• @qwertyqwertyqwerty@lemmy.world
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    1397 months ago

    Honestly, between the telemetry data collection, the strange hardware requirements, advertisements, bloatware, and unknown future licensing model, Linux is looking like an attractive option. At this point, I only use Windows for Office and gaming, and Linux + Proton has gotten really good lately. I don’t see a reason to use Windows on my personal machine any more.

    • OldQWERTYbastard
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      907 months ago

      We don’t use the word “Spyware” like we did twenty years ago. It’s baked into Windows now.

    • @sweetchildintime@lemmy.world
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      367 months ago

      Linux is fine for people like you and me who are comfortable installing our own operating system, and trouble-shooting any problems. Most ‘normal’ people though will continue to walk into a store, buy a laptop, and use whatever came installed.

      Of course, the year of Linux on the desktop actually happened some time ago without anyone noticing. It’s called ChromeOS, and that’s a whole different can of worms.

      • @SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        287 months ago

        While true, how much troubleshooting does windows require? Because as I sometimes use windows, it’s not that much less work to get it to do what you want it to do, or solve issues, than linux.

        Especially since it feels like windows tries to fight you every step of the way.

        • @pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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          107 months ago

          Most distributions require little to no troubleshooting, and if they do, someone has probably already posted the solution online. It’s pretty rare these days that you run into a problem that someone else hasn’t and you’re stuck figuring it out yourself.

          The only pain point is trying to find the Linux equivalent of the Windows apps that you commonly use. Web browsers are the exact same, but that’s about it. A fair amount of apps to offer Linux counterparts though.

        • Dudewitbow
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          47 months ago

          It depends on ehat youre trying to do. If you are teying to debloat it, of course you go out of your way, but it has the reverse problem for most drivers, where youre almost guaranteed to plug in an arbitrary USB device, and itll probably have drivers or software in the windows environment.

          Linux is great. With the caveat that you specifically pick hardware that works well in Linux for it, else you have the problem of “a choice fighting you every step of the way”

        • smoothbrain coldtakes
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          17 months ago

          Linux is easily fixed but the problem is that the issues that crop up needing to be fixed are generally not pain points on Windows. The first Arch install I did this year was busted and I thought I had broken my networking setup because it wouldn’t connect, but the issue was that the system clock was wrong. Something like that may pop up in Windows but you can quickly press the sync time and date button in the settings and it’ll sort itself out, while Arch requires a lot more work than just that, especially if it has no connectivity.

          • @SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            67 months ago

            …I’ve certainly had that issue on windows as well. I had to manually set the time. Windows sync at least didn’t use to always work.

          • @pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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            37 months ago

            I’ve been using Linux for like 15 years and Arch for about a decade. I’ve never had an issue where the system time prevents the network connection from working. That’s odd.

            • smoothbrain coldtakes
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              7 months ago

              It makes sense because all of our cryptography is based around time limits. If the system time is way off it can’t verify the cryptographic signatures and it’s not going to validate any certs since the time doesn’t line up properly.

      • @pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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        147 months ago

        Once people get over the initial Windows indoctrination, Linux is simple to use and doesn’t require tons of complex troubleshooting like people think. Before the COVID lockdown I tried for the Nth time to get my dad to use Linux. I had it installed and told him to stick with it for a few weeks (he only browses the web and plays solitaire). If he still didn’t like it, I’d reenable Windows. Well that few weeks turned into 6 months. Now both he and my mom have been happy Linux users for about 2 years.

        • @itsraining@lemmy.world
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          67 months ago

          If I may ask, how do you deal with updates? Have you enabled unattended upgrades or do you update the machines yourself?

          • @Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            His dad just needs to put a password when asked. It’s a 6-years-old kid task updating on most Linux distro.

            • @itsraining@lemmy.world
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              67 months ago

              That would be true if:

              1. A GUI software center is used (or if the said dad is comfortable with an interactive console application)
              2. The said dad actually realizes the importance behind updates. From my experience, many people don’t.

              So, unless both of above are true, the dad will never (want to) update his system because “it works as is”, sticking to old versions of software, never receiving bugfixes and neglecting security.

