why is no one talking about ATL?
https://preview.redd.it/6bb5uouwaqvf1.png?width=1889&format=png&auto=webp&s=00072dd25564433f2b0e2e3b3b637e86daa9755c
I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.
It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.
The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).
Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it.
Why is no one talking about this?I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.
It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.
The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).
Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it. Why is no one talking about this?
https://redd.it/1o9bsjj
@r_linux
https://preview.redd.it/6bb5uouwaqvf1.png?width=1889&format=png&auto=webp&s=00072dd25564433f2b0e2e3b3b637e86daa9755c
I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.
It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.
The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).
Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it.
Why is no one talking about this?I just found out about ATL (Android Translation Layer) and I’m honestly surprised it’s not getting more attention.
It’s a lightweight layer that lets you run Android apps on Linux without a full Android container like Waydroid. It works kind of like Wine for Android, translating calls instead of virtualizing a whole system.
The project’s still new, and the list of working apps is short for now, but it’s already available in Alpine edge (and postmarketOS edge too).
Feels like this could be huge if it matures, yet barely anyone mentions it. Why is no one talking about this?
https://redd.it/1o9bsjj
@r_linux
ONLYOFFICE Docs 9.1 Introduces Powerful PDF Redaction, New Annotations
https://linuxiac.com/onlyoffice-docs-9-1-introduces-powerful-pdf-redaction/
https://redd.it/1o9itbe
@r_linux
https://linuxiac.com/onlyoffice-docs-9-1-introduces-powerful-pdf-redaction/
https://redd.it/1o9itbe
@r_linux
Linuxiac
ONLYOFFICE Docs 9.1 Introduces Powerful PDF Redaction, New Annotations
ONLYOFFICE Docs 9.1 delivers 4× faster spreadsheet formulas and advanced tools for PDF redaction and editing.
This Week in Plasma: Plasma 6.5 is nigh and KDE is 29 years old; help us celebrate!
https://blogs.kde.org/2025/10/18/this-week-in-plasma-plasma-6.5-is-nigh-and-kde-is-29-years-old-help-us-celebrate/
https://redd.it/1o9k9xw
@r_linux
https://blogs.kde.org/2025/10/18/this-week-in-plasma-plasma-6.5-is-nigh-and-kde-is-29-years-old-help-us-celebrate/
https://redd.it/1o9k9xw
@r_linux
KDE Blogs
This Week in Plasma: Plasma 6.5 is nigh and KDE is 29 years old; help us celebrate!
Welcome to a new issue of This Week in Plasma!
This week we put the finishing touches on Plasma 6.5, and I think it’s gonna be a pretty darn good release when it comes out in 3 days! So eyes started turning towards features and UI improvements again, and…
This week we put the finishing touches on Plasma 6.5, and I think it’s gonna be a pretty darn good release when it comes out in 3 days! So eyes started turning towards features and UI improvements again, and…
How GNU can you make GNU/Linux?
I came up with the most GNU system you can have with your linux.
First you need the kernel (the Linux part of GNU/Linux). Did you guys know that the FSF maintains a fully libre Linux kernel (linux-libre)? That's right, not only can you have GNU/Linux, you can have GNU Linux!
Onto the init system, GNU has an init of its own, GNU Shepherd. The only distro that uses it is Guix, which cleanly brings us to the package manager. GNUs package manager is Guix, but for those who hate declarative package management theres also GSRC (though, this is more akin to the FreeBSD ports system)
You also have the standard things that make a GNU/Linux a GNU/Linux, like the coreutils, glibc, bash, the GNU toolchain, and whatever other application software you want
The system is pretty boring so far, so why not spice it up a bit? For multiple windows in the TTY there's GNU screen. For an actual graphical environment, we have 4 to choose from: EXWM, Ratpoison, GNUstep, and MATE.
EXWM is a window manager that works inside of emacs, allowing you to manipulate X windows like you would emacs buffers.
While ratpoison isn't a GNU project, it's hosted on Savannah (GNUs VCS forge) and aims to replicate GNU Screen so I'd say it counts.
