• @recapitated@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    There’s never been a bad year for the Linux desktop. The share size doesn’t matter. So, yes, it is the year of the Linux desktop in my book and it has been that way for decades.

    • @QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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      445 months ago

      The share size doesn’t matter.

      Gotta disagree with you there. Market adoption should be a primary concern of those who care about the Linux ecosystem.

      • @Kedly@lemm.ee
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        295 months ago

        Steam deck BAYBEE. None of the other pocket computers have my attention now if they arent built for Valves version of Linux

        • @QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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          295 months ago

          This is exactly the “popular => bad” mentality that needs to die. Good products are good—and perhaps more importantly, bad products are bad—irrespective of their popularity. Linux is a masterpiece as a result of millions of hours of thoughtful and rigorous engineering, not the absence of its wide adoption on desktop. Windows is a dumpster fire as a result of millions of hours of reckless code vomit, not its ubiquity on desktop. See also: the Android operating system you know and (if I had to guess) love.

          • @nexguy@lemmy.world
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            -85 months ago

            I use windows and it runs prefectly fine for me so I never said it would get bad… just become more like windows.

            • @rtxn@lemmy.world
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              115 months ago

              Like Windows, how? An operating system has dozens of properties that could be “like Windows”, please specify.

            • @Kedly@lemm.ee
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              95 months ago

              Windows used to be alright/tolerable like 3 operating systems ago, each new version takes features away and brings new bugs that are more and more annoying in their attempt to get a slice of Apple’s closed garden pie. Their auto sign in feature has caused me SO MANY headaches when trying to sign in with a different user

        • midnight
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          55 months ago

          No it won’t. The beauty of Linux is that it can transform completely to fit your needs.

          Making Linux more noob friendly isn’t going to take away my custom terminal-centric tiling wm arch install.

          More users = more developers = more options. Linux is already awesome, but growing will only bring more good.

          • R0cket_M00se
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            25 months ago

            Growing will also bring an increased attack surface and justification for writing malware for Linux due to market adoption.

            It’s not all good, there is going to be an increased security vulnerability along with it.

            • @joojmachine@lemmy.ml
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              35 months ago

              And so will there be more people to look into and fix the vulnerabilities, specially if we can foster a bigger community of open source developers by being a healthier community overall.

              • @mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                14 months ago

                That is less likely though. Nerds who like developing FOSS for hobbyist and ideological needs are already doing so and more users will likely only increase normal users into linux, not developers usually

      • @RoyaltyInTraining@lemmy.world
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        135 months ago

        Linux runs people’s cars, phones, routers, sometimes even fridges. And don’t even get me started on servers. Linux is the most useful OS on the planet. The desktop is just another thing for it to conquer.

        • @Aux@lemmy.world
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          -35 months ago

          You’re wrong though. Linux kernel might be running on all of these things, but Linux desktop OSes do not because they’re shit.

            • @Aux@lemmy.world
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              15 months ago

              Lack of standards, compatibility and totalitarian control of a single person. Pretty much everything that’s important for a Linux kernel is lacking in userland.

              • @RoyaltyInTraining@lemmy.world
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                25 months ago

                We have standards like pipewire, xdg portals and wayland in active development that try to cover anything a desktop OS might need. Lately there has been a huge push towards them, as the standards they replaced weren’t future proof at all.

                But I take it that you are more concerned about fragmentation of these standards. I can almost guarantee that a lot if it will just whither away with time. Noone wants to maintain ancient protocols like X11 anymore. We might have another turbulent few years in this transition, but the end result will be worth it.

                And I don’t get what you mean with compatibility exactly. There are lots of ways to define that, and the Linux desktop is excellent in many of them. We have xwayland for legacy applications, loads of translation layers to bring together older graphics APIs under the main vulkan drivers, WINE to run windows software, etc. You’re gonna have to be more specific there.

                • @Aux@lemmy.world
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                  15 months ago

                  Yeah, some things are getting standardized, that’s great. But many are not even on a roadmap. People still argue which init system is the best, lol. And don’t get me started on package managers…

                  As for compatibility, even if we forget about the apps, let’s just focus on some modern features. Multi monitor DPI settings work in some distros, but don’t work in others. HDR works in some, but not the others. DRM, proprietary tech, etc. Why the fuck things just don’t work everywhere?

      • @lunachocken@lemm.ee
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        75 months ago

        Stupid take.

        Linux has some of the best device compatability because it’s baked into the kernel. Don’t need to download a driver in most cases, just update the kernel.

        Plus it’s known to be a great os for a developer. Also the apt repositories or other repos make installing an app on windows store look like a toddlers first steps in comparison.

        Oh and if you use an android phone then you’re using a Linux kernel.