              • @Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                Most distro nowadays come with a gui to update. A pop up window appears asking if you want to update/upgrade. You can press “yes” and the password of the sudoer or admin user is asked. It has been like this for over a decade. For popular distros as Ubuntu or fedora over 15 years

                Is it different for your distro?

                • @itsraining@lemmy.world
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                  17 months ago

                  Yes, probably because I stick with Arch and Slackware plus a lightweight environment. The only time I saw such a GUI was when I tried out Elementary just for fun.

                  What I consider a problem is that the user can simply dismiss or disregard the updates notification indefinitely. I know many non-tech-savvy people who do not understand the importance of updates, so they would be inclined to do exactly that. That is why unattended upgrades are probably a better option in such cases.

              • @pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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                47 months ago

                You’re a wise (wo)man. That is exactly the case. I’ve shown him how to do it in the GUI but he doesn’t care to because, like you said, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”.

                • @itsraining@lemmy.world
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                  17 months ago

                  Thank you for answering. I can relate to manually updating my parents’ systems once in a while but at this point I’m seriously considering unattended upgrades (updating over SSH is also a good idea).

          • @pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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            57 months ago

            I do it for them whenever I come over every month or two (I live out of state). I could also just SSH in and do it remotely if I really wanted to. I showed my dad how to do it with the GUI package manager, but he’s the “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” type. Linux will run perfectly fine without updates for years.

          • @ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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            57 months ago

            I’m not the guy you asked, and I hope he responds because I’d like to hear his answer too, but a lot of that depends on the Linux distro you select. On rolling releases you get continuous updates automatically, not major upgrades like forced Windows Updates.

            • @pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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              47 months ago

              I’m OP, he runs Manjaro and I handle the updates whenever I see him, every month or so (I live out of state). I could do it over SSH but if something happens to break, it’s a pain to fix. I showed him how to do it in the GUI but he doesn’t care to do it.

            • @itsraining@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              What do you mean, automatically? Arch is a rolling release and I have to explicitly run pacman with the correct flags to update. At the same time Debian, which is not a rolling release, has the unattended upgrades feature which installs updates automatically.

              But indeed, many things depend on the distro. For example, user-centric distros such as Elementary and others provide an easy to use GUI for updating the system.

              And yes, Windows Updates was (is still? not a Win user) a nightmare.

              • @ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                What do you mean, automatically? Arch is a rolling release and I have to explicitly run pacman with the correct flags to update. At the same time Debian, which is not a rolling release, has the unattended upgrades feature which installs updates automatically.

                I was thinking Tumbleweed, Manjaro and the like which have GUI updaters, lol. @pete_the_cat@lemmy.world was pretty clear that his parents are the ultimate Linux beginners; he’s not going to give them Arch or Debian out of the box and bark command lines at them.

      • @ForgotAboutDre@lemmy.world
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        67 months ago

        When people are talking about Linux Desktop they usually mean GNU/Linux. Chrome OS and Android both use the Linux kernel, but they aren’t GNU/Linux like we understand Linux desktop.

        GNU/Linux needs a company that will create a Macintosh equivalent. A company that will design quality hardware. Restrict the hardware they support tightly, but highly optimise the drivers in their devices. Selling their equipment with a distro that’s well supported with bug testing and user support. Each update being tested on all their devices.

        This would allow people to buy their devices without much thought.

        I think people in the past thought this could be Ubuntu and Canonical. But their business is server, so there desktop will never get to the place it needs to be.

        The steam deck is pushing Linux closer to this place. But I don’t think it will be enough.

          • @ForgotAboutDre@lemmy.world
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            27 months ago

            System76 aren’t there. They sell rebranded ugly generic laptops with low quality screens. They sell them for a similar prices to low end macbooks. You put the average person in front of both in a store and they are going for the macbook. Better screen, better battery life and good quality hardware.

            PopOS has the best chance to be ‘the Linux’ desktop. But they need nicer hardware. System76 are selling laptops to Linux people, that’s their market. They don’t have nice hardware design to compete in the high end of the market. And they aren’t cheap enough to compete in the low end.

            System76 are also going after the server market. I suspect they will go the way of Ubuntu. Chasing the server market and being too distracted to follow through with their desktop ambitions.

            • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Tell us how you really feel. xD

              I wouldn’t call System76’ hardware ugly. It’s generic looking, sure, but it’s not ugly. It’s also designed by them. They used to only customize OEM systems with their own designs, but they started designing and manufacturing their own desktops a few years ago. Their first fully self designed and manufactured laptop is coming out soon. They have never just rebranded other companies’ designs though, so that’s just flat out wrong.

              Their screens are fine. Have you seen them? They’re nothing to write home about, but they’re not low quality.

              They have a range of laptops from $999 to $3,299, so I’m not sure what you mean when you say they’re a similar price to a low end MacBook.

              They are very much not abandoning their desktop ambitions. They are putting a lot of effort and investment into their own desktop environment.

              There is no company that designs all their PC hardware and all their software. Not even Apple does (but they’re probably the closest). Everyone has suppliers they work with for stuff they don’t want to design or build.

      • @qwertyqwertyqwerty@lemmy.world
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        27 months ago

        To add to that, Android is likely the overwhelming market share of Linux-based operating systems in use today. For that matter, an absolute ton of Intel CPUs have Minux installed on them too, but I wouldn’t call this “on the desktop”, just interesting.

    • Possibly linux
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      147 months ago

      Until you realize that many orgs have software that only works on windows.

      Its not a great situation

      • SuperDuper
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        87 months ago

        Storage is super cheap these days. Just buy an extra hard drive for Windows and boot into that on the rare occasion you truly need to use Windows. Or just use a VM.

        • Possibly linux
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          17 months ago

          You could just use a VM or put on the same disk. There is no reason to spend extra money

          • SuperDuper
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            7 months ago

            Windows has a bad habit of fucking up Linux boot partitions when it updates, so proceed with caution if you decide to keep them on one disk.

      • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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        57 months ago

        I’ve worked as a SWE at Facebook, Google, and LinkedIn, and none of the devs I worked with used Windows. Everyone either used Mac or Linux. It’s just a matter of time before the dev world bleeds out into the consumer world.

        • @BURN@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          We’re a Mac shop here, but almost everyone I know still runs windows on their desktops. The few who don’t are on MacBooks and don’t have desktops.

          Linux is still a minority, even among developers

          Edit: I should probably clarify I mean personal desktops, not work provided.

          • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            At LinkedIn everyone had a Linux desktop that matched the server environment. Very few people actually coded on their desktop though. Most of us used a MacBook then either tested on the desktop or tested on a dev server.

            At Google, almost everyone used a MacBook or their Goobuntu desktop (Google’s custom version of Ubuntu). Basically everyone would remote into their desktop to write code. Some people used Windows and some used Chromebooks.

            At Facebook, most used MacBooks, the rest were pretty evenly divided between Windows and Linux (on Thinkpads). Everyone had a Linux dev server in one of the data centers to test on.

            At every one of these places, the production environment is 100% Linux, so eventually, everyone had to test their code on Linux (except mobile or desktop app developers).

            Again, I never worked with anyone who used Windows, but I knew there were some people who did, cause they would stick out.

            • @BURN@lemmy.world
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              27 months ago

              Should probably clarify that I meant their home PCs, not work provided ones. Our dev is all done on Mac and then we have remote Linux dev environments for testing if needed.

              Windows for development is asinine, can definitely agree there. But for home computing it still isn’t taking over.

      • @ramble81@lemm.ee
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        47 months ago

        Corporations have access to a version of windows that doesn’t have telemetry, advertisements or bloatware. Its called Enterprise Edition.

          • @ramble81@lemm.ee
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            37 months ago

            Cost wasn’t mentioned in the original scope. OP was saying he hates the telemetry, ads, etc. and then you stated that companies have software that needs windows to run, to which I stated that there is a version that doesn’t have OPs concerns and runs custom apps that companies use.

            • Possibly linux
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              17 months ago

              I was actually speaking from personal experience but I see your point

    • @corbinOP
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      87 months ago

      The subscription rumor was debunked pretty quickly. I honestly don’t see that happening anytime soon, PC makers would get pretty upset (especially if they don’t get a cut of the revenue).

    • @pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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      27 months ago

      Do it. I only use Windows to play my heavily modded copy of Skyrim and now Starfield. Everything else has been Linux for years.

