1. Take Complete Control Over Your Desktop Experience
Windows allows only surface-level customization. You can change wallpapers, tweak accent colors, and adjust a few layout settings—but the core interface remains locked down.
Linux, by contrast, gives users full authority over how the system looks and behaves.
Total UI freedom on Linux
With Linux, you can:
- Swap entire desktop environments (KDE Plasma, GNOME, XFCE, Cinnamon, and more)
- Redesign menus, panels, window behavior, and animations
- Replace system components without hacks or paid tools
Instead of adapting to the OS, Linux adapts to you.
2. Move, Duplicate, or Redesign the Taskbar Any Way You Want
Windows 11 removed the ability to move the taskbar, forcing it to stay at the bottom of the screen. Linux never imposed such limits.
Panels without restrictions
On Linux, you can:
- Move panels to any edge of the screen
- Use multiple panels across monitors
- Create floating, auto-hiding, or stacked panels
- Replace taskbars entirely with docks or custom launchers
This level of flexibility is built in—not an afterthought.
3. Run a Full Operating System Directly From a USB Stick
Windows requires installation before it’s usable. Linux doesn’t.
Live environments and persistence
Linux lets you:
- Boot directly from a USB drive without installing
- Browse the web, edit documents, and access files immediately
- Enable persistent storage to save changes across reboots
This is ideal for troubleshooting, secure computing, and portable work setups. Microsoft’s discontinued “Windows To Go” never matched this flexibility.
4. Revive Old Hardware Windows Has Abandoned
Windows 11’s hardware requirements leave millions of functional PCs behind. Linux thrives on them.
Lightweight Linux distributions
Many Linux distros run smoothly on:
- Older dual-core processors
- 4GB of RAM or less
- Traditional hard drives
Linux turns aging laptops into usable machines instead of e-waste.
5. Use an Operating System That Respects Your Privacy by Default
Windows collects telemetry by default and increasingly integrates ads and AI features users didn’t ask for.
Linux takes a different approach.
Privacy-first by design
Most Linux distributions:
- Collect little or no telemetry
- Require opt-in for data sharing
- Contain no ads or forced AI assistants
- Allow full inspection and modification of system behavior
Privacy isn’t something you reclaim—it’s the default.
Bonus: Seamless Access to Windows Filesystems
Linux can read and write Windows NTFS drives out of the box. Windows, however, can’t natively read Linux filesystems like EXT4 or Btrfs.
For dual-boot users, this makes Linux far more practical for file recovery and cross-system access.
Final Thoughts
Windows is familiar and widely supported, but Linux excels at control, longevity, and freedom.
From running your OS off a USB drive to extending the life of old hardware and reclaiming privacy, Linux offers possibilities Windows still refuses to match. For users who want ownership of their computing experience, Linux remains in a league of its own.
Thank you for being a Ghacks reader. The post 5 Powerful Things Linux Lets You Do That Windows Still Won’t appeared first on gHacks Technology News.
☞ El artículo completo original de Arthur Kay lo puedes ver aquí