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What if productivity influencer Ali Abdaal wants to be a Linux user – Is Linux usable for macOS users

Many of you may be wondering who Ali Abdaal is. Others will directly associate the name with the relatively young, but already successful productivity influencer on YouTube. Ali Abdaal started sharing his thoughts on how to study better on YouTube when he was a medical student at Cambridge University. In the meantime, Ali shares his experiences with study techniques, productivity systems, but also life experiences, and entrepreneurship frequently and at a very fast pace. It is also clear that he is a passionate user of the Apple ecosystem and is looking for optimal integration of all his productivity tools. I began to wonder to what extent it is necessary for Ali Abdaal to use the macOS operating system, or whether it is also possible for him to switch to Linux. So, in this article, the main question is what if productivity influencer Ali Abdaal wants to be a Linux user – which Linux alternatives are available for his favorite macOS apps? 

Content of this article

  1. Who is Ali Abdaal
  2. Ali Abdaal’s favorite MacBook Apps (2023)
  3. What are Linux alternatives for Ali Abdaal’s favorite macOS desktop apps
  4. Summary

Who is Ali Abdaal

Ali Abdaal is a relatively young but already enormously successful productivity influencer from the new breed of productivity influencers like Tiago Forte, Thomas Frank, and Matt D’Avella. Ali describes himself in short as a doctor turned YouTuber turned entrepreneur. Ali offers through his various channels, such as Youtube (4.4 milion subscribers), podcast, courses, website, weekly newsletter, and soon to be published book, his vision, and knowledge about living happier, being more productive, being mentally and physically healthier, productivity hacks, apps, devices, books, research, and entrepreneurship. Due to his growing popularity, he is increasingly invited to give presentations all over the world.

Ali has a unique style based on a desire to continuously learn and improve new things and to pass this knowledge on to others. For many, his personal and casual approach is more approachable than the often more theoretical approach of previous generations of productivity gurus. Ali believes that we can all achieve much more through repetition of practice, building habits, and thinking in systems.

If you’ve watched some of Ali’s YouTube videos, you’ll quickly conclude that he has a strong preference for the Apple ecosystem. In the rest of this article, I want to explore whether Ali really can’t live without this platform, or whether he could switch to Linux.

Ali Abdaal’s favorite MacBook Apps (2023)

As mentioned above, Ali Abdaal’s preferred platform is the Apple ecosystem. In his YouTube video “My Favourite MacBook Apps (2023)“, he discusses his favorite apps for his MacBook.

Below is a summary of the apps mentioned in the above YouTube video, for macOS, organized into 6 categories.

Productivity Apps

Apps for Life Organisation

Apps for Personal Life

Apps for Research and Writing

Apps for Creative Work

Apps for Business

This was the list I extracted out of Ali Abdaal’s favorite applications for his MacBook YouTube video, or more generally, for macOS desktops and laptops, so of course also suitable for the iMac, Mac mini, etc. In the section below I will briefly explain what each app does, but more importantly, what in my opinion are proper Linux alternatives for these apps. What you will see is that many apps are also available for Linux and for those that are not available for Linux there are very good alternatives available.

What are Linux alternatives for Ali Abdaal’s favorite macOS desktop apps

In this section, I will briefly describe what the purpose is for each application. In addition, I will find out to what extent it is possible to achieve the same under Linux.

Productivity Apps

Apps for Life Organisation

Apps for Personal Life

Apps for Research and Writing

Apps for Creative Work

Apps for Business

Summary

In the overview below you will find a summary of the above analysis of alternatives. You can clearly see in this overview of Ali Abdaal’s 32 favorite applications that most applications are not natively available for Linux. Only 11 applications also have a Linux version, so two-thirds have not and thus demand a good Linux alternative. But based on the alternatives I provided, we can see that there are very many powerful and solid solutions available that can either be installed under Linux or can be used via the browser or a browser extension.

ApplicationRuns on LinuxLinux Alternatives
AlfredNoUlauncher
MoomNoi3
AmphetamineNoCaffeine
CleanshotNoShutter
RizeNoHamster, jTimeSched, and Kimai or Web Activity Time Tracker
ThingsNoZenkit To Do / Planner
FantasticalNoGoogle Calendar + Taction
SuperhumanNoBlueMail, Thunderbird
DashlaneNoBitwarden
SigmaOSNoVivaldi
Google DocsYesGoogle Docs, OnlyOffice
Day OneNoJoplin + Journal plugin
TextsYesTexts, Station
SpotifyYesSpotify
ObsidianYesObsidian, Joplin
ScrivenerNoManuskript / novelWriter
ZoteroYesJabRef
Kindle app NoKindle Cloud Reader
Google ChromeYesFirefox / Vivaldi / Brave
ScreenflowNoOBS
Final Cut ProNoDaVinci Resolve
PhotoshopNoGIMP / Krita
LightroomNodarktable
StreamlabsNoOBS
FigmaYesPenpot / Plasmic
NotionYesTrilium / Obsidian / Workflowy
ClickUpYesClickUp
1PasswordNoBitwarden
SlackYesSlack
ZoomYesZoom
LoomNoNextCloud + OBS / Jumpshare / Tella / Soapbox
MiroNoBoardmix / Lucidspark

Final words

I doubt my above analysis can convince Ali Abdaal to switch to Linux, but I do believe that being a macOS user is not absolutely necessary to achieve the same level of productivity and results as Ali does with his favorite apps. The only thing is that Ali thinks very carefully about optimized integration possibilities between different applications. In other YouTube videos, he discusses in-depth integration and automatic data exchange between his applications. For example, Ali also uses some applications on his Apple Watch, for recording assignments or reminders on his Watch while on the move, which are then immediately available on his other devices, like laptop, desktop, and mobile phone, and in connected applications. He also integrates his apps from a workflow perspective. This deep integration gets trickier with some of the alternatives I’ve given for Linux. But the question is whether it is really necessary to have this level of integration and collaboration to be productive. When we have a good understanding of the above alternatives for Linux and also have a good idea of our own productivity workflow, then we as Linux users can also be very productive with the tools available to us.

Please let me know via the Contact page if you see other alternatives, want to share more about your own Linux productivity workflow, or whatever you think has a relation with this article.


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