Is it possible to be comfortable with two desktop OSs (e.g. shortcuts, mouse) - eviltoast

I’ve been a linux user for 20 years (mostly on KDE). I just started at a new job, and they gave me a mac. I found out later that I could have got a linux machine instead, which is a bit annoying. Still, I know there are some nice things about a mac, and I figured I’d give it a try for a while.

I’m pretty quick moving around my desktop environment, and I’m finding picking up the mac is not too bad. BUT I use keyboard shortcuts a lot, and they are all every different on a mac. So whenever I switch back and forth between my work machine, I end up stumbling a bunch and wasting my time, and getting annoyed. It’s mostly keyboard shortcuts, but the trackpad buttons and scrolling are annoying too.

So, question is: is it possible to regularly use two OSs with wildly different control surfaces, and be comfortable with it? e.g. either MacOS + Linux, or I guess MacOS + Windows? Or will it be annoying forever?

  • Vanth@reddthat.com
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    1 month ago

    Yeah, I’ve had two jobs in Mac environments while running a Windows or Windows and Linux at home. When I’m tired is the time I make the most goofs, which is usually around the time I should get off computers for the day and touch some grass.

    Interesting that track pad and mouse are specific annoyances for you. You don’t have to use an Apple mouse with an Apple computer, you can use other brands with a more robust scroll wheel.

    • naught101@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 month ago

      Yeah, I use the laptop without a mouse a lot - I don’t love carrying it around, and I sit on a couch a fair bit. The lack of a middle button like my lenovo has is annoying (but this is also an OS and shortcut thing - no middle-click selection paste in MacOS, and no middle click to close tab either).

      I wouldn’t touch an apple mouse with a ten foot pole 😅