- It’s nice to see that Linux is doing well on Steam. 
 But with Steam deck being pretty successful, and showing that gaming on Linux is viable now, I kind of hoped for more.
 But as the AMD numbers showed for years after Ryzen came out, the inertia in the market is huge. And change takes time.- My hope is that there will be an uptick at the end of support for Windows 10. - I know I will really try to completely ditch windows at this time. - It’s better to try sooner. Dual booting as you figure things out like software replacement and what distro - Yes, i already installed a PoP OS in dual boot and tried things out. - I will test games on it in the next months to prepare for Windows deletion. I just hope a game I really like won’t go out not working decently on Linux or I’m afraid I will lose my momentum/motivation. - At the very least I intend to only boot windows for those game that really don’t work on Linux. - Yeah i went down the same path about a year ago and ended up forgetting i even had a dual boot of windows. I ended up just wiping the windows drive and reinstalled popos as a raid0 across both drives for that little extra speed bump for loading. - I don’t really play multi-player games but I haven’t come across anything not working from steam. The only issue I had was openRGB was detected by the insurgency sand storm anti cheat so I disabled it from launching on boot so my PC leds are just on default most of the time 
 
 
- There was clearly an increased popularity of Linux when Windows Vista and Windows 8 came out. 
 IDK if Windows 11 is bad enough to make much difference. People were really pissed about Vista and 8 which helped Linux some.- Win11 has arbitrary hardware reqs - Good Linux marketing IMHO - Yeah well, you can say anything and I wouldn’t know. I haven’t used Windows for 15 years, and Linux became my main OS in 2015. 
 I just ordered a new CPU and SSD, and I’m quite looking forward to making a new install, because my current system is running on a 6 year old installation. Although it’s a rolling release distro, I can see there are desktop improvements I haven’t got. Also I’ll be going back to KDE, since they’ve fixed the hotkeys on numeric keypad issue. I’m almost giddy about it. 😀 😜
- Even given that, I’d still think there would be an uptick in Linux market share, but only a small one. Certainly no “year of the Linux desktop” levels. 
 
- Vista was what pushed me to Linux originally, and I still haven’t gone back! - That’s a pretty decent amount of time ago. I switched a bit earlier, when XP was still going strong. In 2005 when Ubuntu Breezy Badger came out. Goddam it was a good distro for the time, and it became my main OS. For years it was like free gifts when a new Ubuntu came out. In the early Ubuntu days, Ubuntu was way ahead of all the rest, and the forum was amazing. - I really miss Ubuntu from around that era, was by far the easiest thing to get up and running! 
 
 
 
- Do it 
 
- It would be unrealistic to expect a faster growth. The userbase already used windows and the global linux userbase is small. People don’t change habits so easily, and most still don’t see a reason to. - Linux is almost twice as big outside of gaming tho. In the Steam survey it sits at ~2%, whereas Statcounter has it at ~4%, based on browser data. Gaming actually lacks behind mainstream Linux adoption - deleted by creator 
 
- IDK, Steam Deck is kind of a game changer, with SteamOS also getting a lot better. Kinda easy to say it is what it is in hind sight IMO. 
 
- I think the thing a LOT of people forget is that the majority of steam users aren’t hardcore do-nothing-but-gaming-on-their-pc types. - If you do things that aren’t gaming, your linux experience is still going to be mixed and maybe not good enough to justify the switch: wine is good, and most things have alternatives, but not every windows app runs, and not every app alternative is good enough. - Windows is going to be sticky for a lot longer because of things other than games for a lot of people. 
- deleted by creator 
 
- Last month, I switched from an all-AMD system to a 2+ times better all-AMD system and I couldn’t be happier! (okay, 32GB RAM and a bigger than 59W battery could’ve made me happier but I digress). - I’ve been on AMD throughout my entire Linux journey and I’ve never had any issues related to that hardware. - What laptop? - Old one was an Acer Aspire 5 with Ryzen 4500U, 8GB RAM and 512GB SSD. - New one is Thinkpad T14 with Ryzen 7840U, 16GB RAM and 1TB SSD. 
 
 






