this post was submitted on 21 Jan 2026
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Thought I'd create a distinct thread from the previous one asking about daily use, because I really do want to hear more on people's pain points. Great to know people are generally sounding pretty positive in those posts who recently switched, but want to know your difficulties as well! This way old and new users can share their thoughts, hopefully to inspire a respectful discussion.

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[–] st3ph3n@midwest.social 3 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (2 children)

I only really have two pain points, one of which isn't the fault of linux, and the other that probably is.

First: Adobe shit. I depend on Adobe Lightroom. This is entirely on Adobe. I know about the alternatives, but apparently I suck and can't get good at them. I keep a Mac laptop around just to use this application. I tried screwing around with Wine and VMs to get it working, but it's pretty useless without GPU acceleration, and so far the only way to get that in a VM is to have a second dedicated GPU just for the VM. Plus, that still requires keeping a Windows installation around.

Second: Wake from sleep. Just doesn't work properly on my desktop PC running Fedora 43 with KDE. AMD CPU and GPU, etc. The computer does wake up but the display never does, and nothing short of a hard power cycle seems to make it recover. Works just fine on my Thinkpad which is running the same environment, also all AMD but with just whatever AMD integrated graphics came with the CPU in that case.

Having chatted with some other people experiencing the same thing with similar hardware setups and F43 with KDE it apparently doesn't manifest if using GNOME, just KDE. For now I just have the desktop set to turn off the display when idle but to not put the machine to sleep. I am a KDE enjoyer, GNOME does not float my boat.

[–] cm0002@libretechni.ca 3 points 6 days ago

Second: Wake from sleep. Just doesn't work properly on my desktop PC running Fedora 43 with KDE. AMD CPU and GPU, etc. The computer does wake up but the display never does, and nothing short of a hard power cycle seems to make it recover. Works just fine on my Thinkpad which is running the same environment, also all AMD but with just whatever AMD integrated graphics came with the CPU in that case.

Having chatted with some other people experiencing the same thing with similar hardware setups and F43 with KDE it apparently doesn't manifest if using GNOME, just KDE. For now I just have the desktop set to turn off the display when idle but to not put the machine to sleep. I am a KDE enjoyer, GNOME does not float my boat.

Lol I have a similar issue, with Debian on my AMD laptop. But for me it's already on GNOME and it only manifests randomly -_-

First: Adobe shit. I depend on Adobe Lightroom. This is entirely on Adobe. I know about the alternatives, but apparently I suck and can't get good at them. I keep a Mac laptop around just to use this application. I tried screwing around with Wine and VMs to get it working, but it's pretty useless without GPU acceleration, and so far the only way to get that in a VM is to have a second dedicated GPU just for the VM. Plus, that still requires keeping a Windows installation around.

Have you seen the news about the Wine patch from a random GOATED dev that fixes the CC installer? Iirc they tested Photoshop so far and reports it's "buttery smooth" so other Adobe softwares might not be too far behind!

[–] vala@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 6 days ago

Same here. Broken on KDE but not gnome.

[–] Dekkia@this.doesnotcut.it 40 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (3 children)

I guess the biggest thing I'm missing right now is VR gaming.

But since my VR googles need WMR to work, I wouldn't be any better off with Windows 11 either.

[–] Muffi@programming.dev 4 points 6 days ago

I was surprised to find my Valve Index work flawlessly after switching to Linux (Pop!_OS). Even had a better framerate in some games.

[–] Sunspear@piefed.social 26 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I'm looking forward to the Steam Frame, hopefully it'll support SteamOS out of the box

[–] Tempy@programming.dev 1 points 4 days ago

I mean it should. It'll have a steam os installed on the device itself. It'd be a pretty silly oversight to not work with a computer running Linux.

[–] Jestzer@lemmy.world 13 points 1 week ago (3 children)

I would be a lot more excited if I wasn’t worried it was going to cost +$1,099. I hope that I am wrong.

[–] fascicle@leminal.space 9 points 1 week ago

that is just for the memory

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[–] Blaster_M@lemmy.world 11 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Same. Quest 2. Fedora 43. 5700X3D / 9070 XT. Steam Link can't find AMD video decoder on the pc to run. ALVR has death wobble-like reprojection jitter. WiVrn works when Envision feels like it, which is never as it constantly errors out compiling due to some dependency I can't find for the life of me.

I know compiling from source is preferred as "the linux way", but I would like to spend more time actually using my pc than fixing it. There's no reason the VR software needs to be recompiled just to change a setting. Maybe bake in the ability to change settings instead of hardcoding everything.

Wine would be super helpful if they can find way to make older (2019 and older) Quickbooks run reliably. Lots of small businesses locked into old platforms because the accountants or the people who do accounting themselves can't learn how to use anything else, and the linux alternatives require a phd in linuxology to learn and don't offer the easy business-in-a-box functionality.

Waydroid is neat, but poorly integrated in the desktop. It runs as a full screen app, and doesn't task switch easily.

Please, Valve, make Steam a 64-bit native client! So few people use 32-bit systems that the few that do probably aren't running Steam to save on memory.

