In short, the article offers: "Which of the three is best? The one you like most. If you like good things, then it's Linux." It is neither wise, nor critical, nor useful.<p>I don't know how people-pleasing passes as having something to say these days. You can answer any dilemma and every question in life with "the right answer is the one you like". Which completely misses the context of what the dilemma is or why it is.<p>"Which car should I buy: an indestructible economy box, or a $$$$ luxury lifestyle machine?" "Just buy the one you like".<p>"And which house?" "The one you like!".<p>"And what securities should I invest in?" "The ones you like!".<p>"Exercise or eat a bucket ice cream" "The one you like most!"<p>Truly an all-purpose advice, always guaranteed to please the one receiving it and do nothing more.
> One with tools more powerful, elegant, and accessible: Linux.<p>This didn't seem to fit with the rest of the article up to this point. It was all about doing your own thing and what works best for you. Linux being the most powerful, elegant, and accessible is _highly_ dependent on the user and what they are actually trying to do on their computer.<p>There was also a warning to Arch users not to spend too much time customizing, because it's all about productivity, but ends on recommending the user spend time distro hopping before picking something... right after saying the distro didn't matter that much.<p>I was very much on board until it took this left turn at the end.
>Now let’s say you’re truly indifferent, then--<p>--then use the one with the most market share, which is Windows.<p>The truly indifferent person is not writing articles like this, and they are <i>definitely</i> not posting on Hacker News. In fact, even many non-indifferent people, who nevertheless don't pass a critical threshold of interest, should probably just stick with the defaults.
Am I a strange person because I use all three of them? Win for Gaming, Mac for creativity and Linux for coding.
All three by the way support Jetbrains Tools, Sublime Text or nvim etc.
So basically when maximizing an app you barely feel the difference except a few shortcuts which you can very often adapt.
I used to work with a Linux laptop daily. Mostly Linux Mint, but tried some other distros as well. I got frustrated with UX issues, problems connecting to external monitors and also sometimes I need to use PowerPoint and Excel.<p>Now I'm happily running Windows 11 with WSL2.
> on Windows because you feel so professional<p>Pretty funny that this is the first reason the author could think of that someone would choose Windows.
Copilot "tl;dr"<p>Sent by Copilot:
Sure! Here’s a brief summary of the article “Which OS Should I Drive?” from Code Faster:<p>The article compares different operating systems (OS) for developers, focusing on Windows, macOS, and Linux. It discusses the pros and cons of each OS in terms of performance, compatibility, customization, and cost. The author suggests that the best OS depends on your specific needs and preferences, such as the type of development work you do and your familiarity with the OS.<p>If you have any specific questions or need more details, feel free to ask!
I use and respect Windows because it's the only operating system that lets me <i>use</i> the computer.<p>Mac? Maybe if I want my computer to be fashionable room decor and nothing else.<p>Linux? I'm not a libertarian neckbeard with too much time to waste and a bad case of acne.<p>BSD? We don't talk about the Berkleys.