What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?
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Nice meet you too...
It was just an opinion mate...
And the folk who escaped the toxicity of X, Facebook, etc, etc to the, supposedly, more moderate Mastodon just love reading post's like your reply.
Oh, and, fuck you dickhead!
@avoca@gladtech.social My pronouns are in my bio, I am not your "mate", nor am I a dickhead. I am a woman who's been dealing with the toxicity of the Linux community for two decades and you're victim blaming here.
But nice to meet you too. -
@avoca@gladtech.social My pronouns are in my bio, I am not your "mate", nor am I a dickhead. I am a woman who's been dealing with the toxicity of the Linux community for two decades and you're victim blaming here.
But nice to meet you too.Fair enough.
Not really my fault though.
And, where I'm from, "mate' is a non-gendered term of de-escalation.
Oh, and, are you complaining about the toxicity of the "Linux Community", or providing an example of it?
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@CedC@diaspodon.fr Do not peddle AI slop as the savior here. AI is not helpful, it is not useful. It is a prediction engine of what sounds like the right answer. Not what is the right answer, but what will sound plausibly like a correct answer.
That slop is part of the reason why the kindness in the Linux community is so important right now. AI is putting a lot of bad information out there. It is making up urls for people to download packages from that malicious folk then go and register domains for to offer up malware to these trusting people. It makes up names of packages and programs that do not exist, sending users into forums asking for total nonsense because the pedo-bot or the bullshit engine told them that would fix their problem.@deathkitten
You are going to make me soud like an AI fan, which is not the case, but your statement is incorrect.Yes AI is a prédiction engine, but so are we.
If you make a llm play chess, which is not what it has been trained for, we now have proof that it _does_ create an internal representation of the board and its pieces event if it is not supposed to "know" the rules.
1/2
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Fair enough.
Not really my fault though.
And, where I'm from, "mate' is a non-gendered term of de-escalation.
Oh, and, are you complaining about the toxicity of the "Linux Community", or providing an example of it?
@avoca@gladtech.social Yup, let's call the woman who's angry about victim blaming toxic.
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@avoca@gladtech.social Yup, let's call the woman who's angry about victim blaming toxic.
FFS, READ you own stuff.
Your response to a generalised opinion was absolutely toxic.
Suggest you get counselling for that massive chip on your shoulder, or grow-up.
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FFS, READ you own stuff.
Your response to a generalised opinion was absolutely toxic.
Suggest you get counselling for that massive chip on your shoulder, or grow-up.
@avoca@gladtech.social lol, okay
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What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?Not the installation process.
Not finding a distro.
Not getting programs to work.
Not troubleshooting.
Not hardware compatibility.The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.They ask a simple question and:
People respond "Did you Google it?"
People respond "RTFM"
People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.We can't expect people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.
Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.
The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.
@Linux_in_a_Bit So true. I'm too dumb to fix my own problems or to understand the arch wiki. All I do is meow all day and drink hot chocolate :3
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What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?Not the installation process.
Not finding a distro.
Not getting programs to work.
Not troubleshooting.
Not hardware compatibility.The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.They ask a simple question and:
People respond "Did you Google it?"
People respond "RTFM"
People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.We can't expect people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.
Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.
The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.
@Linux_in_a_Bit Oh absolutely. Incidentally I read that as "finding a bistro", and I do think Linux could be more helpful there.
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@deathkitten
You are going to make me soud like an AI fan, which is not the case, but your statement is incorrect.Yes AI is a prédiction engine, but so are we.
If you make a llm play chess, which is not what it has been trained for, we now have proof that it _does_ create an internal representation of the board and its pieces event if it is not supposed to "know" the rules.
1/2
"proof" o_O
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"proof" o_O
@pikesley@mastodon.me.uk I just wanted to say I love your display name.
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What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?Not the installation process.
Not finding a distro.
Not getting programs to work.
Not troubleshooting.
Not hardware compatibility.The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.They ask a simple question and:
People respond "Did you Google it?"
People respond "RTFM"
People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.We can't expect people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.
Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.
The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.
People respond "Did you Google it?"
Actually understandable after answering the same question many times.
People respond "RTFM"
People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.Above responses have been seen on antiX and MX Forums, the persons concerned were warned or in at least one known case banned.
The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.
