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  3. What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

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  • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

    What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

    Not the installation process.
    Not finding a distro.
    Not getting programs to work.
    Not troubleshooting.
    Not hardware compatibility.

    The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
    For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

    They ask a simple question and:
    People respond "Did you Google it?"
    People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
    People respond "RTFM"
    People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

    We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

    Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

    The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

    #Linux

    megatronicthronbanks@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
    megatronicthronbanks@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
    megatronicthronbanks@mastodon.social
    wrote last edited by
    #20

    @Linux_in_a_Bit

    Yeah honestly, this.

    The most hostile user base of all is Macs, Apple people truly hate each other. Issues are betrayal of the cult leader.

    Then comes Linux, though it HAS improved a bit. You don't get "Just recompile your kernel!" to every single question about why your fucking wifi won't stay up or or your screensaver won't lock.

    Then windows. The most shithouse OS on the planet actually has the most friendly help base, though it is often completely useless!

    -> World <-

    simplicator@federate.socialS 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

      What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

      Not the installation process.
      Not finding a distro.
      Not getting programs to work.
      Not troubleshooting.
      Not hardware compatibility.

      The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
      For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

      They ask a simple question and:
      People respond "Did you Google it?"
      People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
      People respond "RTFM"
      People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

      We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

      Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

      The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

      #Linux

      robotdiver@starlite.rodeoR This user is from outside of this forum
      robotdiver@starlite.rodeoR This user is from outside of this forum
      robotdiver@starlite.rodeo
      wrote last edited by
      #21

      @Linux_in_a_Bit

      It's also ableism. Ten years ago I could have RTFM but now as a person with cognitive issues it's not always that easy, which is literally why i've held off on installing it

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • megatronicthronbanks@mastodon.socialM megatronicthronbanks@mastodon.social

        @Linux_in_a_Bit

        Yeah honestly, this.

        The most hostile user base of all is Macs, Apple people truly hate each other. Issues are betrayal of the cult leader.

        Then comes Linux, though it HAS improved a bit. You don't get "Just recompile your kernel!" to every single question about why your fucking wifi won't stay up or or your screensaver won't lock.

        Then windows. The most shithouse OS on the planet actually has the most friendly help base, though it is often completely useless!

        -> World <-

        simplicator@federate.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
        simplicator@federate.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
        simplicator@federate.social
        wrote last edited by
        #22

        @megatronicthronbanks @Linux_in_a_Bit Misery loves company 🙂

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

          What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

          Not the installation process.
          Not finding a distro.
          Not getting programs to work.
          Not troubleshooting.
          Not hardware compatibility.

          The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
          For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

          They ask a simple question and:
          People respond "Did you Google it?"
          People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
          People respond "RTFM"
          People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

          We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

          Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

          The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

          #Linux

          crocodisle@woof.techC This user is from outside of this forum
          crocodisle@woof.techC This user is from outside of this forum
          crocodisle@woof.tech
          wrote last edited by
          #23

          @Linux_in_a_Bit This. People like to waltz around all proud "I'm from the 'RTFM' days, kids these days, grumble grumble" and I'm thinking to myself... the problem ain't the kids...

          "I'm tired of answering all these basic (author's note: not as basic as they think) questions. They can just find the answers themselves!" like, okay, then stop complaining on their questions on forums if you're so tired of it.

          Or my personal favorite: being a seasoned linux user and needing a quick reminder on how to do something.
          First search engine hit is a forum post of someone telling someone else to RTFM. Thanks for wasting mine and everyone's time.

          raphaelmorgan@disabled.socialR 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • malte@anticapitalist.partyM malte@anticapitalist.party

            @Slacker why is that annoying?

            kancept@infosec.exchangeK This user is from outside of this forum
            kancept@infosec.exchangeK This user is from outside of this forum
            kancept@infosec.exchange
            wrote last edited by
            #24

            @malte @Slacker because you don't buy a car to tweak the engine until you know how the car works first. Then you learn about the engine. Then you tweak it.

            Many 'noobs' are mad there isn't a bolt-on upgrade to rice it. i.e. a double-click method and that it takes some learning.