      • @twack@lemmy.world
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        17 months ago

        I have been playing both of those on proton with little issue, and I’m not positive that the issues I experienced are exclusive to linux.

        • @pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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          17 months ago

          Using ModOrganizer2 to launch a Windows game from Steam using Proton is a massive pain in the ass, I’ve tried to set it up a few times before. I finally got it to work correctly, where it would actually run the game with ENB, and I was getting 15 FPS on an RTX 2080 Super and Ryzen 7 5900.

          Also trying to get all the other programs like DynDoLOD and xEdit to work with MO2 was a pain as well.

      • @qwertyqwertyqwerty@lemmy.world
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        17 months ago

        I was using Mint for a while but the system got hosed. I plan on modding Starfield, and there was another game I can’t recall that wouldn’t work on Linux. After I best Starfield I fully expect to wipe my system again and go with a more stable distro of Linux (e.g. Gentoo or something).

  • @a_fancy_kiwi@lemmy.world
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    707 months ago

    I could probably tolerate Windows 11 if:

    • the start menu search didn’t search the web and just searched my system.
    • the widget panel wasn’t just a wrapper for their shitty news aggregator that seems to only gather celebrity news
    • If I have windows pro, I don’t want notifications to use Edge or see TikTok, Amazon, Candycrush, etc. in the start menu (I know they aren’t downloaded but what “pro” wants any of that shit)
    • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.world
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      207 months ago

      the start menu search didn’t search the web and just searched my system.

      Windows 10 has the same problem, that one isn’t unique to 11.

      Widgets I don’t think there’s anything that can save that. 10% of the space is set aside for actual widgets, the rest is just their “news”.

    • HidingCat
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      27 months ago

      Searching the web isn’t that bad, it’s on the bottom anyway, no? Or did they change that in Win11?

      Still waiting for my taskbar changes, mainly.

      • @a_fancy_kiwi@lemmy.world
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        207 months ago

        This is definitely a personal preference thing but I think if you want to search the web, you go to the web browser. And if you want to search for a folder or file on the system, windows search should fulfill that purpose.

        At the very least, it should be a toggle. The current implementation of Windows search feels like it’s only there to force people to use Edge

    • @Nelots@lemm.ee
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      27 months ago

      As others mentioned, there are ways to disable all of this shit incredibly easily. ShutUp10++ is my personal choice for debloating Windows 10 & 11. Now, should it need to be done in the first place? No, but I’d say installing the program is easier than learning a whole new operating system.

  • kubica
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    7 months ago

    I can understand that sometimes hardware needs to be deprecated, but windows 11 is trying to ditch hardware that is still quite new. And with all the chip problems and expenses it has not been so feasible to “just” get something more up to date.

    If I’m going to buy something with the same money that I bought what I have now I’m going to end with about the same pefromance of what I have.

    • @tobbue@feddit.de
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      107 months ago

      Yeah the hardware I’m running can easily run cyberpunk and any other modern game with satisfying FPS. Yet, it has no 8th gen CPU so I’m not able to upgrade. If I would upgrade my CPU just for win 11 I would have to replace my mainboard and then my GPU would bottleneck which would be, well, sad, so I would feel like I need to upgrade it too … And well, we know where this leads. I’m just not in for this ride just for Windows 11. I already use Linux on a different drive and prepare to fully switch to Linux. It’s just for gaming that I still use Windows and I feel like Linux could really “profit” from Microsofts decision to ditch Windows 10 under this conditions.

      • @QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Most of those requirements are, to quote Captain Barbosa, “more what you’d call guidelines than actual rules.” Registry hacks can bypass the more specific CPU requirements and the TPM check, allowing older PCs to run Windows 11. That’s how I upgraded my gaming PC to Windows 11, which has a first-gen Ryzen CPU (just barely missing the Ryzen 2000 minimum), and it runs Windows 11 just as well as Windows 10. Maybe those hacked installations of Windows 11 will stop working at some point, or a future Windows 12 update will make those requirements actually required, but so far Microsoft hasn’t given any indication that will happen.

