Don't tell me you switched to Linux. Tell me WHY! 2
Breaking: Digg crashes under weight of I switched to Linux posts, but nobody spends enough time explaining why they did!.
If I had to hand tweak every application, if my system crashed every day, if I had to reinstall from scratch every 6 months, if I still needed a Windows machine for certain things, if it needed more powerful hardware, if it ran slower, and if I had to buy all new peripherals I would still choose something like Ubuntu* Linux over Windows XP or Vista.
The fact that NONE of these are the case should put things into perspective.
People don’t switch to Linux because they wake up bored one day and can’t think of anything else to do. They do it because regardless of the inconvenience, the time required, the unknowns, they have to do SOMETHING to improve their relationship with their PCs.
There are people out there who love Windows, but I think that most simply tolerate it. Tolerating Windows is what you do if you don’t have a Mac**. That’s just the way it is, and the unexplained disk activity, slow downs, crashes and viruses are just part of the deal.
You don’t “switch” to Linux, you ESCAPE Windows.
For those like me who sit every day in front of a Linux Desktop that they are proud of, switching is not an academic, nor sterile process. It’s an awakening into feelings of liberation, empowerment and even astonishment at working with a glorious OS that is free, and “the man” doesn’t have a piece of.
Do people switch to Linux from a Mac? Some do, but it’s often about principles than the nut and bolts. No, the vast majority of Linux Desktop adopters are Windows people who simply YEARN for change. The growth of Linux on the desktop is pure and simply evidence that many people DO NOT like, and are no longer willing to PUT UP WITH Windows.
There is a tipping point at which a Windows user will look for something else. Joe Average will probably buy a Mac, but the reason why many Linux Desktop users are geeks is because they are the people who have the perception that they can get Linux up and running.
The irony of the average Ubuntu User’s Profile
Ironically, the typical Ubuntu user is in some ways least suited to the OS. “Your granny” or other “normal” people who just surf the web, check their gmail account, skype, IM and do some basic document work is actually the perfect candidate for something like Ubuntu right now.
The Walmart and Sears $199 Ubuntu PCs are a perfectly positioned product, combining cheap hardware that adequately runs Linux with a the low tech savvy consumer. Likewise, something I’ll blog about soon is my Media Center based on a $329 Dell. I got it up and running in 40 minutes with Ubuntu including all the bells, whistles and codecs. No glitches, no problems, no tweaks, no issues. It just installed and worked.
It’s us geeks who want to take it to the limits that have to get under the hood, but that’s also why Windows wasn’t working out for us.
Fixing Linux issues is a doddle compared to fixing Windows issues
Seriously. To any Windows user who thumbs their nose at the need to get down and dirty with the Linux terminal, I say, “Well at least we CAN!”. What do you do when something mysteriously stops working in Windows?
- 1) Reboot
- 2) Reinstall application
- 3) Reboot
- 4) Reinstall associated applications
- 3) Reboot
- 4) Reinstall OS
Not exactly, but my point is that fixing an issue with something under Linux is a matter of using Google to find the fix, then some copy and pasting some commands from some helpful soul out there. This level of ease and visibility is simply unavailable for Windows.. sometimes you are just SOL.
Don’t tell me I’m wrong because that argument doesn’t stand up. I’ve used Windows heavily from it’s initial release through XP and I’m telling you that I had problems that made me want to throw it out the window.
Oh.. that’s because I’m dumb? SWEET! A dumb person who can’t even keep Windows running properly can install and fully maintain 5 functional bleeding edge Linux machines including desktops and web servers - SVN, Rails, LAMP, mongrel clusters, NFS and SSHFS all over the place and more eye candy than you can shake a stick at, not to mention a suite of productivity tools that could design and launch the space shuttle. Tell the world, you don’t have to be smarter than dumb to add printers, webcams, midi devices, drives or any other peripheral to a Linux box. WooHoo!
If you don’t get the point, feel free to come over and I’ll stick it in your ear.
Open Source Changes People
I didn’t get it at first.. I didn’t understand why people hovered on forums giving help and spent their time creating free stuff.
For years my income revolved around an online store that sold niche technology. I hooked up a developer community and a user community, and I took a cut of the sales. The site actually had a policy of “NO FREE STUFF”, so you can imagine, I didn’t “get” Open Source. For a long time I couldn’t understand how people monetized open source, and then realized that for many that is not the motivation for many people involved in the thousands of Open Source projects. I’m not sure that I understand it to this day - but I’m a part of it now. Giving is Receiving in many walks of life.
Don’t work in a cluttered, dingy office with no natural light
Good advice I think - probably no arguments there. Well nothing else that you interact with is an extension to your physical environment as much as your PC.
If you had a paranoid person looking over your shoulder all day interrupting you constantly to have you confirm every step you try to take, you’d likely kick the crap out of them. Why tolerate it from your PC, and even worse, why put so much trust in an operating system that NEEDS to be paranoid to stay healthy?
Sure, I sometimes have a fight with Linux, but I always know I’m going to win.. and I’m fighting for something I care about - not just tolerate. Creating an operating system environment that you love and that works FOR you is nurturing yourself at such a deep level that it’s almost life changing.
I would not be where I am today without Linux
Over dramatic? No. Expanding the horizons of my virtual work environment has expanded my entire business horizons.. I’ve expanded my desktop four fold alone.
Have you tried Rails development on Vista? It’s like pulling teeth. I just don’t think I’d have a Rails based business if my head was stuck in an XP box.. and for sure switching to Rails has changed the amount of enjoyment I have in my life.
Hosting? Yikes.
Look and Feel? My desktop looks just like Vista IF IT CRASHES. Yup. My FALLBACK look and feel is identical to Vista. My primary look and feel is like a Mac on steroids.
If you think Linux is for servers, you’re a few years behind. Last years Ubuntu out-of-the-box has all the UI bells and whistles of OSX Leopard and makes Vista look about as attractive as a turd on a beach.
So to summarize..
When technology is such a central part of our existence, why should we put up with something that does not enhance our lives?
It’s that simple! If you don’t LOVE your PC, do something about it. I’ve been using Linux long enough that I’m passed the stage of believing that everyone should use it, but I’m still squarely in the camp that XP and Vista are not good enough.
Switch to Linux, buy a Mac - I don’t care, but stop compromising. Raise your expectation to something above “tolerable”. Things are getting worse not better. The long awaited Vista has made “intolerable” so much more achievable for the average Joe, with it’s horrific hardware requirements, bad peripheral support and sub-XP levels of security.
Enough already!
Additional Reading:
*About Ubuntu. Yes, it’s the newbie of all newbie distributions. So what? It’s outgrowable? I don’t think so.
** I like Macs.. I’ll never bash them, but I just don’t NEED one. I don’t need to drop that kind of money to get something that I’m happy with.




Great article. I’m thinking about switching to Ubuntu on my PC setup. I have a PC & Mac currently, so I consider myself unbiased… The only thing holding me back is my ATI graphics card.
ATI doesn’t really care for linux so they don’t really make great drivers for them…
@Devon.
I wouldn’t let the ATI card hold you back from playing at least. Check out the Ubuntu LIVE CD and play around running Linux right off the CD without affecting your install.
Also $30 goes a long way at tigerdirect.com on an nVidia card.