Oh yeah, definitely. I haven't spent much time with Steam, So I don't bother looking up ways to optimize it. If you look at a some of the Linux (or any other OS/Subject) gurus, they can do some amazing stuff. You look at their tutorials and it's "Eh...I really don't want to spend two hours doing that"Vivi22 said:I definitely agree with you, though if you really know what you're doing, even stuff like Steam can run pretty well on Linux. I have a friend who runs Gentoo on his laptop and managed to get Counter Strike Source running better under Gentoo than it did under XP on the same laptop. Mind you, it took a hell of a lot of fiddling and pretty much every time he updated his system or the game was updated he had to fiddle some more. And of course there are still some games that will work better than others, or not work at all no matter what you do. He didn't mind it too much, and I think it helped that he quite literally knew his OS inside and out, but even if I knew enough to do what he did I'm not sure I'd want the hassle. It's tempting since it can be so customizable to the users needs, but there's so much effort involved in maintaining it all.
Somethings are simply impossible to get around like, Microsoft Zune software, you can't run it in anything but a Virtual box of windows.
I was really terrified of my terminal when I first changed over to Ubuntu, but it's become my bestfriend. And now, every time my mates ask me to help troubleshoot them in Windows, I have to draw on my half remembered experiences and resort to going to Google, all while thinking "Why is Linux so much easier?" haha, I couldn't go back permanently since I've forgotten most of the tricks