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This is our fourth open mic night at the Linux Saloon. This is our opportunity to talk anything in general tech and open source realm. Like every other Saturday night, Linux is always on tap.
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Interesting topic that @CubicleNate and @Norbert brought up regarding whether it is actually beneficial for a distro to copy the Windows look and feel. I would argue that there are two very different facets to that issue: 1) the Windows appearance, and 2) certain OS paradigms that Windows has established.
So I am in favor of the implementation of sensible Windows paradigms in Linux distros, without necessarily copying the exact presentation layer.
Also regarding @CubicleNate 's comment about ARM being a heterogeneous mess with no standards, 100% agreed. I remember in an interview where Linus Torvalds mentioned that what motivated him to create the Linux kernel was the sense of enablement when he got a PC with a i286 or i386 clone processor, which enabled him to code for a standard instruction set that would work on anything that supported that same architecture, regardless of brand or manufacturer. That is the total opposite of the ARM infrastructure, and it completely turns me off, because I have to do so much research before buying to see if the hardware will support my preferred distro and learn about all its idiosyncracies. Whereas I can buy pretty much any x86-64 machine and be almost guaranteed to at least be able to boot and install software on it even with the most obscure Linux distro out there.
I think this is quite accurate. To copy the Windows look closely can certainly raise some unsustainable expectations that the experience would be the same and when that .exe doesn’t give you the driver you expect, you make an inaccurate assessment about the quality or completeness of the operating system.
I sort of think the general familiarity of the Plasma desktop COULD lead to this expectation which is why I often think something like Unity or even GNOME is a better starting point for many but that is just an opinion. Plasma is my jam as I think it is the ultimate in desktop experience but that is obviously not an opinion shared by all.
Also, not a popular opinion, but I truly think that ARM is just a toy platform until some real standards emerge. I love my Raspberry Pi computers but I don’t view them as serious computers. Maybe the Apple M1 will change it, but I will stick with x86 for the foreseeable future for serious computing.
Continue the discussion at forum.tuxdigital.com