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Personally I find switching between Windows and *nix more confusing than switching between Arch, Debian, SLES, Solaris and FreeBSD every day.
At least with the different *nix's, they're all largely POSIX and any terminal mistakes takes just a couple of seconds to spot (eg using ps ax in Solaris, forgetting I need to use the hyphened switches instead).
Switching between Windows and *nix, I'm confronted with not only a different type of terminal shell entirely (the number of times I type ls into cmd.exe is just embarrassing), but a completely different file system hierarchy and even a unique different.
Quite honestly, it almost always takes me 5 or 10 minutes of guess work before I've readjusted to Windows.
Edited 2013-01-25 12:49 UTC
Oh, I'm pretty cool with that, it's just I sometimes try to exit Notepad.exe by pretty <esc>wq.
The problem I had with Linux vs FreeBSD were mostly the command switches. Many I don't know, until I sit behind a Linux prompt and have to type them. On FreeBSD some are the same, some are not, some have different effects.
As it was my desktop OS it made more sense to switch back to Linux as its desktop development went much faster than FreeBSD's and I already knew how it worked.
Nothing bad to say about FreeBSD though.
BTW I'm tidying up my house and I found many more watches.





Member since:
2011-05-12
I've used FreeBSD for a while on the desktop, but I already had a few years Linux experience (which we had running on servers at work) and too many things were the same, slightly different or very different.
In the end I found it too confusing to be using both so I sadly had to let go of FreeBSD.