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.
Wine and proton are the same valve takes wine and adds some tweaks to it to work beter for games. Wine can work in a pinch but I wouldn’t rely on it for your workflow as wine could always be playing catch up when your software updates versions.
Wine/Proton is a translation layer that translates windows system calls Linux system calls. So if wine/proton doesn’t have a feature windows has for your knew version then it will break. That’s okay for games but for something you need for work that can be a deal breaker. If you can switching to something Linux native will benefit you in the long run.
In this case I would say the other way round. Proton works in a container, so getting to the sound interface for example might be harder than just using Wine