        The foundation of the Android platform is the Linux kernel. For example, the Android Runtime (ART) relies on the Linux kernel for underlying functionalities such as threading and low-level memory management. 4 May 2023 Platform architecture - Android Developers

      • @recapitated@lemmy.world
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        45 months ago

        I’ve been tinkering with it since the late 90s and running it as my daily driver both at home and at work for nearly 20 years now. It’s extremely useful.

      • @1984@lemmy.today
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        5 months ago

        People are dumb here, they buy apple.

        "Hey look at my new iPhone that costs 20000 sek and can’t do anything important better than the last five previous iPhones "

        But it’s really fast at idling in people’s pockets.

        I admit the MacBook air has a nice cpu, it stays cool. But most people don’t use anywhere near what the cpu is capable of.

          • @1984@lemmy.today
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            15 months ago

            Critical thinking seems to be a thing of the past… Maybe it’s because they feel like we are on the end stretch of society anyway, may as well enjoy the days left.

        • @LemmyIsFantastic@lemmy.world
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          05 months ago

          Your Fedora must be huge!

          It’s amazing to me in 2024 we still have fanboys saying this shit ad nauseum since 1995.

          Linux is a shitty desktop environment unless you like to tinker. Apple and Windows provide a far better experience to those who want shit to just work and be compatible.

          • @agent_flounder@lemmy.world
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            15 months ago

            Odd. What distros have you had such poor experiences with? What sort of things do you use Linux for?

            Mint has been tinker-free for me for years as my main desktop. I have had Mac and Windows laptops during that time, as well. But I rarely use them for any of my hobbies.

            I use it to actually do stuff so the last thing I want is tinkering getting in the way of that. And it hasn’t for years.

            Now, to be fair, gaming is another story since not everything works easily.

            Anyway, I doubt Mint is the only distro that doesn’t require much fiddling with.

            Things have come a long, long way since the 90s (I was using Mandrake at that time).

            For example, the install process for Fedora and Mint are slicker than for Windows if you ask me.

            I mean, my kid has been using Linux as her desktop since she was like 10 and she doesn’t seem to have any problems (except ok sure, stupid Nvidia …we went AMD with her new system). Granted she mostly just surfs and plays Minecraft.

            I wouldn’t hesitate to set up a non-techie with one of the mainstream, stable distros depending on what they want to use.

            I don’t think it is the year of the Linux desktop by any stretch but I do think the numbers will trend slightly up over the next five years as steamdeck-alikes get more popular and more progress is made on compatibility and natively written games, and as Windows enshittification continues.

            • @BURN@lemmy.world
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              15 months ago

              I’ve personally had poor experiences with Mint, Fedora, Ubuntu, Manjaro and one or two others I’ve tried. Every single one required a few hours of tweaking in the terminal to get it even close to being functional, and I constantly found new things it wouldn’t work with (hardware, software, games, etc)

              After about a week of being unable to use my computer as I’d like to (online gaming and photo editing) I went back to Windows.

          • @papabobolious@feddit.nu
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            15 months ago

            Nothing just works.

            I run Linux, not because I think it’s great, but because Windows is awful, and keeps getting worse. Furthermore it keeps abusing its majority market share to get away with increasingly scummy behaviour.

            My Linux experience has been a lot more tinker free than Windows. There’s a ton of distros to choose from for the uninvested, my 60 year old mum runs Linux at this point and the only difference is she stopped calling all the time for tech support.

          • @Sanctus@lemmy.world
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            05 months ago

            Install Linux Mint with the GUI installer a la windows, done.

            You are factually wrong unless you specify a distro. But even arch has arch install now.

            • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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              05 months ago

              Does the audio work? Including the microphone?

              What about the Nvidia drivers? Wifi drivers? Printer drivers?

              Maybe it works when you don’t do anything with your computer, but most people aren’t like that. Linux just really requires you to tinker more than other OSes. Sometimes that is a good thing, but never for a non-techy.

              You will just have to come to terms with that.

              • @Octopus1348@lemy.lol
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                5 months ago

                Everything you listed would be solved if Linux was as mainstream as Windows.

                For me, I don’t use Nvidia, WiFi works, old HP printer works, just need to install a package, a 1-year old Canon printer works out of the box on Ubuntu, but on Arch I need to extract the stuff from the driver .deb and place into the it into the right directories. Audio and microphone works flawlessly. This is the case on ASUS ZenBook, an underpowered ASUS Vivobook or something and a 2012 iMac, though on that one I need a modification to /etc/default/grub to be able to control the brightness.

              • jkozaka
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                14 months ago

                I have never had to worry about wifi drivers, and my microphone has always worked out of the box with my computer.

                Proprietary nvidia drivers are a bit trickier, but mostly painless.

                Printers work flawlessly for me, I have a modern cheap hp printer, so I had low expectations, but my laptop running mint can print and scan with the built in applications.

