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It’s not like reinstalling Windows wasn’t the best way to make it usable after couple of years.
And sure, HDR is the issue with SMASHING Windows? I always laugh at people who say ‘Linux is not ready for 99% of users’ then point out a feature only 1% uses.
I have not tried Bazzite, so maybe it’s a lot better than Fedora, maybe even Fedora changed, as I dropped it over a decade ago.
That hasn’t been the case since… what? Windows 7? All the Win 10/11 installs I have around the place are some version of the preinstalled OEM Windows setup or the initial install I made when I did it myself. There is no meaningful performance degradation on any of them that I can notice, and I believe there have been benchmarks done recently showing similar outcomes. Linux can’t afford to argue about Windows XP issues as if they were current. For the record, no, Windows won’t force you to reset mid-work to make an install anymore, either. It defaults to installing updates on reboot, just like Bazzite (you can turn it off on Bazzite and not on Windows, though).
Also, HDR is absolutely not “a feature only 1% uses”. The past four monitors I’ve purchased had HDR support, not because I wanted it, just because it came with them. My last laptop came with it out of the box. All the TVs I’ve purchased for myself and relatives for many years have it (not even sure if they make non-HDR TVs anymore, in fact). It’s supported by all current-gen consoles, now the Switch 2 has added support for it, too. It’s also supported by the Steam Deck, incidentally.
So no, not a niche feature anymore, by a long shot. It’s baseline compatibility for any display made this decade. And for a gaming computer it’s an absolute must, especially if you want to do TV out with it, which I do. As will the upcoming Steam Machine. Again, can’t SMASH WINDOWS for gaming if games outright look better on Windows than Linux when they come out of my screen. That’s not how that works.
Even if that wasn’t the case, though. My monitors are already HDR. This is about the OS being compatible with the hardware I already own. I’m not paying for features I can’t use because the software is incompatible with it for no good reason.
FWIW, Bazzite isn’t any better than Fedora, it’s just… Fedora. It has a couple of gaming-friendly features, including booting into a controller interface by default (which doesn’t work well on Nvidia cards, so meh) and specific compatibility for certain gaming hardware, particularly for handhelds and gaming laptops, which can be very useful if you’re on a portable gaming device that struggles under Windows but is not officially supported on SteamOS. You can rebase directly from it to the Fedora atomic distro matching your DE if you want (can’t rebase across DE’s, annoyingly).
It’s not like reinstalling Windows wasn’t the best way to make it usable after couple of years.
And sure, HDR is the issue with SMASHING Windows? I always laugh at people who say ‘Linux is not ready for 99% of users’ then point out a feature only 1% uses.
I have not tried Bazzite, so maybe it’s a lot better than Fedora, maybe even Fedora changed, as I dropped it over a decade ago.
That hasn’t been the case since… what? Windows 7? All the Win 10/11 installs I have around the place are some version of the preinstalled OEM Windows setup or the initial install I made when I did it myself. There is no meaningful performance degradation on any of them that I can notice, and I believe there have been benchmarks done recently showing similar outcomes. Linux can’t afford to argue about Windows XP issues as if they were current. For the record, no, Windows won’t force you to reset mid-work to make an install anymore, either. It defaults to installing updates on reboot, just like Bazzite (you can turn it off on Bazzite and not on Windows, though).
Also, HDR is absolutely not “a feature only 1% uses”. The past four monitors I’ve purchased had HDR support, not because I wanted it, just because it came with them. My last laptop came with it out of the box. All the TVs I’ve purchased for myself and relatives for many years have it (not even sure if they make non-HDR TVs anymore, in fact). It’s supported by all current-gen consoles, now the Switch 2 has added support for it, too. It’s also supported by the Steam Deck, incidentally.
So no, not a niche feature anymore, by a long shot. It’s baseline compatibility for any display made this decade. And for a gaming computer it’s an absolute must, especially if you want to do TV out with it, which I do. As will the upcoming Steam Machine. Again, can’t SMASH WINDOWS for gaming if games outright look better on Windows than Linux when they come out of my screen. That’s not how that works.
Even if that wasn’t the case, though. My monitors are already HDR. This is about the OS being compatible with the hardware I already own. I’m not paying for features I can’t use because the software is incompatible with it for no good reason.
FWIW, Bazzite isn’t any better than Fedora, it’s just… Fedora. It has a couple of gaming-friendly features, including booting into a controller interface by default (which doesn’t work well on Nvidia cards, so meh) and specific compatibility for certain gaming hardware, particularly for handhelds and gaming laptops, which can be very useful if you’re on a portable gaming device that struggles under Windows but is not officially supported on SteamOS. You can rebase directly from it to the Fedora atomic distro matching your DE if you want (can’t rebase across DE’s, annoyingly).