After 4 years of using Fedora KDE as my main OS with 0 issues or drawbacks, my workplace is now requiring all computers to be on Windows 11. Any suggestions to make the transition back more bearable?

My dissapointment is immeasurable, and my day is ruined :(

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    7 hours ago

    Just use the shovel your boss gives you. Back to your own preferences once you clock out.

  • ISolox@lemmy.worldOP
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    6 hours ago

    Thanks for the info guys, good stuff!

    Those of you who are telling me to look for a new workplace over an OS change are a bit crazy though lol. It’s not quite that bad.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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    14 hours ago

    Sorry for your loss :( Same thing happened to me about a year ago.

    I was the sole IT admin for a small company. Used Debian with KDE on a snappy little Thinkpad. No issues managing all the infra with it, even though most of it was MS trash. I used Reminnia for RDP into the Windows servers, and the Browser for all O365/Entra administration. A Windows 11 VM for the rare times I needed to test Windows-only apps or configs.

    Worked like a dream, but then we got bought out by a huge competitor. Their IT team took everything over. I had to decommission my on-prem Linux servers, Ansible automations, Open Project tracking and FOSS ticketing system. Finally, I had to give up my Sweet little Linux Thinkpad and use their standard-issue HP Windows 11 garbage laptop. They were slow, clunky, buggy, and ugly, it was awful.

    I quit a few months later after securing the job I have now. It pays about 35% more, has twice as much PTO, and about 50% of my workload is Linux stuff. It’s so much better.

    My advice, if it’s truly non negotiable, install WSL first thing. It’s not nearly as good as having actual Linux, because it’s running inside of Microslop’s horrid OS, but it’s better than nothing. Try to be an advocate for FOSS at the company, see if you can convince leadership to let you implement Linux-based solutions wherever they might fit, make yourself the de facto expert on them so you at least get to work on Linux and FOSS infra.

    Aside from that, start job hunting. Try to find a job that will let you be more Linuxy.

    • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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      3 hours ago

      the last time i used wsl on a work windows laptop, windows fucked up the virtual disk drive and everything in it was gone.

      this was about 5 years ago, so hopefully it’s gotten better.

  • suicidaleggroll@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    I’m sorry to hear that. Our company recently got acquired, and every 4-6 months the new IT team tries to say, “but do you guys really need Linux? What for?”. We answer them, in depth, every time, but then it just comes back up a few months later.

    I’m scared one of these days they’re just going to force the change on us, all productivity will grind to an absolute halt, deliverables will be missed, and eventually they’ll backtrack but only after it’s too late to recover the programs that got hosed in the process.

    • tangonov@lemmy.ca
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      16 hours ago

      Just ask them why they want to waste the money on licensing. Money is the language managers understand

      • ozymandias117@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        Although compliance is also a concern.

        For us, on our Linux machines, they pay Canonical or RedHat for workstations 🤷‍♂️

  • JoeKrogan@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Pressing F to pay my respects.

    Sorry to hear that OP.

    When old employer was bought out they tried to move us on to windows. It was shit. After non stop issues they gave in and let us keep linux.

  • tangonov@lemmy.ca
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    16 hours ago

    You may run Fedora in WSL2. This is what I do. My work is largely command line based. Use Wezterm. If you must, launch GUI apps from there. I’m running graphical Emacs daily just fine this way. My coworkers don’t have half the gas for our kubernetes pods that I do and that’s by in large the fact that I refuse to lose my Linux chops

  • Liketearsinrain@lemmy.ml
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    12 hours ago

    You can use many KDE apps (konsole, dolphin, kate), and may be able to enable WSL. Look at powershell 7 and windows terminal, winget for a package manager.