NeXT we have GNUstep (pun very much intended). GNUstep is a gui toolkit that aims to work like NeXTs gui toolkit. It also has a graphical file manager/desktop (gworkspace) and window manager (window maker). Unfortunately, there is a severe lack of application software
Finally, we have MATE, put on this list because it forked from GNOME when it was still a GNU project and most of GNUs GUI software use GTK. If this doesn't sway you, it's the desktop stallman himself uses (when he isn't in a TTY)
But wait, there's still more! You can replace MATEs window manager with EXWM, completing our GNU system. Add in GNUs web browser (icecat) and you're set to do anything you need to do on a computer (as long as it doesn't require nonfree javanoscript or proof of work)
Of course, you could just use emacs for everything and call it a day
https://redd.it/1o9mzsj
@r_linux
I came up with the most GNU system you can have with your linux.
First you need the kernel (the Linux part of GNU/Linux). Did you guys know that the FSF maintains a fully libre Linux kernel (linux-libre)? That's right, not only can you have GNU/Linux, you can have GNU Linux!
Onto the init system, GNU has an init of its own, GNU Shepherd. The only distro that uses it is Guix, which cleanly brings us to the package manager. GNUs package manager is Guix, but for those who hate declarative package management theres also GSRC (though, this is more akin to the FreeBSD ports system)
You also have the standard things that make a GNU/Linux a GNU/Linux, like the coreutils, glibc, bash, the GNU toolchain, and whatever other application software you want
The system is pretty boring so far, so why not spice it up a bit? For multiple windows in the TTY there's GNU screen. For an actual graphical environment, we have 4 to choose from: EXWM, Ratpoison, GNUstep, and MATE.
EXWM is a window manager that works inside of emacs, allowing you to manipulate X windows like you would emacs buffers.
While ratpoison isn't a GNU project, it's hosted on Savannah (GNUs VCS forge) and aims to replicate GNU Screen so I'd say it counts.
NeXT we have GNUstep (pun very much intended). GNUstep is a gui toolkit that aims to work like NeXTs gui toolkit. It also has a graphical file manager/desktop (gworkspace) and window manager (window maker). Unfortunately, there is a severe lack of application software
Finally, we have MATE, put on this list because it forked from GNOME when it was still a GNU project and most of GNUs GUI software use GTK. If this doesn't sway you, it's the desktop stallman himself uses (when he isn't in a TTY)
But wait, there's still more! You can replace MATEs window manager with EXWM, completing our GNU system. Add in GNUs web browser (icecat) and you're set to do anything you need to do on a computer (as long as it doesn't require nonfree javanoscript or proof of work)
Of course, you could just use emacs for everything and call it a day
https://redd.it/1o9mzsj
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Updated Linux Patch Would Disable RDSEED For All AMD Zen 5 CPUs
https://www.phoronix.com/news/RDSEED-Disable-All-Zen-5
https://redd.it/1oa59qw
@r_linux
https://www.phoronix.com/news/RDSEED-Disable-All-Zen-5
https://redd.it/1oa59qw
@r_linux
Phoronix
Updated Linux Patch Would Disable RDSEED For All AMD Zen 5 CPUs
A few days back we reported on a Meta engineer uncovering an architectural issue with RDSEED usage on AMD EPYC 9005 'Turin' CPUs
🚨 HUGE: Spotify Lossless/HiFi is LIVE on the Linux Desktop Client (PipeWire Proof Inside!)
Hello r/linux,
I have some exciting news for all Linux audiophiles! It seems **Spotify has quietly enabled Lossless (HiFi) audio streaming on their native Linux client** without any official announcement or client update.
I confirmed this via the audio pipeline, and the results clearly show a CD-quality stream.
# 1. Discovery and Client Details
* **Spotify Version:** 1.2.63.394.g126b0d89 (Copyright (c) 2025, Spotify Ltd)
* **Operating System:** Linux Mint 22.2
* **Audio Server:** PipeWire (Running via pipewire-pulse)
* **Prerequisite:** Spotify Premium subnoscription (The Lossless option appeared under the quality settings.)
I noticed a new **'Lossless'** option in the Audio Quality settings, situated right below 'Very High.' When this setting is activated and playing a track, the audio output is immediately upgraded.
# 2. Technical Verification (The Proof)
To verify that the client is actually streaming at a higher quality than the standard 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis/AAC, I checked the output format reported by PipeWire using the `pactl list sink-inputs` command.
