• Zink@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    I dual boot at work, which in practice means I have a Linux laptop with a Windows partition for occasional use.

    It’s windows 10, not 11, and the machine has decent specs: 6c/12t, 32 GB ram, and an SSD. Windows feels legitimately clunky and slow to me when I use it, and I am not using some lightweight Linux distro meant to be blazing fast. I run Mint Cinnamon which is as mainstream and all-in-one as it gets. But it still feels like it was created to serve the user rather than third party business interests.

    I have some desktop machines at home that run windows 10 as well, which I use pretty infrequently. One of my winter projects is going to be fixing that. The OS part anyway.

    • Teppichbrand@feddit.org
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      2 days ago

      Exactly the same setup and experience here. Work forces me to use an inferior application in windows instead of a more powerful option in Linux and it boils my blood.

      • Zink@programming.dev
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        2 days ago

        Any chance you could use that Windows app in a VM, or is Windows itself a mandate too?

        Before we got the green light to dual boot, I spent 90% of my time using Linux in a VM while windows basically handled my M365 applications. These days I much prefer having Teams and Outlook being tabs in Firefox!

        • Teppichbrand@feddit.org
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          2 days ago

          I don’t think so, this is rather complex video editing software and I never heard about anyone running it in a VM. Maybe I’ll give it a try someday.

          • Zink@programming.dev
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            2 days ago

            Knowing nothing about it, I’d guess it might work but at a slight performance penalty. But depending on how it uses system resources (GPU use, etc) maybe not.

            You could run a VM of windows on your windows system just to mess with it. I always used VirtualBox but idk if there are better cross-platform options.