Pipewire audio devices and webcam support needs to be smoother. I've never seen so much console shim hacks just to get a virtual webcam working.

I haven't even begun to try my NXT Gladiator flight stick in linux... that might be a whole nother can of trouble to open.

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[–] Sunspear@piefed.social 30 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I'm using Fedora KDE, and for the first time in my life, an upgrade (42 to 43) completely borked the system, in a way that I couldn't boot to anything else other than a kernel panic.

I had to boot up a live USB, mount and chroot into the old system, and manually fix each duplicated / corrupted package. And it still caused every now and then some weird issue with dnf, so in the end I just reinstalled the entire OS.

I feel like updates "offered" via a nice and convenient gui shouldn't really do this out of nowhere - and I wasn't the only one to report this in the past half year.

[–] brooke592@sh.itjust.works 2 points 5 days ago

Sorry you had to go through with that.

Point-release distros like to tout stability, but they face all the same problems as rolling-release distros when upgrading between versions.

[–] Blaster_M@lemmy.world 15 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I found on the 42->43 upgrade, Wine 32-bit was removed, and the upgrader errors out instead of fixing it. Wht I did to fix was immediately, manually (via dnf) uninstall wine*, then immediately run the upgrade again, and it fixed itself, finishing the upgrade with 64-bit Wine installed.

[–] brooke592@sh.itjust.works 1 points 5 days ago

Sure would be nice if they caught and fixed that before pushing the update and requiring users to do it themselves.

[–] Sprocketfree@sh.itjust.works 24 points 1 week ago (7 children)

Mobile... I want a Linux phone 😭

[–] brooke592@sh.itjust.works 2 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Just dusted off one of my old Android apps and I completely agree with you.

Android has to be one of the least-competent, hacked-together, yet overengineered pieces of shit on the planet.

It saddens me that people were paid 6 figures to make it. They did not deserve that money and did a horrible job.

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[–] slurp@programming.dev 23 points 1 week ago (3 children)

The biggest difficulty is music production plugins. Some have a Linux version, some work via yabridge and wine (with some GUI bugs), and some don't work at all.

On top of that, my initial attempt was using Mint with all of the audio optimisations (including kernel) but it was stuttery and slow. Unfortunately, oving to another distro is not painless when you have to move all the plugins too but CachyOS has been much better so far.

[–] Valsa@mander.xyz 7 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Native Linux audio plugins are frustratingly uncommon. I'm gradually trying to replace my Windows plugins with Linux native ones but it's hard to do sometimes. My thing lately has been building my own replacements with plugdata.

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[–] Telorand@reddthat.com 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

You might enjoy this video/series: https://youtu.be/yawlonjLp4c

I've been trying to get my audio working the way I want (instead of everything just going to the default sink), and it's been helpful.

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[–] Quibblekrust@thelemmy.club 22 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (3 children)

I don't like that I get zero feedback when typing in my boot-time decryption password. Like, I can't even tell if my keyboard is working. Did I press Enter or am I wasting my time staring at the prompt: "enter password for drive whatever (random guid)".

I've literally sat there with my keyboard not even plugged in, not realizing it wasn't dong anything because there's no feedback. Like, can't it show some asterisks? Or maybe "attempting decryption" after I press Enter, or anything? The only feedback is: it will either boot or say "invalid password" eventually.

It's a minor frustration, but it's every day that it bugs me.

(OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. LUKS2 or whatever, using the built-in encryption when I first installed it on my laptop.)

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[–] redlemace@lemmy.world 13 points 1 week ago (1 children)

If I had to name a thing ...... My only issue is the lack of support from organizations. Drivers, though It's getting better for printers/scanners etc. but like HW identifiers from banks etc are still windows (and mac). And no, i'm not gonna install windows or anything wine-like for it. (so far I've been able to take the alternative route/work around it)

[–] Axolotl_cpp@feddit.it 9 points 1 week ago

Probably the banks don't even check HW identifiees, they see that you are using Linux and just decide to block you, at least, many reported that with many banks but it's not a universal rule ofc

[–] Jestzer@lemmy.world 11 points 1 week ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (1 children)

I use Linux daily for work and personal tasks, but I sometimes have to resort to either a Windows VM or Windows running natively for the following:

Hardware

  • Gaming with the Oculus Rift S
  • My third-party Xbox One wireless controller adapter for the non-bluetooth models
  • Brook controller adapters

Software

  • Microsoft Office. I absolutely need the documents, spreadsheets, and presentations I work on to be interoperable with Windows users who exclusively use Microsoft Office. I am no position to ask them to change what software they use. OnlyOffice is the closest to achieving interoperability and its UI is very similar, but it still falls short. Multiple animations on 1 slide don’t carry over, none of the macros my coworkers have made seem to work, slide formatting may look different, and transformed cells don’t seem to automatically update.
  • Some games, such as Fortnite and CastleMinerZ either have bug-breaking issues or the publisher/anti-cheat sucks and blocks Linux. I don’t particularly care for these games, but I’m also not willing to give up game nights with lifelong friends over these. I’ll play them, suck at them, and have a good time. Then there are games such as Halo: MCC that mostly work, but then co-op campaign de-syncs.
  • Original Xbox and Xbox 360 development and modification tools/programs don’t work. I can’t even FTP a file over from Fedora without it being unrecognized. I obviously don’t expect any of this to change.