        I found this part of the article interesting; it’s the first time I’m hearing about it. It’s nice to know that my old desktop won’t be stuck on Windows 10 once it’s deprecated, although it’s also… fucking ridiculous, to say the least. If it weren’t for two programs that WINE/proton can’t run, I’d have switched it over to Linux years ago.

        Edit:

        Microsoft even had to carve out exceptions for its own hardware: the 2018 Surface Studio 2, which was priced at up to almost $5,000, nearly didn’t get Windows 11 because it had a 7th-gen Intel CPU. It was later added to the compatibility list.

        Jesus fucking Christ Microsoft

    • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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      47 months ago

      Yep. I can literally buy brand new hardware that doesn’t run Windows 11 without an extra purchase (TPM module).

  • HidingCat
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    507 months ago

    ITT: People who just read the headlines and not the article, and then going off on their own Windows rant/Linux evangelism instead of discussing the article.

    • @corbinOP
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      237 months ago

      A certified Lemmy/Reddit classic.

    • @servermonky@lemmy.today
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      37 months ago

      A someone running a proxmox cluster on my gaming PCs, why not just use all of the above? Hell, I still have an XP VM on there somewhere for some particularly grouchy games.

      • HidingCat
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        37 months ago

        Don’t see a need, basically. What games require XP though? So far all my old games still work on 10.

        • GreyBeard
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          37 months ago

          XP was the last Windows OS that supported 16 bit code if I recall correctly, so there’s that. Although most games that needed that are better off with something like DOSbox.

          • HidingCat
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            17 months ago

            Ah yes, I suppose there’s that, and I’ve been running the really old games on Dosbox too.

    • Riskable
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      -237 months ago

      I read the article! It suggests in a hundred different ways that Windows 11 sucks and that sticking it out with Windows 10 is a bad idea for a dozen different reasons.

      The people here suggesting Linux nailed it. If you’re not using Linux at this point you’re just being lazy, IMHO. If you have any issues you can always just troubleshoot and fix it but based on the anecdotes posted so far it’s obvious no one claiming to have tried Linux has done much of that.

      Get off your ass and learn something new for real or stop bitching and bend over for Microsoft with your wallet ready to pay them afterwards for the privilege.

      People bitching about Windows on their personal PCs is like people who don’t vote bitching about politics.

      • HidingCat
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        187 months ago

        No, I just want to use my time in other ways, thank you. You can call it lazy, but that’s what it is. Windows 10 still works, the issues won’t come till 2025, and regardless, Windows 11 issues are mostly personal preferences (I just want my task bar to work in a certain way).

        This religious-like evangelising over Linux is such a turn off, regardless of whatever technical merits the OS might have. It’s definitely not moving the needle for me, and it’s turning me off the fediverse.

        • Zammy95
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          87 months ago

          Linux has tons of perks! If you don’t care, awesome! Have a nice day and enjoy whatever you want.

          I don’t see how this is a difficult concept for so many haha. Like yeah, you can like something and think it’s a better way to do something, but I do LOADS of things the “wrong way”. Who cares

          • HidingCat
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            07 months ago

            That’s why the Linux crowd here I describe as evangelical. I’m going to say that even the vegans aren’t as annoyingly zealous.

            • @rivalary@lemmy.ca
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              47 months ago

              It’s just something that people are excited about. It’s also mind-boggling how people complain so much about a product but refuse to replace it. Yeah, I get it how there’s software that only runs on Windows; this is something that should be fixed. We shouldn’t be stuck on a shitty OS with no other options due to required software. That’s the thing about Linux, you can customize it to be whatever you want, whereas you’re stuck with whatever Microsoft gives you with Windows. Just the idea that a single company has control over everything is wrong. I don’t really care if Linux wins out in the end, I just want choice in what OS I can run. That’s it.

      • @corbinOP
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        137 months ago

        Linux is great but it’s not always an option. It doesn’t run every app or game that Windows has (Proton is great but it’s not 100%), or maybe you’re doing dev work that has to be on a Windows machine, or you’re using some hardware that isn’t supported well in Linux. I switched off Linux to Windows (and then later to macOS) partially because Photoshop and Lightroom are pretty great tools for my job and the workarounds/alternatives weren’t cutting it.

        • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          That’s funny cause the last time I told my friend Alex that I couldn’t switch to Windows because it doesn’t run the Linux apps I need, he was like, “well you can use WSL, which can run Linux apps in Windows”. I would describe it the same way, it’s great, but it’s not 100%.

      • @BestBouclettes@jlai.lu
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        117 months ago

        Putting this burden straight on the consumer is stupid. Most people don’t care about what’s running on their machines and have absolutely no interest in learning it. Same thing with cars, you know how to operate it and that’s enough for 95% of the people. I agree that Linux is not that hard to learn and understand but that’s already too much for the standard consumer.

        The issue is and has always been with Microsoft and the deals it had with OEM and governments. It locked us into a Microsoft only world (office being absolutely everywhere, windows installed by default on 99% of hardware etc.), and things that were unveiled by the Halloween Papers etc… Microsoft changed its stance on FOSS but it’s only because they managed to profit from it (azure mostly). It’s still the same garbage company.

      • @Pasta4u@lemmy.world
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        57 months ago

        Every half a decade or so since windows 95 I have tried Linux and I have come to the same conclusion each time. I rather use windows 95.

        • yeehaw
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          47 months ago

          If it’s not gaming I’m dual booting into Linux as my primary productivity OS. Even then, a lot of the games I play do run perfectly fine under Linux. Been going strong with this since 2015 and I don’t have much negative to say about it. Ymmv

          • @Pasta4u@lemmy.world
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            37 months ago

            Only place it works fine for me is steam deck. Otherwise I just use windows unless I have to service a Linux machine at work.

      • @massivefailure@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        If you’re not using Linux at this point you’re just being lazy

        I used Linux for over twenty years and stopped about two years ago due to Linux invariably moving to lazy, poor development and design all the way from the kernel up. Rapid kernel development with tons of random new patches and ideas instead of the old way of maintaining a stable kernel and doing random patches and ideas on a separate branch (the odd minor versions vs. the stable even ones, and even the modern “stable” kernels are just the same branch of constantly rapid updated kernels where they just choose one at random and say “this is ‘stable’ now and we’ll keep patching it instead of telling people to install new ones”), systemd being more of a problem than a solution, the push for everything to move to Wayland forcing every single thing that has to do with lower level desktop interfaces, including all of the lightweight window managers, to completely rewrite themselves with tons of bloat that replaces everything X.org did by default as well as Wayland’s devs taking a “it works on my computer” approach to bugs and dismissing tons of major issues people have found, pipewire still not being a stable, reliable audio system (Linux has never had one, but using ALSA with the right hardware back in the day where everything would mix via hardware was a decent solution), distros becoming more and more unreliable and buggy (even “stable” and “long term support” ones), distros and developers giving up on native and running bare metal applications and substituting things like flatpak to run things natively with any sort of cross-platform reliability and fucking wine – essentially a new version of Windows running in Linux, which is an admission of failure to make a successful game platform if I’ve ever heard one – to run games, and on and on.

        I’ve been able to use Linux very well until a few years back. I used to be one of its biggest advocates and wouldn’t dare run Windows.

        No more. People bitch, moan, and complain about Windows 11 so much but for me, it just works. Simply, easily, no problem. Do I wish I still used Linux? Hell, yes. But am I given how bad it’s become? Nope. I’ve even tried going back here and there and quickly ran into the same huge list of problems and aches that were never there before and back to Windows I go.

        Sorry, Linux is a pain and it’s not about being lazy, it’s about wanting to use a decent OS that just works as well as Linux used to.

        • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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          57 months ago

          I’ve been using Linux since 2008, and yours and my experience is basically opposite. I stayed on X until about a year ago, and haven’t had any problems with Wayland. PipeWire was basically immediately better as soon as Fedora switched to it. I could use Jack plugins and patch bays with my pulse apps, including all the electron apps, like Discord. Systemd has always been better than sys5 init. Maybe you don’t remember how bad the old init daemon was.

          I’m sorry you had trouble with Linux though.

          • @rivalary@lemmy.ca
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            17 months ago

            Ditto here. I always felt that the desktop environments were just way less polished than Windows, but I feel like it’s been the reverse now with KDE Plasma for the past couple years. I don’t feel like I’m taking a lesser experience for the sake of having control over my computer, at least anymore.