    • @henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      5 months ago

      Me too. As one data point, I don’t use mine to access the web. However, it did get me confident with Linux as a viable choice for my desktop today. I went on to install it dual boot on my main and rarely if ever open Windows. It’s probably a couple months behind in updates.

      • Programmer Belch
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        145 months ago

        In the end I just uninstalled windows because every time I opened it, it tried installing all updates and I had to wait 20-30 mins to get to the desktop

        • @henfredemars@infosec.pub
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          135 months ago

          And don’t forget the ten different single app updaters because there’s no centralized update system. There’s just so much stuff running all the time.

          • @papabobolious@feddit.nu
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            15 months ago

            Hey so I know you deleted the Edge shortcut from your desktop the last three times, but this time I think you’ll really like it, so I added it back!

          • @BURN@lemmy.world
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            15 months ago

            Tbh I prefer individual installation control and don’t really like the Linux store page method. I’d much rather install directly from the developer.

        • @Kvan@sh.itjust.works
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          35 months ago

          Yeah, I just ended up fully disabling windows updates. Still do most stuff on Linux but only boot windows for some specific games

      • Ahhh that’s kind of like how it started for me. Now the things I can do on Linux far outstrip the things I can’t, if I switched back to Windows.

        Have you messed around with different desktop environments (DEs) yet? That’s my favourite part of Linux. I can’t imagine using a laptop without tiling window manager

        • @BURN@lemmy.world
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          25 months ago

          To be honest, DEs are one of the biggest things I dislike about trying to use Linux. Nothing works with each other, solutions for one don’t work for another and unless you spend weeks configuring them they all look and function the same.

          Windows and Mac are simple. There’s one option, it works well and doesn’t need a bunch of tweaking to make it tolerable (at least to me)

        • @thoughtorgan@lemmy.world
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          25 months ago

          I’m back to Windows unfortunately.

          I miss gnome with a passion. I loved the win key overview, it was great for dragging windows across monitors.

      • @mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        14 months ago

        Sadly there aren’t even Indian manufacturers with linux preinstalled. I’ve heard of starlabs, slimbook, tuxedo, system76 etc. only to find out that most doesn’t ship to india and are not availiable in the stores like flipkart, amazon and local stores, where most of people computers. Still, still India is at 15% now and what if market already has linux preinstalled systems!

      • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        15 months ago

        This is mostly from browser stats though.

        Sure, you can browse on it, but I wouldn’t have thought it enough to skew the numbers in any meaningful way.

      • @Samsy@lemmy.mlOP
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        15 months ago

        Time to Sort the Steam Deck out like ChromeOS, then the Linux market goes back to 2%?

        Right? RIGHT?

      • @sploosh@lemmy.world
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        05 months ago

        School districts buy Chromebooks by the thousands. Steam Deck is definitely paving the way in terms of demonstrating a consumer use case for Linux, but I would be shocked if there are even 1/100th the number of them in the wild as there are Chromebooks.

  • @kinther@lemmy.world
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    185 months ago

    I switched to Ubuntu 22.04 on 2023-12-31. I had used a bunch of other distros back in 2008-2012, then got tired of manually tweaking things constantly. Things have come a long way and there are way more options to make things work. I don’t have to spend hours on the CLI or reboot frequently.

    So yeah, I’m going to stick with Ubuntu for a bit, then switch to something else.

  • @jaschen@lemm.ee
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    135 months ago

    I’m trying my very best to love Linux but I’m having so much trouble with Mint.

    I’m running a Mint vm on a proxmox to try it out and for some reason my back button and forward button on my mouse maps to the scroll wheel. The scroll wheel is mapped correctly. I installed Spice to improve performance and so far it’s amazing, but the mouse is annoying.

    If I run RDP, it works perfectly, but the lag is too annoying.

    Does anyone here have suggestions? Thanks.

    • @agent_flounder@lemmy.world
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      195 months ago

      If I were you I would install Mint on a second drive.

      Pretty sure your issues aren’t with Mint they’re with the virtualization platform.

      You can get a cheap $40 SSD and install the OS on that.

      Be sure to unplug the windows drive before installing Mint to the other drive. Then plug the Win drive back in. Now you can use the bios boot menu to boot into either.

      • @Vlyn@lemmy.zip
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        -15 months ago

        Be sure to unplug the windows drive before installing Mint to the other drive.

        Why would you do that? Totally unnecessary. When Windows is already installed any Linux installation respects it without issues. The problem is the other way around, if you install Linux first and then install Windows afterwards on a second partition/drive it nukes your Linux bootloader.

        Especially in times of M.2 drives (which are often behind the GPU) you only annoy people by telling them to unplug their Windows drive first. And they might want to use a second partition on that drive if it’s bigger.