The crucial finding is that the audio stream is running at **44.1kHz**.
# 🔑 Key Output Lines (From pactl list sink-inputs)
サンプル仕様: float32le 2ch 44100Hz
形式: pcm, format.sample_format = "\"float32le\"" format.rate = "44100" format.channels = "2" ...
プロパティ:
application.name = "spotify"
application.process.binary = "spotify"
media.name = "Spotify"
node.rate = "1/44100"
media.class = "Stream/Output/Audio"
What This Means:
44.1kHz (CD Quality): This confirms the stream is using the CD-standard sampling rate, a hallmark of lossless quality, and is not the standard 48kHz used for most compressed streams and general PipeWire mixing. Float32LE: Spotify is utilizing a high-resolution, 32-bit floating-point format internally, which is a best practice for maintaining audio integrity and avoiding digital clipping before the DAC. Server-Side Switch: Since there was no client update, this feature appears to have been rolled out via a server-side feature flag (a "secret switch") to select users/clients.
# 3. Call to Action
If you are a Premium user on the Linux desktop client, please check your audio quality settings now! Can anyone else confirm this behavior, especially on different distributions or with ALSA/JACK? This is a massive win for the Linux desktop audio ecosystem!
*(元の投稿者による日本語コメント: これまでLinuxでロスレス再生は非常に複雑でしたが、PipeWireのおかげでスムーズに実現できています。この発見は本当に嬉しいです!)*
https://redd.it/1oa64rp
@r_linux
Hello r/linux,
I have some exciting news for all Linux audiophiles! It seems **Spotify has quietly enabled Lossless (HiFi) audio streaming on their native Linux client** without any official announcement or client update.
I confirmed this via the audio pipeline, and the results clearly show a CD-quality stream.
# 1. Discovery and Client Details
* **Spotify Version:** 1.2.63.394.g126b0d89 (Copyright (c) 2025, Spotify Ltd)
* **Operating System:** Linux Mint 22.2
* **Audio Server:** PipeWire (Running via pipewire-pulse)
* **Prerequisite:** Spotify Premium subnoscription (The Lossless option appeared under the quality settings.)
I noticed a new **'Lossless'** option in the Audio Quality settings, situated right below 'Very High.' When this setting is activated and playing a track, the audio output is immediately upgraded.
# 2. Technical Verification (The Proof)
To verify that the client is actually streaming at a higher quality than the standard 320 kbps Ogg Vorbis/AAC, I checked the output format reported by PipeWire using the `pactl list sink-inputs` command.
The crucial finding is that the audio stream is running at **44.1kHz**.
# 🔑 Key Output Lines (From pactl list sink-inputs)
サンプル仕様: float32le 2ch 44100Hz
形式: pcm, format.sample_format = "\"float32le\"" format.rate = "44100" format.channels = "2" ...
プロパティ:
application.name = "spotify"
application.process.binary = "spotify"
media.name = "Spotify"
node.rate = "1/44100"
media.class = "Stream/Output/Audio"
What This Means:
44.1kHz (CD Quality): This confirms the stream is using the CD-standard sampling rate, a hallmark of lossless quality, and is not the standard 48kHz used for most compressed streams and general PipeWire mixing. Float32LE: Spotify is utilizing a high-resolution, 32-bit floating-point format internally, which is a best practice for maintaining audio integrity and avoiding digital clipping before the DAC. Server-Side Switch: Since there was no client update, this feature appears to have been rolled out via a server-side feature flag (a "secret switch") to select users/clients.
# 3. Call to Action
If you are a Premium user on the Linux desktop client, please check your audio quality settings now! Can anyone else confirm this behavior, especially on different distributions or with ALSA/JACK? This is a massive win for the Linux desktop audio ecosystem!
*(元の投稿者による日本語コメント: これまでLinuxでロスレス再生は非常に複雑でしたが、PipeWireのおかげでスムーズに実現できています。この発見は本当に嬉しいです!)*
https://redd.it/1oa64rp
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I'm Out Of The Loop. What's the deal with DHH (Omarchy) and Framework vs Gnome, Debian and other projects?
I'm curious to know why there is so much drama among these Linux folks, at least on social media and communication channels.
