I have worked on both OSX and Windows, and enjoy both environments. I currently use OSX on a 2018 MacBook Pro as my daily computer, but have a custom built Windows 10 desktop as well. I have also duel booted my MacBook Pro with windows 10.
I spend most of my time in OSX though as I like the unix-like environment more then windows. But both have there uses.
Please share you basic computer environments below, others will certainly be interested in your experiences.
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Top comments (28)
I use Manjaro Linux (#Arch btw), jeje, and really enjoy it. Currently I have more than two years working with it and I'm very satisfied.
I've read several good things about Manjaro. How's your general setup like?
Mac OS at previous job,
Windows 7 at current job,
Lubuntu w/ OpenBox at home.
I've used DOS/Windows since the late 80s, started using Mac OS in the late 90s, and have been tinkering with Linux since the early 2000s.
I prefer working on a Mac, but since they're outlawed at work and I can't afford one for personal use right now, I'm good with Linux (even with it's configuration frustrations).
MSI laptop i7
16Gb RAM
1TB SSD internal
Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (for everything web/mobile development and multimedia)
Running Windows in VirtualBox (for some multimedia tasks, filling in the gaps Ubuntu isn't good to handle)
Started using Ubuntu in 2006, I think (received first Ubuntu disk via shippit Ubuntu, it was the 6.06LTS)
Fun fact. When my MSI laptop came in, I never run the Windows that came with it to even see what it was. I booted from pendrive, straight up, installed Ubuntu, and never looked back.
My policy was, Windows should never directly touch any internal hard disk of mine. Via VM, fine. Directly installed, never!
Personnal:
- Thinkpad T470: Ubuntu 18.04, 500gig SSD, 16gig RAM
- Custom built desktop: Win10, i5-6600k, 8gig RAM, GTX 1070 8gb, 500gig SSD + 2x1TB HDD, 144hz monitor
Work:
- HP desktop: Ubuntu 18.04, 500gig SSD, 16gig RAM
I was a Mac user for 15+ years, but it feels like Apple doesn't care anymore. I ditched my MBP and my iMac is next.
Now I run a maxed out ThinkPad P1. Windows 10 FastRing. WSL made the switch painless. REALLY looking forward to the release of WSL2.
I thought about a Linux desktop, but all the apps I regularly use have no good alternatives. That, and I just value my time too much to spend so much time tinkering.
Yeah, the tinkering isn’t as prevalent as it use to be. There is some, but many distros work great out of the box. Pop!_OS is one such distro.
I generally stay away from what I call "derivative" distros. Ubuntu and CentOS being the exceptions. For example, Ubuntu isn't going anywhere. Not anytime soon. But knockoff-of-Ubuntu may not last. I prefer to just stick with the main line distro, and avoid all that hassle.
Its really not that much hassle if you’re coming from macOS or Windows 10. Less to worry about in terms of hardware compatibility. Even though its a derivative, its still Linux either way.
I graduated in 1990 and since then I always worked with *nix, with some VAX-VMS just after graduation. Nowadays it is Linux everywhere: 1 laptop and 2 notebook at home and 2 laptops at work (mostly Ubuntu since with age I got a bit lazy... 😊) with some virtual machine with Windows (old stuff.. maybe XP?) for the occasional need.
Hardware: Dell Latitude with 16GB memory and 500GB SSD.
OS: ElementaryOS
Don't care about the computer as much as the OS.
ElementaryOS is like Linux Mint in that its minimalistic in terms of resource usage and shiny distractions. But its aesthetics are clean and consistent much like OSX.
The only gotchas are. The standard suite of *nix packaging tools (ex software-properties-common) aren't installed by default. A the desktop is disabled by default so no icons on the desktop (I actually like this) unless you explicitly enable them in the Gnome settings via Dconf.
I would use Linux but I need to use too many main stream applications to make the switch.
Here's a list of my top 10 favorite operating systems:
Seriously though, the tooling is becoming so diverse and cross-platform (with the exception of the Apple development ecosystem) that it's hard not to just use whatever you're most comfortable with or whatever your company makes you use. I feel like people spend more time focusing on the right tools, and the OS is just an afterthought.
Mid-2014 Macbook Pro, which I've been using for 2 years.
Before that, I was developing on a variety of Windows laptops, so despite toting around my Mac, I'm still always speaking up for the possibility of developing on Windows-based PCs. I also have a laptop that runs Ubuntu, but only pull that out a handful of times a year, tbh.
ArchLinux. Use to be a vim guy, but recently switched using spacemacs (basically an easy to configure "distribution" of Emacs, focusing on Vim users and using the space bar a the "leader key" for all keyboard commands).