Oh, wow we have had different experiences haha. It was a very steep learning curve at first as I have no background in programming. But it acted like a motivator to learn more.
I love having my operating system be exactly what I want it to be. Doing exactly what I want it to do. And I love that Hyprland depends on Wayland. Id never go back to X compositor again. Its forced me to learn a lot about the future of Unix-like computing.
Like it sounds kinda sad to say this haha but I love when my OS breaks. 99% of the time I already have a very good idea why and will have it fixed in just a fee minutes, that 1% of the time ive learned a lot about figuring out what the issue was and fixing it. My OS almost never breaks now as ive worked out so many of the bugs over time. But initially I won’t lie there was a definite learning curve.
I think part of it is that computing on my personal PC is very hobbyist for me. Like I dont work on it and I dont play competitive online games. That means that I’m free to use it how I want and make it work how I like it to. So Hyprland suits my needs well. I can customize it to my liking, make it pretty, make it functional, and grow my confidence in Linux. I used to hate command line. Now if there is a terminal/CLI application I will take it first every time because my Terminal is so customized to my liking. Save on disk space, compute power, and dealing with clunky menus and inconsistent design.
This is what I mean about Hyprland making me love computing again. It just made me see my computer in a totally different light and has reinvigorated my long dormant passion for it.
Switching to Linux made me like computers again. Switching to Hyprland made me love computers again.
Hyprland made me suicidal again but we are all different
Oh, wow we have had different experiences haha. It was a very steep learning curve at first as I have no background in programming. But it acted like a motivator to learn more.
I love having my operating system be exactly what I want it to be. Doing exactly what I want it to do. And I love that Hyprland depends on Wayland. Id never go back to X compositor again. Its forced me to learn a lot about the future of Unix-like computing.
Like it sounds kinda sad to say this haha but I love when my OS breaks. 99% of the time I already have a very good idea why and will have it fixed in just a fee minutes, that 1% of the time ive learned a lot about figuring out what the issue was and fixing it. My OS almost never breaks now as ive worked out so many of the bugs over time. But initially I won’t lie there was a definite learning curve.
I think part of it is that computing on my personal PC is very hobbyist for me. Like I dont work on it and I dont play competitive online games. That means that I’m free to use it how I want and make it work how I like it to. So Hyprland suits my needs well. I can customize it to my liking, make it pretty, make it functional, and grow my confidence in Linux. I used to hate command line. Now if there is a terminal/CLI application I will take it first every time because my Terminal is so customized to my liking. Save on disk space, compute power, and dealing with clunky menus and inconsistent design.
This is what I mean about Hyprland making me love computing again. It just made me see my computer in a totally different light and has reinvigorated my long dormant passion for it.
Switching to TempleOS made me hear the voices again.
They got pills for that. Just sayin’
Switching to Hannah Montana Linux made me hear The Best of Both Worlds again.
I want to use Corey in the House Linux
Same story here! Im in love with computing all over again because of it. Too bad many are tricked into thinking Microsoft ia the only option.