You forgot the part where you have to look up what to write in the terminal whenever you want to do something, but I forgive you, it's easy to forget something you need to do daily.
You take the mouse and do clicky clicky. Luckily theres usually one control panel on linux in contrast to three more and more legacy versions in windows where you need to go three levels deep in order to change the local ip address.
You realise the comment I was replying to was "I bet you never used Linux or you used it 20 years ago" and I simply replied to that and you're the one who decided to shift the conversation to talk about ARM vs x86/64 and their compatibility with other OS... Right? You realize you derailed the conversation?
No one except you is talking about using Linux on specific hardware and I was replying to a question after I talked about having to look up what to enter in the terminal, which is the same experience no matter if isn't ARM or x... God damn, how do you manage to tie your shoelaces in the morning?
If you have to do that to install anything, it's either always your package manager or something that can be copy-pasted from the included installation guide.
You don't even need the terminal in most cases. You have GUIs. Simple ones.
I'd rather have to type a line than struggle with installing 10 pieces of unnecessary bloatware individually
On the other hand, it takes only four letters and hitting enter for me to update everything installed on my pc so not that hard to memorize a few commands.
You forgot the part where you have to look up what to write in the terminal whenever you want to do something, but I forgive you, it's easy to forget something you need to do daily.
You take the mouse and do clicky clicky. Luckily theres usually one control panel on linux in contrast to three more and more legacy versions in windows where you need to go three levels deep in order to change the local ip address.
I literally click one button and it starts the entire automated update process. The only interruption is asking for a password
You probably never used Linux. Or you used it 20 years ago.
Last time was... Oh... 4 months ago, before my RPi was put in storage?
Don't hurt your back with that goalpost my man!
You realise the comment I was replying to was "I bet you never used Linux or you used it 20 years ago" and I simply replied to that and you're the one who decided to shift the conversation to talk about ARM vs x86/64 and their compatibility with other OS... Right? You realize you derailed the conversation?
RIGHT?
No one except you is talking about using Linux on specific hardware and I was replying to a question after I talked about having to look up what to enter in the terminal, which is the same experience no matter if isn't ARM or x... God damn, how do you manage to tie your shoelaces in the morning?
Why the fuck do you think you got down voted when you brought up the RPI.
I mean... Look at the way you act in your replies and it's pretty clear why people get downvoted when they ridicule Linux users 🤔
If you have to do that to install anything, it's either always your package manager or something that can be copy-pasted from the included installation guide.
You don't even need the terminal in most cases. You have GUIs. Simple ones.
I'd rather have to type a line than struggle with installing 10 pieces of unnecessary bloatware individually
Imagine thinking the terminal is something to be forced into.
On the other hand, it takes only four letters and hitting enter for me to update everything installed on my pc so not that hard to memorize a few commands.