Ulu-Mulu-no-die

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Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: June 4th, 2025

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  • The vast majority of desktop users don’t give two flips about security, nor freedom, they don’t even know what those things are and don’t care to be informed.

    I’ve even seen a few (on reddit) asking for Linux to support giving kernel level permissions to applications, so they can play a few videogames, they are fine with having rootkits on their PC, that’s the level of “care” they have.

    But that’s ok, Linux is already a de-facto “monopoly” on the server side, the most important one, it doesn’t need to win over also desktops.




  • Keep all work stuff contained in a (encrypted) virtual machine, that’s what I do.

    I work for a big enterprise, in a case like that, you seriously don’t want sensitive company data on your personal PC, it’s asking for troubles if you do.

    Our company PCs are Windows, I got permission to install VIrtualbox so I can use Linux that’s so much better for many things. I encrypted the VM I use for work, so I can keep a copy on my personal PC when I work at home, without any risk of data breaches.

    The advantage of a VM is that it makes it very easy to separate work from home, you start it up when you work, you shut it down when you’re done working and it doesn’t “interfere” with your personal stuff that way.







  • What you say is especially true for laptops, those have the highest chance of having weird non-standard components that give a lot of problems on Linux.

    Much easier on desktops, especially if you build your own, you get to choose which components go into it.

    Nvidia is shit on laptops but it’s fine on desktops.

    I’ve been using Linux for over 20 years, always had Nvidia on my self-built desktops, my experience has always been flawless, I just have to install proprietary drivers.

    My experience with laptops has been hit and miss, until I learned to buy laptops “full Intel only”, on those everything works out of the box.