* I didn't know anything about Hyprland, but it seems that its main developer is quite problematic and authoritarian, calling users on Discord or GitHub idiots at the slightest provocation, or for not having the same knowledge as him.
* I've heard something about Omarchy, a distro created by DHH based on Arch + Hyprland. I know he's a controversial character, very much cut from the cloth of the typical wealthy tech bro.
* Finally, I've heard of Framework, a company that manufactures Linux laptops.
It seems, if I'm not mistaken, that Framework decided to donate to and support Hyprland and Omarchy, among other projects, and there have been communities such as Gnome and Debian that haven't had a good opinion of this? With some in Gnome thinking of rejecting the donation and Debian removing Hyprland from its repositories?
Meanwhile, what I've seen on social media is DHH attacking these projects as much as he can and integrating himself into circles that link Linux with ideology, from a conservative or right-wing/far-right point of view, starting to criticize these projects for being leftist, and saying they criticize him “for calling attention to the hypocrisy of the left, which generates defensive overreactions,” and “I was blissfully unaware of just how nutty things had gotten in much of Linux land, and didn't realize GNOME had been fully captured.”
**Captured by who? What is all this shit? What's the context suddenly for all this? Was Framework already a huge donor or this is just overreacted and no problem?**
I'm perplexed by how so little part of the community can make such a big fuss and be able to turn on the shit fan over so many people over so many projects (Gnome, Debian...)
https://redd.it/1oa74wh
@r_linux
I'm curious to know why there is so much drama among these Linux folks, at least on social media and communication channels.
* I didn't know anything about Hyprland, but it seems that its main developer is quite problematic and authoritarian, calling users on Discord or GitHub idiots at the slightest provocation, or for not having the same knowledge as him.
* I've heard something about Omarchy, a distro created by DHH based on Arch + Hyprland. I know he's a controversial character, very much cut from the cloth of the typical wealthy tech bro.
* Finally, I've heard of Framework, a company that manufactures Linux laptops.
It seems, if I'm not mistaken, that Framework decided to donate to and support Hyprland and Omarchy, among other projects, and there have been communities such as Gnome and Debian that haven't had a good opinion of this? With some in Gnome thinking of rejecting the donation and Debian removing Hyprland from its repositories?
Meanwhile, what I've seen on social media is DHH attacking these projects as much as he can and integrating himself into circles that link Linux with ideology, from a conservative or right-wing/far-right point of view, starting to criticize these projects for being leftist, and saying they criticize him “for calling attention to the hypocrisy of the left, which generates defensive overreactions,” and “I was blissfully unaware of just how nutty things had gotten in much of Linux land, and didn't realize GNOME had been fully captured.”
**Captured by who? What is all this shit? What's the context suddenly for all this? Was Framework already a huge donor or this is just overreacted and no problem?**
I'm perplexed by how so little part of the community can make such a big fuss and be able to turn on the shit fan over so many people over so many projects (Gnome, Debian...)
https://redd.it/1oa74wh
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Fedora KDE why haven't i discovered this OS earlier
Been an ubuntu/pop os/windows on and off user for the past few years but fucking hell fedora kde blows them all out of the water. Its super fucking snappy and everything just works this feels like an os from the future. Bro the websites don't even load they're just there almost instantly. This shit is crazy, it literally feels like i got a brand new computer. The bluetooth also fucking works!
I've been really missing out all these years, i could have been using this instead. How come this is not recommended more?
https://redd.it/1oa89o9
@r_linux
Been an ubuntu/pop os/windows on and off user for the past few years but fucking hell fedora kde blows them all out of the water. Its super fucking snappy and everything just works this feels like an os from the future. Bro the websites don't even load they're just there almost instantly. This shit is crazy, it literally feels like i got a brand new computer. The bluetooth also fucking works!
I've been really missing out all these years, i could have been using this instead. How come this is not recommended more?
https://redd.it/1oa89o9
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with AI, Linux is actually more accessible than Windows
Imagine you don't know how to do something on a computer. You ask your favorite AI "how do I do this and this" in Windows you get "click here and there" and in the new release of Windows the UI might not be there...
On the other hand in Linux you get mostly command line command generated by the AI and you just directly copy-paste it.
