A few days ago I asked about taking the big leap, but I use my PC for work in the arts (voice over, music, digital art, etc).

I’ve been playing around with Bitwig to replace Cubase and ideally Adobe Audition. It’s… a learning curve but I’m willing to make it work if I can get everything about my PC lined up with Linux.

I then discovered Wine and Proton. So, they’re basically bridges that allow you to use some Windows programs in Linux? I read they can use vst files with a bit of work, and people have had some success with Cubase, though Adobe is still right out but I’d love to get away from Adobe anyway. Also games??

Is there a difference between Wine and Proton or are they basically just different programs that do the same thing? The big leap might be more feasible than I thought if they do what I think they do.

  • Random Dent@lemmy.ml
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    17 hours ago

    As a side note, a couple of things that might be handy for you:

    Bottles is a GUI for running Wine things that might make it a bit easier to navigate. It’s helped me out a few times.

    Also there’s an AppDB on the Wine site where you can search for specific software to find out how well it runs/tweaks that people have used etc.

    ALSO yeah games are in a pretty good place on Linux nowadays. I have a Steam Deck and it runs a surprising amount of stuff, even things that aren’t listed as being compatible. I think the main source of trouble is the online AntiCheat stuff, that’s not always compatible with Linux (although sometimes those work too, I think it just depends on the game.) There’s also protondb for checking which games work in Linux.

    Hopefully some of that is helpful!