Night and day. Zero configuration, zero weird issues, games perform fantastic at high settings (CP2077 at 1440p/High settings across the board is a pretty stable 80+ FPS, compared to 50fps at low and medium and 1080p with the old card, even on Windows). Complete gamechanger.

bigmclargehuge ,

And then, experience the joy of that program spreading its files to 6 different directories, all at different levels of your drive. Who cares about having a sensical file system that clearly separates system from user?

bigmclargehuge ,

To be fair, I've had some issues on Windows that have left microsoft support staff saying "yeah man Idk good luck hope you figure that out lol". Meanwhile, on Arch, I've never had a problem that didn't have a solution, or at least a clearly documented cause (which is almost always just as important as the solution) right there in plain text on the ArchWiki.

Plus, when a windows error happens, you usually just get a little message saying "It dun broke 🤷‍♂️". Again, on linux, 9 times out of 10, I get a pretty detailed error message at least telling me what broke, and maybe even some hints as to why. I get that Windows has error logs, but I bever have to dig for that info on linux, it's always presented to me because it's important.

bigmclargehuge ,

That's potentially my biggest issue woth Windows. You aren't actually made to understand what went wrong. Linux will give you lots of information. It can be overwhelming if you're just used to seeing "This app stopped working, wait or close it?", but once you're used to it, you realize that info usually give you all the tools you need to fix your problem.

bigmclargehuge ,

I was just about to say, yes it can get tiresome to hear the same debates over and over, but it's kind of what makes FOSS great. We can debate about it and actually have our stances make a difference in the end result of how our systems function.

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