        • @agent_flounder@lemmy.world
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          15 months ago

          I would do that because the last time I tried installing a new distro it fucked my windows bootloader. So your statement isn’t universally true, sorry to say. I have only had this issue once on one distro. I have not spent the time digging into the underlying cause yet. It may well be distro related. I figured I would save a noob a potential gotcha, however.

        • @histic@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          05 months ago

          always unplug the windows drive I’ve fucked my windows bootloader so many times because if your windows drive shows up in drive order before your Linux drive it’ll fuck with it

    • @Swarfega@lemm.ee
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      125 months ago

      I’ve run Mint in Virtual Box on Windows with no issues. Really though, the move from Windows to Mint is best done on bare metal.

      • @jaschen@lemm.ee
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        15 months ago

        I know you deleted your comment, but running a Linux server is not the same as using Linux as a pure desktop environment. I’m not going to surf a website using proxmox.

        • udon
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          15 months ago

          Yes, deleted because it didn’t really make sense in the desktop context. But proxmox has a debian derivate unter the hood I think, so everything apart from the DE seems to be fine for you already. That was my point I think. And actually that is what makes the biggest difference with Linux imho, the UIs are pretty standardized these days. Windows, buttons, mouse, unless you specifically want to go fancy. Because you mention web browsing specifically: that is actually the same, isn’t it? Firefox or chromium, not sure how that would complicate things?

      • @jaschen@lemm.ee
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        25 months ago

        Its a logitech G502SE. It doesn’t look like it has drivers. I also had problems with a logitech steering wheel when I was running Mint on bare metal. Just not a very linux friendly company.

        • @histic@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          05 months ago

          you could try installing antimicrox I had to install it for my azeron keypad to even work for some reason I don’t remember why it was a long time ago

          • @jaschen@lemm.ee
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            15 months ago

            I installed something similar to this called “Input Mapper”. The problem is the mouse key is not differentiating from the scroll inputs. So I can’t remap something that isn’t there.

  • @Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    5 months ago

    Wow, I was just going to ask if it was 2% a couple years ago, then checked the link. That is a really fast increase.

  • XenGiA
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    65 months ago

    Where do they get their data?

  • @nexussapphire@lemm.ee
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    65 months ago

    If profit and growth continue to be above all else, I don’t see why it wouldn’t gain a decent market share in the next couple of decades.

    On the other hand, the Unix model of selling hardware to help pay for software development might breed a more competitive hardware space if there is a big enough user base.

  • XenGiA
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    5 months ago

    If you add chrome os which is Linux you even go over 5%

  • Victor
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    55 months ago

    Really curious about all those “unknown”. Solid piece out of everybody.

    • @Samsy@lemmy.mlOP
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      45 months ago

      I would bet it’s a mix of win/Linux with people don’t spoofing their system. Mac users don’t hide using a Mac, well, they are doing more like the opposite.

  • @mightyfoolish@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    2023 was the year of the Linux desktop.

    1. Got Discord and Zoom off the store
    2. Zoom screen and webcam sharing just worked
    3. Was able to even switch Bluetooth profile through GUI
    4. Essentially any game that didn’t use a kernel level spyware works
    5. Chromebook hardware in the $500 range is pretty good
    6. Must software is web based.

    I recommend OpenSuse Tumbleweed. Install once, update weekly or biweekly. (It’s a rolling release, so it doesn’t have major upgrades like Windows 10 to 11 does.) About a month ago I did an upgrade on my old laptop. Handled 2 years of updates flawlessly.

    • @pkill@programming.dev
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      05 months ago

      I left tumbleweed for alpine and artix because even if you always use --no-recommends for package installation it seems to ship just too much bloat and I left it after it shipped some broken software I didn’t need anyway but must’ve affected system stability too severely, iSCSI iirc

      • @mightyfoolish@lemmy.world
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        15 months ago

        artix

        Wow, are you able to use the new s6 supervisor or service manager yet, or is it too early yet? I saw an initial post once but didn’t follow it’s development.

        Sorry you had problems with Tumbleweed. The forums and subreddit are very supportive, no matter how you installed the distro. It’s actually why I moved to Tumbleweed from Arch.

  • @pHr34kY@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I feel this is now being driven by the decline of desktops in general.

    Every now and again I meet someone who somehow gets through life without a desktop.

    I can understand someone who owns a Mac/Windows PC just binning it out of frustration and not buying another one. They are just life-sucking levels of horror at this point.

    • Programmer Belch
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      15 months ago

      I’m sure those users would like an experience like a game console or a phone with just apps and shortcuts

      • @JCreazy@midwest.social
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        05 months ago

        It’s been years since I owned a tablet. I felt that they were redundant because I have a phone and a desktop and a laptop and a Chromebook.

        • @Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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          05 months ago

          Yes, in that case, it really is. But if you have both a phone and a tablet with a keyboard, any kind of PC might be redundant, if you don’t do any specialized task like coding/video/gaming/photography,…