When you\'re used to one operating system, it can be easy to look at other operating systems almost as if they were apps. If you use one OS on your desktop, you might think of another OS as the app that people use to run servers, and another OS as the app that plays games, and so on. We sometimes forget that an operating system is the part of a computer that manages a countless number of tasks (millions per second, technically), and they\'re usually designed to be capable of a diverse set of tasks. When people ask me what Linux *does*, I usually ask what they *want* it to do. There\'s no single answer, so here are 5 surprising things I do with Linux. ## 1. Laser cutting At the nearest makerspace, there\'s a big industrial machine, about the size of a sofa, that slices through all kinds of materials according to a simple line-drawing design file. It\'s a powerful laser cutter, and I the first time I used it I was surprised to find that it just connected to my Linux laptop with a USB cable. In fact, in many ways, it was easier to connect to this laser cutter than it is to connect with many desktop printers, many of which require over-complicated and bloated drivers. Using Inkscape and \[a simple plugin\](https://github.com/JTechPhotonics/J-Tech-Photonics-Laser-Tool/releases/tag/v1.0-beta_ink0.9), you can design cut lines for industrial laser cutters. Design a case for your Raspberry Pi laptop, use these Creative Commons design plans to build \[a dice tower\](https://msraynsford.blogspot.com/2016/05/working-dice-tower-with-plans.html) for your tabletop games, cut out a sign for your shopfront, or whatever it is you have in mind. And do it using an entirely open source stack. ## 2. Gaming Open source has \[always had games\](https://opensource.com/article/20/5/open-source-fps-games), and there have been some high profile Linux games in the recent past. The first gaming PC I built was a Linux PC, and I don\'t think any of the people I had over for friendly couch co-op games really realized they were using Linux by playing. It\'s a smooth and seamless experience, and the sky\'s the limit, depending on how much you want to spend on hardware. What\'s more is that it\'s not just the games that have been coming to Linux, but the platform too. Valve\'s recent Steam Deck is a popular handheld gaming console that runs Linux. Better still, many open source software titles have been publishing releases on Steam, including [Blender](http://blender.org) and [Krita](http://krita.org), as ways to encourage wider adoption. ## 3. Office work Linux, like life, isn\'t always necessarily exciting. Sometimes, you need a computer to do ordinary things, like when you pay bills, make a budget, or write a paper for school or a report for work. Regardless of the task, Linux is also normal, everyday desktop computer. You can use it to ## 4. Music production ## 5. Retro computing ## Bonus: Servers It can be easy to think of an operating system as something that\'s a single-serving. I remember the first time I met someone who\'d grown up using Linux. It never seemed to happen for most of the time I\'ve been a Linux user, but lately it\'s relatively common. I think the most surprising encounter was with a young woman, toddler in tow, who saw whatever geeky t-shirt I was wearing at the time and casually mentioned that she also used Linux, because she\'d grown up with it. It actually made me a little jealous, but then I remembered that Unix on a desktop computer simply *didn\'t exist* when I was growing up. Still, it\'s fun to think about how casual Linux has become over the past few decades. I\'m a Linux user, and I appreciate that it\'s built to handle complex tasks on a large scale.