            At least, this is the experience I've had, and so I just don't bother helping anymore.

            malte@anticapitalist.partyM 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • mtrnord@gts.mtrnord.blogM mtrnord@gts.mtrnord.blog

              @Linux_in_a_Bit It might sound simple and I am aware people often volunteer but not getting a reply after hours of waiting is even for me as a nerd very frustrating. At least after a while have someone say "sorry it seems we can't help you either. Maybe you can leave a ticket on our tracker/mailinglist" or something along those lines. That often would have made me feel better than the feeling of being ignored or worse feeling I asked something so stupid nobody wants to talk to me.

              kancept@infosec.exchangeK This user is from outside of this forum
              kancept@infosec.exchangeK This user is from outside of this forum
              kancept@infosec.exchange
              wrote last edited by
              #25

              @mtrnord @Linux_in_a_Bit as frustrating as that is, it helps to remember people that do help are global and probably not in your time zone.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • kancept@infosec.exchangeK kancept@infosec.exchange

                @malte @Slacker because you don't buy a car to tweak the engine until you know how the car works first. Then you learn about the engine. Then you tweak it.

                Many 'noobs' are mad there isn't a bolt-on upgrade to rice it. i.e. a double-click method and that it takes some learning.

                At least, this is the experience I've had, and so I just don't bother helping anymore.

                malte@anticapitalist.partyM This user is from outside of this forum
                malte@anticapitalist.partyM This user is from outside of this forum
                malte@anticapitalist.party
                wrote last edited by
                #26

                @Slacker @Kancept who is "you"?

                memoria@wetdry.worldM light@noc.socialL goodnewsgreyshoes@mastodon.artG 3 Replies Last reply
                0
                • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

                  What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

                  Not the installation process.
                  Not finding a distro.
                  Not getting programs to work.
                  Not troubleshooting.
                  Not hardware compatibility.

                  The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
                  For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

                  They ask a simple question and:
                  People respond "Did you Google it?"
                  People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
                  People respond "RTFM"
                  People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

                  We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

                  Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

                  The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

                  #Linux

                  xinjinmeng@dragon.styleX This user is from outside of this forum
                  xinjinmeng@dragon.styleX This user is from outside of this forum
                  xinjinmeng@dragon.style
                  wrote last edited by
                  #27

                  @Linux_in_a_Bit

                  Seconded. It's been said that Apple hates computers but loves users, and that Linux hates users but loves computers. There's room for everyone at the console. Death to the elitist penguin.

                  Link Preview Image
                  kbm0@mastodon.socialK timwardcam@c.imT 2 Replies Last reply
                  0
                  • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

                    What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

                    Not the installation process.
                    Not finding a distro.
                    Not getting programs to work.
                    Not troubleshooting.
                    Not hardware compatibility.

                    The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
                    For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

                    They ask a simple question and:
                    People respond "Did you Google it?"
                    People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
                    People respond "RTFM"
                    People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

                    We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

                    Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

                    The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

                    #Linux

                    owlor@meow.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
                    owlor@meow.socialO This user is from outside of this forum
                    owlor@meow.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #28

                    @Linux_in_a_Bit Another common thing I've encountered is feeling like people aren't really listening to you or aren't willing to take the time to understand the situation before they start throwing stuff at you.

                    This is sometimes how people recommend Linux itself, as a solution to a problem in a situation where switching to Linux would either be unfeasible or where that'd cause a lot more headache than simply finding a workaround for now and look into switching to linux at a later date when you're not actively trying to solve a problem.

                    A lot of these issues, I feel like, come from an inability a lot of people have to admit they don't know something. That's why they feel the need to make it out like you're the one wrong for asking the question, or try and steer them towards something you do have an expertise in even if that thing isn't actually helpful in the situation.

                    No reasonable person is gonna think less if you just admit you don't know. "I don't know, but I'll try looking into it" is a lot better than bullshitting some answer or deflecting the question. And when it comes to computers in particular, I'm pretty convinced there are only two kinds of people: people who don't know what they are doing at least half the time and people who are lying.

                    mkj@social.mkj.earthM 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • cedc@diaspodon.frC cedc@diaspodon.fr

                      @Linux_in_a_Bit not true anymore.
                      With AI integrated in most search engine, you often get the right response from it.
                      One of the few benefits of AI is that it can basically customise the documentation to make it sensible to you. It becomes a kind of live documentation.

