![]() Using Linux makes me anxious, even though I very much know WTF I'm doing with it. And it turns out that your windowing environment crashing or the main program you're currently using crashing is really close to as bad as the whole machine blue-screening in Windows, from the perspective of the user. Applications crashing pretty regularly or glitching out so badly they have to be restarted, including the basic applications distributed with the heavier DEs? Yep. X/Wayland crashes that restart the window server? Yep. ![]() unless you have graphics drivers issues, which isn't unlikely. It was my main OS from something like '01-'10, but after I finally gave OS X a try, and since Windows got its shit together some time late in the WinXP service pack cycle (or, arguably, Win2k, but that wouldn't run my games) and stopped crashing all the time, it's really hard to justify using desktop Linux.ĭoes the OS hard lock or completely crash? No. This is a small one, but it makes things more fun and makes the whole system feel fluid and “organic,” for lack of a better term.ĭesktop Linux is easily the least-stable OS I use with any regularity. Third-party Mac software is generally the most polished, though not quite as much exists as for Windows. ![]() I believe GNOME Tweaks is supposed to do this, but I could never get it to work reliably and universally like macOS. Emacs keybindings for editing text in every text field (including on the web). Being able to assign custom keyboard shortcuts for any menu option in any app. This is like having Emacs M-x or Sublime/VSCode shift-cmd-P in every desktop app. The consistency of the menu system, and being able to search and use the menus of any app from the keyboard with shift-cmd-?. Aqua, the macOS desktop, is by far the most stable and consistent, and in my experience the most usable and powerful as well.Ī few things that stand out about it to me vs GNOME 3, KDE Plasma, Xfce, LXDE, and whatever the Windows interface is called: Not OP but I have extensive experience as a user of all three major desktop systems. That said, my money is still on Linux and other open source OSes, because I don't want a single company telling me what I can and can't do. With full desktop environments, like GNOME and KDE lessen this, but it's still really, really common. On Linux, almost everybody seems to have their own ideas on how an app should be arranged. Third party apps generally tend to fit well into the above. The keyboard shortcuts both exist and are the same across apps. The benefit of controlling the vertical, I suppose. The Mac apps I use generally tend to tie into the hardware (hw acceleration, drivers, etc) much better. Admittedly somewhat less so, these days now that the Apple Human Interface Guidelines are largely ignored. > Can you please explain what exactly you get from the Apple desktop you don't with any of those options?Ī more cohesive experience across the desktop and applications, eg.: I recommend you reboot and take a look at your disk I/O stats - maybe this will help someone! So just logging in with your iCloud id, you could be "importing" whatever performance problem you're having on a new install. Performance was immediately back to normal, no reboot needed. Somehow having bookmarks and previously using Safari 15.x caused a huge amount of I/O that wouldn't stop - the solution was to remove all bookmarks and reading list items. Today I realized that data read/written since boot was about 1TB in a few hours on a brand new OS install, and I traced this back to the process. This seemed to happen frequently after "opening many files", like doing some recompiling with Xcode for a few hours, or indexing a large volume with Spotlight. The symptoms is always generally poor performance after the system has been running a while (4h to a week, varies), usually with WindowServer using CPU cycles non-stop and UI that felt choppy across all programs. I've been having some sort of severe performance issue in one form or another since Mojave/Catalina or so with a 2017 MBP and a 2020 M1 Mac Mini.
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