Which has the effect that you actually control your computer with natural language (English) - which you type to the AI and get precise commands :)
https://redd.it/1mqu29b
@r_linux
Imagine you don't know how to do something on a computer. You ask your favorite AI "how do I do this and this" in Windows you get "click here and there" and in the new release of Windows the UI might not be there...
On the other hand in Linux you get mostly command line command generated by the AI and you just directly copy-paste it.
Which has the effect that you actually control your computer with natural language (English) - which you type to the AI and get precise commands :)
https://redd.it/1mqu29b
@r_linux
Reddit
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Xubuntu website got hacked and is serving malware (trojan)
Just be aware, Xubuntu.org got hacked and their download button tries to download “Xubuntu-Safe-Download.zip”, that seems to include a fake TOS and an EXE, and Virustotal confirms malware (a Trojan) inside of it. Seems someone’s trying to get noobs from Windows that could be interested in Linux (more so now because the Win10 EOL)
Hope the people at the Xubuntu project and Ubuntu/Canonical can take fast actions, but this seems has been up for 6h now, going by the first people that noticed. Having this vulnerability up for 6h shouldn’t be OK.
https://redd.it/1oad1m6
@r_linux
Just be aware, Xubuntu.org got hacked and their download button tries to download “Xubuntu-Safe-Download.zip”, that seems to include a fake TOS and an EXE, and Virustotal confirms malware (a Trojan) inside of it. Seems someone’s trying to get noobs from Windows that could be interested in Linux (more so now because the Win10 EOL)
Hope the people at the Xubuntu project and Ubuntu/Canonical can take fast actions, but this seems has been up for 6h now, going by the first people that noticed. Having this vulnerability up for 6h shouldn’t be OK.
https://redd.it/1oad1m6
@r_linux
Linux is pretty cool so far
I've been using the Linux Mint OS to replace the now unsupported Windows 10 OS on an old laptop that certainly won't have a single bit of processing power to run Windows 11. So far, I'm in love, and I am planning on using said laptop to test things like electronics. And I gotta say.. it wasn't and really isn't what people are saying it is, it's not as code-y or hard to use, like they were saying 10 years ago. It honestly feels like a brand new cheap (it's running on a HDD, yes I have a replacement) laptop with a slightly crap battery life, but still feels utterly brand new, regardless. Thanks, Linux community for another light shining on an old laptop. Very cool.
https://redd.it/1oadpzs
@r_linux
I've been using the Linux Mint OS to replace the now unsupported Windows 10 OS on an old laptop that certainly won't have a single bit of processing power to run Windows 11. So far, I'm in love, and I am planning on using said laptop to test things like electronics. And I gotta say.. it wasn't and really isn't what people are saying it is, it's not as code-y or hard to use, like they were saying 10 years ago. It honestly feels like a brand new cheap (it's running on a HDD, yes I have a replacement) laptop with a slightly crap battery life, but still feels utterly brand new, regardless. Thanks, Linux community for another light shining on an old laptop. Very cool.
https://redd.it/1oadpzs
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Tron: Ares Runs on Linux! (Movie featured accurate CLI and and systemd commands)
Saw Tron: Ares today and I was happy to see a movie version of "Linux" OS being featured. I enjoyed the movie and seeing one of the characters write out the command:
'sudo systemctl stop'
Made me appreciate that the team didn't phone it in on the command line stuff. Their very quick visual intro to "training" neural networks was a nice addition also. The movie surprised me in good way and it was a nice nod to those with a background in Linux, software engineering and deep learning!
https://redd.it/1oaemz4
@r_linux
Saw Tron: Ares today and I was happy to see a movie version of "Linux" OS being featured. I enjoyed the movie and seeing one of the characters write out the command:
'sudo systemctl stop'
Made me appreciate that the team didn't phone it in on the command line stuff. Their very quick visual intro to "training" neural networks was a nice addition also. The movie surprised me in good way and it was a nice nod to those with a background in Linux, software engineering and deep learning!
https://redd.it/1oaemz4
@r_linux
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Hackers Deploy Linux Rootkits via Cisco SNMP Flaw in 'Zero Disco' Attacks
https://thehackernews.com/2025/10/hackers-deploy-linux-rootkits-via-cisco.html
https://redd.it/1oaj4l9
@r_linux
https://thehackernews.com/2025/10/hackers-deploy-linux-rootkits-via-cisco.html
https://redd.it/1oaj4l9
@r_linux
Reddit
From the linux community on Reddit: Hackers Deploy Linux Rootkits via Cisco SNMP Flaw in 'Zero Disco' Attacks
Posted by GL4389 - 6 votes and 1 comment
Linux > Windows even on new & powerful hardware (ThinkPad E14 Gen 6)!
