• brax@sh.itjust.works
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    21 hours ago

    My biggest concern is the whole “removing powerful features = user friendliness!” mentality that these big tech companies have been pushing for years.

    Why make users smarter when you can make software worse and charge more for it?

    The dummies don’t get the bigger picture, they just see “nobody needs powerful features that make things too confusing for me!” My hope is that they don’t flood Linux with this drivel - profit margin or not, it’s a toxic cultre that has already been created in commercial software.

    • DarkAri@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 minutes ago

      You can have both and both is actually better.

      You have a system that is simple to use on the surface, auto configures itself. Has guis to do the standard tasks you need to do. Then you have everything exposed in a neat way for power users. There is no reason having a nice gui has to preclude having an infinitely hackable and well laid out system. Also the more normies who use Linux, the more corporations are forced to support it with drivers and stuff which is a win for everyone. If half of normies were using Linux on their personal machines rn, then every piece of software would support it out of the box. Since it’s open source and often copyleft, you always have the option to pick your own distro, environment, and whatever else, regardless of how much corporations want to manipulate users or control software.

      The main thing is that Linux should always be hacker and developer oriented first, and supporting normies should be secondary, but also not unimportant.

    • Pika@rekabu.ru
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      20 hours ago

      There will always be newbie-oriented distros as well as ones for experienced/professional users. It’s alright if the former will go towards simplification, as long as we have plenty more keeping the tinkering spirit.

      Besides, each and every distro has a powerful tool that can help you do everything: the terminal. No one limits you there, and unlike in Windows, terminal is heavily and commonly used.

      • brax@sh.itjust.works
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        16 hours ago

        And back in the day we had CMD that was pretty powerful. Things are great now but if Linux sees a huge flock of new users, and they become the status quo then we could be in trouble.

        Worst case scenario: widows goes tits-up and everybody flocks to Linux. Solid ground for a potential commerical swing to happen.