There are several areas where open source systems are better than proprietary systems such as windows or macOS. Here are some examples:
1. Stability: One of the most important parts of an operating system is the file system. But windows and macOS don't have a file system that is reliable-competitive with OpenZFS or most other file systems developed for Unix-like systems. It has also been shown many times that popular open source software has fewer bugs on average than popular proprietary software, which means that popular open source software is more stable.
2. Security: Proprietary software cannot be audited by security specialists and is therefore inherently unsafe. Furthermore, the fact that porprietary software has more bugs also means that it has an additional security risk.
3. Functionality: open source software evolves much faster than proprietary software and therefore also offers more functionality and more advanced tech. Certain apps and software exist for BSD and/or Linux, but not for Windows and macOS.
4. Freedom of choice: proprietary software always prevents your choice to change things or often prevents you from doing many things that are easily possible in open source software. For example, think of the many windows managers and desktop environments that exist for Linux and BSD, but are missing in windows and macOS.
5. Ease of use: updating and installing software or apps is often much easier in open source systems than in windows/macOS.
6. Privacy: Apple and Microsoft have an extensive history of abusing their users' privacy, something you don't see with most BSD and Linux systems.
7. Performance: There are always differences in performance between different operating systems. Here are some examples:
redbyte.eu
adventurist.me
www.phoronix.com
www.phoronix.com
https://www.reddit.com/r/freebsd/comments/rkayfs
I am seeing a dramatic difference in performance between Linux and FreeBSD servers mounting the FreeNAS server I have setup. I have searched the forums and not found a discussion of this as a general problem, so wonder what in my setup might be causing this. The FreeNAS 8.3 server has a raidz2...
www.truenas.com
FreeBSD and Linux Nginx benchmark
docs.pritunl.com
On the same hardware , SSD-Disks. On one side Freebsd with ZFS filesystem, and on the other side Arch-Linux with XFS filesystem. Number of transactions per second comparison: Tokyocabinet-DB was 50% faster on Linux Redis-DB was as fast on Linux as on Freebsd Mongo-DB was 20 % faster on Freebsd...
forums.freebsd.org
Read our article on FreeBSD vs. Linux: Virtualization Showdown. Compare VM performance on FreeBSD's bhyve and Linux's KVM to make informed virtualization decisions.
klarasystems.com
If there is a large or significant performance difference in something that is important to you, you should choose the open source system that gives the highest performance there.
8. Support: Open source systems such as Linux and BSD often offer longer and better hardware support than proprietary systems such as windows and macOS.
www.phoronix.com
One of the highly debated subjects with Windows and Linux is with device support. The two have different methods of how drivers are created and implemented into the operating system.
www.zdnet.com
Which distro is the best usually also depends on your hardware and many other factors. Intel and AMD CPUs are usually well supported, but there too you see that some CPUs are simply not supported by certain distributions. But usually CPU support is less of a problem than GPU support, so I'll split my advice for Nvidia and AMD/Intel users:
Linux systems for Nvidia GPU users:
mageia, Nobara Project,
Void Linux, Mint,
NixOS, Artix Linux, MX Linux
Linux systems for AMD/Intel GPU users:
All of the above systems +
Alpine Linux,
Devuan and Clear Linux
I consider the five systems in bold to be the best Linux distributions of 2023.
I believe that the BSD systems are still more qualitative than the Linux systems.
Some BSD systems I would recommend are FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, and DragonFly BSD.