The problem: you still need Windows every now and then (even I have this 'problem'). Those games that just refuse to run in Wine, or those applications, or something just is not there in Linux free or not free (like multimedia apps comparable to Logic or Pro Tools, or even FL Studio).
Of course you'll notice that when you boot back into Windows, your Firefox there is completely different from your Firefox in Linux. How do we keep these in sync?
My pet project I have been working on for a while is looking for new developers, talented and motivated individuals.
If you would like to join, please have experience in one or more of the following areas:
I came across this site when trying to look up the state of PSPGo Homebrew, which seems to be okay for the moment but no leads (and NO you cannot yet play so-called 'backup' games yet).
As much as I hate linking to stupid sites, this one is a topper that just has to be seen, as it is a great example (Bluehat/Greyhat SEO-wise) of when content scraping goes wrong.
I have never had fun typing the mount command manually. It is annoying, sometimes runs into problems, and sometimes fails altogether. I also rather like clicking in this case, just like I would have done in DAEMON Tools on Windows or similar.
I also use KDE 4 now, and the Service Menus system has changed only slightly. The .desktop files are now located in a number of places:
/opt/kde4/share/services/ServiceMenus//usr/share/services/ServiceMenus//home/aaron/.kde4/share/kde4/services/ServiceMenus/Nowadays, PC game updates are often huge. They can range from less than 10 MB to gigabytes now. I burn these as I consider them game upgrades nearly. The thing is I do not feel like browsing to the setup executable every time I use the disc. So I generate an Autorun.inf file. Of course this is useful for anything that you need burned to disc that needs to launch an application (like a setup) on insertion (often used for picture CDs, etc).