I got a Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 6 (Intel Core Ultra 5 125H, 32 GB RAM, 1TB nVME SSD) system last year, and while I was already a full-time Linux user, I decided to give Windows 11 a try. Surely, with that kind of processor and RAM, the experience would be pretty smooth, right? Nope, I was proven wrong. While things were fast and snappy initially, within a week I started seeing graphical glitches here and there. The Explorer for some weird reason kept crashing, the entire desktop crashed and came back up multiple times right after waking the laptop from sleep, and a lot of other things. These glitches got so bad that I had to restart my PC every 2 weeks just to keep them at bay.
As I said, I was already a full-time Linux user. I run Arch Linux on both my servers and they've been working amazingly well for the last 3 years, so it was my preferred choice when choosing which Linux to use. For GUI, first I went with i3 (created all the workspaces and stuff), and lately I have been trying out KDE just because I can. Regardless of the desktop environment / window manager I use, Linux has been rock solid and stable on this system. Most of my games (I only play single-player story based ones) run at-least 10% better on Linux than they ever did on Windows, that too UNDER EMULATION!! Lastly, I'd like to mention that, as crazy as that sounds, the battery life has actually been a lot better on Linux. I simply used TLP to configure platform profile and CPU governors and stuff, and that was enough. So, my verdict is that Linux is not only an excellent choice on older computers, it's also a good choice on new performant hardware.
TL:DR; Got a new ThinkPad E14 Gen 6 last year (Intel Core Ultra 5 125H, 32 GB RAM, 1TB nVME SSD). Tried Windows 11 on it, and the experience sucked. Wierd graphical glitches, desktop crashing, explorer crashing, etc. Had to reboot atleast once every 2 weeks. Switched to Arch Linux, and experience was so so much better. No more lags, no crashes. Just pure performance and stability. Also, battery life on Linux >> Windows (who would've thought?!)
https://redd.it/1oajn88
@r_linux
I got a Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 6 (Intel Core Ultra 5 125H, 32 GB RAM, 1TB nVME SSD) system last year, and while I was already a full-time Linux user, I decided to give Windows 11 a try. Surely, with that kind of processor and RAM, the experience would be pretty smooth, right? Nope, I was proven wrong. While things were fast and snappy initially, within a week I started seeing graphical glitches here and there. The Explorer for some weird reason kept crashing, the entire desktop crashed and came back up multiple times right after waking the laptop from sleep, and a lot of other things. These glitches got so bad that I had to restart my PC every 2 weeks just to keep them at bay.
As I said, I was already a full-time Linux user. I run Arch Linux on both my servers and they've been working amazingly well for the last 3 years, so it was my preferred choice when choosing which Linux to use. For GUI, first I went with i3 (created all the workspaces and stuff), and lately I have been trying out KDE just because I can. Regardless of the desktop environment / window manager I use, Linux has been rock solid and stable on this system. Most of my games (I only play single-player story based ones) run at-least 10% better on Linux than they ever did on Windows, that too UNDER EMULATION!! Lastly, I'd like to mention that, as crazy as that sounds, the battery life has actually been a lot better on Linux. I simply used TLP to configure platform profile and CPU governors and stuff, and that was enough. So, my verdict is that Linux is not only an excellent choice on older computers, it's also a good choice on new performant hardware.
TL:DR; Got a new ThinkPad E14 Gen 6 last year (Intel Core Ultra 5 125H, 32 GB RAM, 1TB nVME SSD). Tried Windows 11 on it, and the experience sucked. Wierd graphical glitches, desktop crashing, explorer crashing, etc. Had to reboot atleast once every 2 weeks. Switched to Arch Linux, and experience was so so much better. No more lags, no crashes. Just pure performance and stability. Also, battery life on Linux >> Windows (who would've thought?!)
https://redd.it/1oajn88
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