It’s funny, as Linux became more viable as a daily driver, it became less about the system itself and more about how it integrated into the rest of my life. That isn’t something an LLM will solve for me.
I enjoy the TUI apps on Linux as well as OpenCode, Codex and Claude Code.
I used to use Linux only for QA work but now that Devs are using more AI to produce better quality apps that are surpassing Windows UI quality it is way more enjoyable since I noticed way better graphics and more satisfying responsiveness from UI.
I feel like TUI stuff works way better in Linux. Windows seems to have a lot of bugs. For example Antigravity's agy cli is way better in Linux than Windows.
I heard of a story had an issue with one of the drivers, if I remember right regarding audio, after letting LLM loose, making patches and recmpiling the kernel, it worked. They even shared the patch as a pull request or something which of course the person, mentioned that it was out of his depth so he won't be working on the feedback.
I thought this was a quite a success story, normally I wouldn't compile my own kernel, let alone making code changes. LLMs can be quite empowering! Of course, always keep a backup!
It’s funny, as Linux became more viable as a daily driver, it became less about the system itself and more about how it integrated into the rest of my life. That isn’t something an LLM will solve for me.
I enjoy the TUI apps on Linux as well as OpenCode, Codex and Claude Code. I used to use Linux only for QA work but now that Devs are using more AI to produce better quality apps that are surpassing Windows UI quality it is way more enjoyable since I noticed way better graphics and more satisfying responsiveness from UI. I feel like TUI stuff works way better in Linux. Windows seems to have a lot of bugs. For example Antigravity's agy cli is way better in Linux than Windows.
I heard of a story had an issue with one of the drivers, if I remember right regarding audio, after letting LLM loose, making patches and recmpiling the kernel, it worked. They even shared the patch as a pull request or something which of course the person, mentioned that it was out of his depth so he won't be working on the feedback.
I thought this was a quite a success story, normally I wouldn't compile my own kernel, let alone making code changes. LLMs can be quite empowering! Of course, always keep a backup!