                      A simple how to fix … on [distro name] works 95% of the time in my experience.

                      razemix@mamutovo.czR This user is from outside of this forum
                      razemix@mamutovo.czR This user is from outside of this forum
                      razemix@mamutovo.cz
                      wrote last edited by
                      #29

                      @CedC @Linux_in_a_Bit Or… consider this: it also often hallucinates complete bullshit. 😊 No, LLMs are not a solution.

                      cedc@diaspodon.frC 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • crazyeddie@mastodon.socialC crazyeddie@mastodon.social

                        @Linux_in_a_Bit Offer to pay for it maybe vOv

                        I hear you. I've been frustrated too. But you're asking people to share expertise for free when they honestly have already shared a whole crap ton of it.

                        Maybe people who can't understand that should stick to the proprietary platforms who are willing to monetize your soul as collateral instead.

                        menos@todon.euM This user is from outside of this forum
                        menos@todon.euM This user is from outside of this forum
                        menos@todon.eu
                        wrote last edited by
                        #30

                        @crazyeddie @Linux_in_a_Bit And TBF, a good many people still do it. It may not be the typical online experience and there's surely room to improve, but I wouldn't even know where to find a seasoned Windows or Mac expert who'll sit down with you in person and show you how to fix your IT problems for free, something that is often advertised by Linux user groups.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

                          What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

                          Not the installation process.
                          Not finding a distro.
                          Not getting programs to work.
                          Not troubleshooting.
                          Not hardware compatibility.

                          The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
                          For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

                          They ask a simple question and:
                          People respond "Did you Google it?"
                          People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
                          People respond "RTFM"
                          People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

                          We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

                          Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

                          The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

                          #Linux

                          0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 This user is from outside of this forum
                          0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 This user is from outside of this forum
                          0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange
                          wrote last edited by
                          #31

                          @Linux_in_a_Bit half the replies to this post

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

                            What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

                            Not the installation process.
                            Not finding a distro.
                            Not getting programs to work.
                            Not troubleshooting.
                            Not hardware compatibility.

                            The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
                            For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

                            They ask a simple question and:
                            People respond "Did you Google it?"
                            People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
                            People respond "RTFM"
                            People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

                            We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

                            Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

                            The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

                            #Linux

                            mansr@society.oftrolls.comM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mansr@society.oftrolls.comM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mansr@society.oftrolls.com
                            wrote last edited by
                            #32

                            @Linux_in_a_Bit Asking for help with Windows doesn't really work much better. I think the problem is people in general, not Linux people specifically.

                            chris_spackman@twit.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

                              What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

                              Not the installation process.
                              Not finding a distro.
                              Not getting programs to work.
                              Not troubleshooting.
                              Not hardware compatibility.

                              The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
                              For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

                              They ask a simple question and:
                              People respond "Did you Google it?"
                              People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
                              People respond "RTFM"
                              People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

                              We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

                              Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

                              The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

                              #Linux

                              earthshine@masto.hackers.townE This user is from outside of this forum
                              earthshine@masto.hackers.townE This user is from outside of this forum
                              earthshine@masto.hackers.town
                              wrote last edited by
                              #33

                              @Linux_in_a_Bit One thing that I guess hasn't changed much in 20 years....

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

                                What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

                                Not the installation process.
                                Not finding a distro.
                                Not getting programs to work.
                                Not troubleshooting.
                                Not hardware compatibility.

                                The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
                                For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

                                They ask a simple question and:
                                People respond "Did you Google it?"
                                People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
                                People respond "RTFM"
                                People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

                                We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

                                Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

                                The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

                                #Linux

                                tattooed_mummy@beige.partyT This user is from outside of this forum
                                tattooed_mummy@beige.partyT This user is from outside of this forum
                                tattooed_mummy@beige.party
                                wrote last edited by
                                #34

                                @Linux_in_a_Bit i joined a forum I had to because i'm an idiot. My complaint about Linux is that my computer looks exactly the same. I have mint it's terribly boring. Lol 😆

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • razemix@mamutovo.czR razemix@mamutovo.cz

                                  @CedC @Linux_in_a_Bit Or… consider this: it also often hallucinates complete bullshit. 😊 No, LLMs are not a solution.

                                  cedc@diaspodon.frC This user is from outside of this forum
                                  cedc@diaspodon.frC This user is from outside of this forum
                                  cedc@diaspodon.fr
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #35

                                  @Razemix @Linux_in_a_Bit yes it does allucinate, not its not «often», and most of the time it does it is because the answer is not documented.

                                  And if it does... Well it will simply not work.