And I desperately miss the native Stream Deck software. StreamController’s page-changing is very slow, in general is finicky, buggy, and less intuitive.

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[–] the_radness@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Not that it's Linux fault, but access to and compatibility with popular creative tools like Ableton or Adobe products.

Sure, it's feasible to use Wine to run these products, but not in any professionally usable manner.

Yes, I am aware there are Linux-friendly alternatives, but they lack the plugins, compatibility, features, and quality of their industry~standard counterparts.

[–] wltr@discuss.tchncs.de 6 points 1 week ago (3 children)

I second this. I use Gimp, but it’s UI and UX is just the worst I’ve ever seen. (It has some great tiny features here and there, though.)

I hope this situation would improve over time, and I’d try to contribute as much as I can. So, fingers crossed. Otherwise, I’m quite happy with Linux being my primary OS for many years.

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[–] aloofPenguin@piefed.world 7 points 1 week ago

The current Virtual Keyboard solution on KDE ( maliit ) isn't working quite as much as i'd like. It only works on GTK apps, and only sometimes shows. When it does, it won't relaunch after dismissal untill you kill it. Add to that it's not as feature-dense as its windows alternatives.

I hear that they are working on their own plasma-keyboard, and I hope that will fix most of these issues, but I haven't had the tim to update my system.

[–] naught101@lemmy.world 7 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Why duplicate this thread? There's now at least 3 copies..

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[–] PancakesCantKillMe@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (5 children)

The only two issues I have at the moment are that Nemo is not a reliable file browser. It crashes almost daily. Some of its behavior is also frustrating when I go up a directory and it reshuffles my view and loses where I was. I deal with copious files and directories so this can be painful sometimes. Maybe need to play with Dolphin more or find another manager. Open to suggestions. I miss the expected behavior of the file manager in windows, but I don’t miss windows at all.

That second issue is not having an easy method to manage my iPhone with Linux. Pulling images is awkward and always requires fiddling. No iTunes of course for backup and updates. I don’t like OTA updates. So I keep a W10 VM (with no route out) for that stuff.

Otherwise, Linux works for everything else perfectly fine.

Edit: Mint btw. I do love how Linux makes the OS a tool for me rather than a tool for them.

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[–] TeamAssimilation@infosec.pub 6 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (3 children)

Fingerprint reader: that thing looks at me every day, obscenely suggesting I boot up Windows instead of Linux so I can stroke it gently and login conveniently.

Oh, also battery life. Windows always has managed to extract more uptime from a single charge in my laptop.

[–] aloofPenguin@piefed.world 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I installed power-profiles-daemon on my laptop (and configured it in the settings) a while back and noticed a bit better battery life. Maybe it could also be the kernel? I updated mine a while back and there was also an improvement.

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[–] luciole@beehaw.org 5 points 1 week ago

I'm pretty picky about my keyboard layout (a specific variant of bépo) and I've found it surprisingly awkward to use a layout that isn't provided. I know that Bépo is typically included in Linux distros, but not the variant I prefer.

[–] gtrcoi@programming.dev 5 points 1 week ago (4 children)

RE engine games like monster hunter and dragons dogma are a mess. I blame Capcom and NVIDIA, but because not everyone is having the same issues I do it's safe to assume there is some Linux solution out there that isn't documented. So I guess my pain point is lack of good documentation, a tale as old as time tbf.

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[–] JakenVeina@midwest.social 5 points 1 week ago (4 children)

On Bazzite.

Programs often take a concerningly-long time to load. Like 30 seconds+. But it's intermittent. Haven't been able to put together any patterns as to when this does or doesn't happen.

About 1/3 of the time when I try to open a PDF file (which open in Firefox), they just.... don't. Plasma will just spin with the Firefox icon on the mouse cursor for like 10 seconds and then silently do nothing. No errors of any kind reported. No idea where I might look for logs or whatever to help diagnose the issue.

Dolphin is definitely lacking in the UX department for frequent actions I'm used to in Windows, like mounting SMV shares with non-default credentials (basically impossible in Dolphin, only doable in CLI), creating new folders (I've been spoiled by having a dedicated toolbar button), and working with elevated permissions (Windows will just seamlessly prompt you when additional permissions are needed, Dolphin will just error, sometimes with useless error messages, and make you go elevate your session separately).

Windows (the UI concept, not the OS) do not remember and restore to their prior locations, which Windows (the OS) always handled pretty seamlessly. I know I can supposedly make this happen via the "window rules" settings, but I haven't been able to find ANY good resources on how that system actually works, and when I tried to just do it intuitively, I fucked up things like where the Application Menu and Open File dialogs appear. No, I don't want to have to configure it specially for every app I might use, I want there to just be sensible defaults that I don't have to fight against.

Those are the ones that're coming to mind. All very nitpicky, but I'm largely a UI/UX designer at work, so I'm pretty sensitive to nitpicky things. No regrets, though.

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[–] v3r4@lemmy.org 5 points 1 week ago (3 children)
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