So you are saying it does 99% of the stuff most people use Photoshop for?
Also, Adobe is kinda trying to force all their users to use their as a service solution from what I hear, so that is kind of a moot point.
Yeah, me boomer again, I always call that thing openoffice despite the fork, since there was no such thing back then.
And I think you mean Fuck Oracle.
The EU kinda trying to get everyone to use ODF.
Not really, a lot of game engines are multi-platform.
First ever game I ran on linux was UT 2003, from the same bootleg disk I was using for Windows.
Failing that there is Wine and Proton, and Steam is pushing that project pretty hard.
Industrial software - no idea what you are talking about, it really depends which industry.
Most servers run Linux.
Only people dumb enough to run a DB on Windows are the ones that have to use MS SQL Server, and that piece of crap works on Linux, too.
For most people the most mainstream programs are whatever they use to surf the internet, followed by whatever they use to deal with documents, listen to music and watch videos.
Linux has native solutions for all those needs.
Um, maya has linux support:
help.autodesk.com
There are a bunch of CAD programs for linux, but again, I see the companies making that software all turning it into an always online service down the road.
It can do most stuff most normie users.
Do you do something related to CAD/multimedia?