Give Linux a Chance

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Your PC Is Not Dying. Windows Is Just Eating It Alive.
There is a conversation happening more and more in tech spaces, on forums, in comment sections, and among people who are just tired of their computers feeling slow. The word that keeps coming up is bloat. And if you have been using Windows for any stretch of time, you already know exactly what that word means even if you never had a name for it before.

Photo by Gabriel Heinzer on Unsplash

Windows bloats. It always has. Background processes, telemetry, updates running when you did not ask, software you never installed sitting in your start menu, services spinning up just to exist. Your computer is not getting worse with age. Your hardware is not degrading. What is actually happening is that your hardware was simply never built to carry the weight that Windows keeps piling onto it. For everyday users who are not deep into tech, this distinction matters because they spend money on new devices thinking their old one gave out, when really the operating system just outgrew the machine.

Mac OS has bloat too. That is worth being honest about. But it does not reach the same levels Windows does, and Apple still manages to deliver a better day to day experience out of that same bloated situation. That says something.

Now here is what most people do not know. You can actually install Linux or Windows on a MacBook. And on any Windows based PC you can do exactly the same thing. You are not locked in. The machine you already own might have a completely different life ahead of it.

I know this because I lived it. I plugged my old laptop into Linux and the difference was immediate. I had installed Linux before, mainly Kali, and it did boot up much faster, but Kali still came with its own clutter. It is built for a specific purpose and that purpose brings baggage. So I tried Mint. Linux Mint. Some people will say it is the easiest Linux distribution to start with and they are right. It is a genuinely approachable entry point and it gave my old machine a second life.
I did try Arch as well. I will be transparent about that. I only have one device and I got stuck during the Arch installation process, which is how it goes sometimes. The thing you have to understand about Arch is that it is difficult, but not impossibly so. Sometimes it actually comes together more easily than you expect. The core idea of Arch is that you get a shell of an operating system and you build everything yourself from the ground up. You install only what you need. Nothing else comes along for the ride.

Photo by Lukas on Unsplash

That is where the real magic is. In probably just five gigabytes of space you can run an operating system that would have taken seventy gigabytes on Windows. And on most laptops, having that space freed up does not just mean room for more files. It means the entire system breathes differently. More storage availability contributes to better overall performance in ways that people underestimate.

Your RAM usage will drop to levels that feel almost suspicious. Because nothing is running unless you told it to run. No background telemetry. No update services idling. No processes you did not start and cannot name. You open what you open and that is all that is there.
Most people are afraid of Linux because you will run into problems. You will have to navigate some things that Windows would have just handled invisibly. But that is also exactly why it is so valuable. You start to understand what an operating system actually is. You learn what is happening inside your machine. You stop being a passive user and start being someone who actually knows their computer.

Most people would never even consider that installing a different operating system is an option. That is not their fault. Nobody tells them. But it is an option. It has always been an option.

Your hardware is probably fine. Give it a chance to prove it.

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