• For me, it’s mostly the lack of GPU acceleration. I’m using an Nvidia GPU a lot of the time and Nvidia’s proprietary drivers are causing loads of issues. This is especially noticeable playing videos in Firefox. I’ve found a method to force video decoding to be done on the GPU which helps a lot, but on Windows this Just Works.

    I also found KDE rather frustrating. It’s fast and snappy, but it’s just not what I’m used to. I switched to Gnome and felt a lot happier about the way the system behaves ever since. If your current desktop isn’t doing the trick for you, you may want to consider another (Gnome/KDE Plasma/Cinnamon/XFCE/LXDE/what have you).

      • Yup, but that doesn’t change the fact the Linux experience is janky. I’m not willing to put down a couple hundred euros on a new GPU when this one works fine and just annoys me every so often.

        Plus, all the good GPUs lack proper CUDA support or require messy workarounds like ROCm, which I can’t be bothered with to be honest. I’m hoping ROCm keeps improving at the rate it has when I eventually upgrade but for the stuff I run, Nvidia hardware is a much better deal with drivers that can be tolerated.