Agree which is why I and others are present as helpers on Linux forums, mostly antiX and MX.
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@Linux_in_a_Bit @Kancept sure. But in days where chats are not fire and forget like irc the chat is asynchronous. So after a day or 2 the timezone argument IMHO doesn't work anymore. I am totally fine if a response takes a day or so. Sure it is frustrating it takes that long if something breaks on you but its reasonable. But beyond that it quickly turns into feeling like you aren't heard
@mtrnord @Linux_in_a_Bit no, I get that. It's like yelling into the void. You had said a few hours in your comment. A day or so, I can see the frustration.
For me, it's not so much time, but how so many use Discord these days as a support channel. No history to even search, really.
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Fair enough.
Not really my fault though.
And, where I'm from, "mate' is a non-gendered term of de-escalation.
Oh, and, are you complaining about the toxicity of the "Linux Community", or providing an example of it?
@avoca Did you really just claim to use mate as a "term of de-escalation" after ending your previous reply with fuck you dickhead?
Sorry to say this but: fuck you, dickhead!
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Seconded. It's been said that Apple hates computers but loves users, and that Linux hates users but loves computers. There's room for everyone at the console. Death to the elitist penguin.
@xinjinmeng @Linux_in_a_Bit Hates computers but loves money would be nearer the mark.
One difficulty with converts from other operating systems is that they will have naturally developed a preference for the way something works on their old OS and tend to consider any deviation from this to be a flaw. Even flexibility can be viewed as a flaw, because flexibility demands choices, and choices are complicated. Adaptation always requires some effort. -
@avoca Did you really just claim to use mate as a "term of de-escalation" after ending your previous reply with fuck you dickhead?
Sorry to say this but: fuck you, dickhead!
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Seconded. It's been said that Apple hates computers but loves users, and that Linux hates users but loves computers. There's room for everyone at the console. Death to the elitist penguin.
@xinjinmeng @Linux_in_a_Bit We had an Apple laptop at home once, brought home from work.
We couldn't get it to work on our home LAN (which had no other Apple equipment on it). There were various settings that looked like they might be something to do with networking, but they all had dumbed down names and descriptions and we failed to find the one that should have been labelled "turn off all the crap that assumes an Apple networking ecology and turn on the DHCP client instead".
She took it back, swapped it for a Windows laptop, and has had no trouble ever since.
(This was a long time ago. One might hope that Apple laptops are rather better at connecting to non-Apple networks these days?)
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What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?Not the installation process.
Not finding a distro.
Not getting programs to work.
Not troubleshooting.
Not hardware compatibility.The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.They ask a simple question and:
People respond "Did you Google it?"
People respond "RTFM"
People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.We can't expect people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.
Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.
The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.
@Linux_in_a_Bit This is a problem everywhere, not just Linux. I used to belong to a clockmaker's group. I once saw someone ask, "Is WD-40 good for lubricating my clock?". The first answer posted was, "You must be the stupidest person on the planet." Yeah, I dumped that group.
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@avoca@gladtech.social You mean the start where you blamed people for not picking the right distro to start with like it justified the abuse they got? The reason I swore at you from jump, mate, is that you are blaming the victim in the situation. That's not okay.
@sco_tty@mastodon.social -
@avoca@gladtech.social You mean the start where you blamed people for not picking the right distro to start with like it justified the abuse they got? The reason I swore at you from jump, mate, is that you are blaming the victim in the situation. That's not okay.
@sco_tty@mastodon.socialUmmm... yes it is.
No 'victim' in it. More than likely lazy-bones expecting everyone to drop everything and hold their hand. That's "not okay".
Look, what is wrong with you two???
Grow the fuck-up and get off your moral horses.
Life sucks for ALL of us atm.
I just don't need your crap, holier-than-tho dribble moralising a simple OP with a slightly different opinion.
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Ummm... yes it is.
No 'victim' in it. More than likely lazy-bones expecting everyone to drop everything and hold their hand. That's "not okay".
Look, what is wrong with you two???
Grow the fuck-up and get off your moral horses.
Life sucks for ALL of us atm.
I just don't need your crap, holier-than-tho dribble moralising a simple OP with a slightly different opinion.
@avoca@gladtech.social okay boomer @sco_tty@mastodon.social