

Lately it's that Debian and Debian-based distros are packaging Python packages that do not follow PIP naming guidelines, which breaks installing other Python packages globally. Maybe I am missing something with how difficult it might be? - Random stupid stuff. Less of an issue now that I have a 4K display, but I am surprised the big DEs like GNOME and KDE never seemed to integrate it. Last I read, you have to do a bunch of things to get basic font-smoothing (e.g. although this seems to be on the developer of the game, rather than Proton or Linux. of course the one game I play (Dead By Daylight) doesn't work. It's a step in the right direction and it looks like many games "just work". Proton makes running Windows/DirectX games on Linux a breeze, and I do agree.

Linux: - Probably my most-frustrating point is that "everyone" talks about how "rock-solid" and great their Linux experience is when that has NEVER been the case for me in 13 years of regularly using desktop and server linux distros. You used to be able to mod a conf to enable it anyway, but that only works with Intel based Macs. They used to, when their displays were literally 1440p, but now it’s 4K or bust. Almost forgot! macOS does not support display scaling AT ALL on 1440p monitors. No NVIDIA support, which means no CUDA support, so anyone who needs CUDA will be SSH'ing into a Linux box with an NVIDIA GPU attached to it. "most advanced operating system in the world" but can't adjust volume of speakers on external displays (brightness too). Expect UI bugs starting with OS X 10.10 Yosemite when they started rewriting Objective-C code in Swift. MacOS: - Doesn't support DisplayPort daisy-chaining at all. Always get bitten by running VMs on a Windows computer (excluding Windows Server of course). It likes to restart to install updates without my permission. Windows 10 and 11 have ads and lots of tracking ("if it's free, you're the product!").

Windows: - Still relatively-susceptible to malware (these days ransomware is the main concern).
