Statcounter, a website that tracks the market share of web browsers, operating systems, and search engines, is reporting that Linux on the desktop has over 4% market share for the very first time (Statcounter records ChromeOS as a separate operating system despite being based on Linux). Statcounter doesn’t provide any explanation about why the market share has increased but we can speculate what’s going on.

Linux’s march to its 4.03% market share has been a steady process ever since the final months of 2020 when Linux held just 1.53% of desktop market share. One of the biggest contributors to the growth of Linux is likely the stringent hardware requirements of Windows 11.

  • Fisch@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    You should look into Krita. Not a replacement for Photoshop but I find it more intuitive than GIMP, at least.

    • Yuumi@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Oh yeah 100%, I’ve used Krita before on windows and it’s enough to cover most of my use cases, also it’s by the KDE community, which I adore <3

      • Fisch@lemmy.ml
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        8 months ago

        This is very interesting, I think I’ll try that out. I wanted to give GIMP a real try at some point anyway.

    • Horsey@kbin.social
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      8 months ago

      Affinity Photo is also really really good. I’d imagine it’s high profile and will have good support in wine.

      • KarthNemesis@kbin.social
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        8 months ago

        Affinity absolutely does not work on linux easily, or well. Some people have gotten a barely-functioning app working in bottles, and reportedly some have gotten it “mostly” working through wine, but it is through a convoluted process that will be beyond many newer linux users and prone to errors. (And you have to dig through 100 pages of the affinity forum to try to figure it out.)

        It doesn’t support hardware acceleration and seems to tend to be glitchy and crash often.
        Which… is still a vastly better state than the last time I checked, at least, ha. But that’s been progress over the course of 4 years.

        I think this page is the best bet for even trying: https://codeberg.org/Wanesty/affinity-wine-docs

        It’s legitimately the only thing I miss from windows. I might try again with this installer when I have the energy… sigh hahah