                                  LLM is a (biais) tool with a _few_ use cases; To me documentation is one of them.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • cedre@corneill.esC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    cedre@corneill.esC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    cedre@corneill.es
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #36

                                    @Bwaz @Linux_in_a_Bit yes! I always have kind replies when I ask for help, but I don't understand most of them

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

                                      What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

                                      Not the installation process.
                                      Not finding a distro.
                                      Not getting programs to work.
                                      Not troubleshooting.
                                      Not hardware compatibility.

                                      The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
                                      For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

                                      They ask a simple question and:
                                      People respond "Did you Google it?"
                                      People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
                                      People respond "RTFM"
                                      People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

                                      We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

                                      Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

                                      The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

                                      #Linux

                                      lovestha@floss.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                                      lovestha@floss.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                                      lovestha@floss.social
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #37

                                      @Linux_in_a_Bit I "earned" a year ban from the Linux channel on the IRC network I used for insisting I looked at the man page and didn't find the answer.

                                      Most useful thing I learnt in that exchange was that "/" searches man pages.

                                      Luckily I was already deep enough that didn't kill my enthusiasm.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchangeL linux_in_a_bit@infosec.exchange

                                        What's the most common complaint I've heard about Linux?

                                        Not the installation process.
                                        Not finding a distro.
                                        Not getting programs to work.
                                        Not troubleshooting.
                                        Not hardware compatibility.

                                        The most common complaint about Linux I've seen is this:
                                        For a normal computer user, asking for help is just about impossible.

                                        They ask a simple question and:
                                        People respond "Did you Google it?"
                                        People complain that the question wasn't asked "correctly".
                                        People respond "RTFM"
                                        People get mad??? at them for making an easy mistake.

                                        We can't expect normal people to know to, or even know how to deal with any of that stuff.

                                        Search engines these days are awful, manuals are hard to read for most people (especially stuff like ArchWiki), and normal people make mistakes we think are easily avoidable.

                                        The solution to making Linux more popular is not ruthless promotion. The solution is to actually help the people who are trying to use it.

                                        #Linux

                                        karlheinzhaslip@climatejustice.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                        karlheinzhaslip@climatejustice.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                                        karlheinzhaslip@climatejustice.social
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #38

                                        @Linux_in_a_Bit The primary reason i bought a system76 pre-installed laptop for my initial transition was the "create a ticket" button it has in the settings. Nice people who get paid to help me help me when i push it and give me copy-pasteable terminal commands by email.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • avoca@gladtech.socialA avoca@gladtech.social

                                          @Linux_in_a_Bit

                                          I hear what you are saying, but, there are caveat's to it.

                                          If you go from Windows/MacOS to ARCH or a rolling-release type of distro then you can expect some folk to be a little short on patience with newbies.

                                          Not because they're unhelpful but because its a pretty silly thing to do.

                                          After 2 years on Linux Mint I have just moved to Debian 13 and GNOME desktop was strange at first. But I still don't think I could be bothered with an ARCH type distro.

                                          I think if you do your research and choose a distro recommended for learners there are plenty of helpful, patient, folk willing to walk you through the basics.

                                          Doesn't mean you are wrong, I'm just not sure things are THAT critical atm.

                                          deathkitten@firetribe.orgD This user is from outside of this forum
                                          deathkitten@firetribe.orgD This user is from outside of this forum
                                          deathkitten@firetribe.org
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #39

                                          @avoca@gladtech.social Let me tell you a story about how I started out on Linux two decades ago:

                                          I knew I was going to need support, and I had a whole IRC channel of nerds telling me (one of two girls regularly there) that I needed to switch to Linux. Okay, I said, if one of you will be my on call support, I'll do it.

                                          The masochist who agreed to my terms was on Mandrake cooker for his personal machine, an unstable rolling release. He had me install that shit without me having any idea
                                          what that meant. It didn't occur to him that it would be hard for me and cause me to ask him a lot of problems because he was so used to putting out small fires he didn't notice he was doing just that constantly.

                                          In the end, I was saved by the Mandrake Newbies list, who realized what'd happened, then helped me step down to the Mandrake stable release.

                                          But telling n00bs they need to just do their homework and pick a "good beginner distro" is fucking victim blaming. They have no idea what's what, they have to depend on the kindness of others to help them understand because the search engines are full of fucking slop these days, and the forums are full of RTFM bros.

                                          If you can't be nice to people asking questions, shut your fucking mouth. Do not blame the people asking the questions.

                                          @Linux_in_a_Bit@infosec.exchange

                                          avoca@gladtech.socialA 1 Reply Last reply
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