7 Reasons Why I use and Love Linux
The first 500 people who click the link will get 2 free months of Skillshare Premium: https://skl.sh/thelinuxexperiment6 The most focused of you guys might already have picked up on this, but I really, really like Linux. I thought it might be a good time to reaffirm my commitment to the Linux desktop by giving you the reasons why I use Linux, right after this.
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The first one that comes to mind in the privacy. I’ve been growing increasingly wary of companies that use your data to sell you more stuff, like Google, which I’ve almost entirely removed from my life, apart from Youtube and Android, and this applies to my computing needs as well. Linux doesn’t try to sell your data to the highest bidder, they don’t collect any personal stuff, hardware information, or usage habits. Well some distros do, but you can always disable that at install, or it’s disabled by default, so not really an issue. Linux doesn’t show you ads in your menu, doesn’t reset your privacy preferences in your back, and doesn’t try to sell you any stuff. It’s just there to be what an OS is supposed to do: let you do what you want to do on your machine.
And that’s the fact that Linux is open source. Anyone can look at the code, and try and add to it, so even if people who might want to use vulnerabilities can also use that to write their malicious code, there are generally more people watching to make sure that this can’t happen.
But that’s not the only thing I like about open source: there’s a whole mentality around it that really resonates with me: the code is open, and communities form around it to uplift projects, make them better, extend them, make them more secure. The whole philosophy around this is very attractive to me: people helping each other to make something greater than the sum of its parts.
Linux desktops are free, as in free beer. You can download any of them and install them without paying a cent. Now, I do think that developers need to eat, and that they deserve compensation for what they do, but they don’t force it down your throat with extravagant subscriptions, or huge one time fees. A Linux desktop is not tied to a specific piece of hardware, there is no CD Key or limit to how many computers you can install it on. Most software available out there is also free, leaving you to try it out, test it, see if you like it, and then contribute if you feel you’d like to reward the developers for their hard work.
And this brings me to another point I really enjoy ab ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=axI239FG9HQ
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