            I would actually like if Windows went back to the Windows 7 era of… everything. At least there’d be some competition to Linux. Where it’s sitting right now with both Windows 10 and 11, I’d take a lesser experience under Linux if it meant that Microsoft wasn’t in charge of everything. It’s my computer.

          • @massivefailure@lemm.ee
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            06 months ago

            I remember the old initd. It was fast, efficient, didn’t hang up for 10+ minutes when it got confused about what needed to shut down when, and just worked until a bunch of impatient new Linux users wanted to get to the desktop in 0.00007 seconds and couldn’t patiently wait for a proper init boot order so they created this bloated monstrosity. But those aren’t even the worst part of NuLinux: to this day Wayland is absolute unstable garbage not worth using. Visual glitches, UI glitches, instability, slowdowns, and outright crashes that even REISUB can’t recover from. Meanwhile, Xorg still Just Works.

            Modern Linux is garbage and needs to be either fixed or thrown away.

            • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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              16 months ago

              Considering how many issues you’re having using software I currently use without issue on a huge variety of hardware, I think you’re probably experiencing hardware related issues. Either that or you’re using some configuration that is causing you issues. You might want to start from scratch on a new system and see if you run into the same issues.

              • @massivefailure@lemm.ee
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                5 months ago

                Considering what a wide variety of hardware I use and all of it exhibits the same behavior, maybe it’s just you who is ignoring obvious issues to push your agenda.

    • @HC4L@lemmy.world
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      207 months ago

      Sorry but I hate this argument. Most people use a phone for that anyway. And my 70 year old mom is going to ask my dad and if he can’t fix the problem someone else and guess what. They never worked with Linux. I can tell you that a lot of the buttons and controls have looked the same in Windows for way too long. Admittedly from Windows 10/11 this gets worse.

      Also they will need software from the local photo place, some shit old legacy app that they refuse to let go, banking software that isn’t Linux compatible… it’s never “just browsing” from my experience and it’s not worth the hassle. Especially if I’m cornering myself by becoming the only 24/7 on-call admin for my family.

      • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I switched my mom to Linux back in 2014, and she hasn’t had problems with it (except every 2 years when she makes me update her to the new version of Ubuntu, because she doesn’t want to do it herself). My dad has tried to switch her back to Windows, but she likes Ubuntu better. He eventually switched too after he retired and we built him a computer. He uses it for browser+light gaming, and Linux works well for both now. (He was familiar with Linux as part of his job, so it wasn’t hard for him to get used to the switch. Though he was really only familiar with the terminal.)

      • @librechad@lemm.ee
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        17 months ago

        Debian is very stable, and its also pretty easy to update and have long term stability. You can just click a button to update or have it automated. If all they’re doing is browsing, Debian should be sufficent, plus, it’s free.

    • Neon 🇺🇦🇪🇺🇹🇼🇮🇱
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      117 months ago

      generally would have agreed with you but since i got a new Monitor i have had nothing but Problems.

      Granted i don’t make it Easy for Linux by having 3 monitors at 4K:60Hz 1440p:144Hz 1080p:60Hz but still

      all my Browsers always crash. I assume it has to do with Scaling since they like to especially crash when i move them between monitors. Then Gnome randomly crashes. It’s a nightmare.

      was forced to come back to Windows 11 because of all that Bullshit. I guess the upside is much better Security on Windows, but still. Although that added Security is pretty useless since every fucking Program needs administrator rights for some inconceivable reason.

    • @Raxiel@lemmy.world
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      177 months ago

      Apparently that was never the official line, and was just something a “dev evangelist” (marketer) said at some conference and it stuck

  • Romkslrqusz
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    247 months ago

    Windows 11 definitely has its issues, but I don’t think the author of this article has sufficient knowledge to be writing articles about it.

    There’s not a great solution for switching to UEFI in an existing install

    MBR2GPT is baked into Windows and works great as long as you don’t have a jacked up partition layout.

    Windows 11 demands a Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 security coprocessor, which isn’t in many PCs that meet all the other requirements.

    Part of the reason that Intel 8xxx and Ryzen 2xxx processors are the baseline “requirement” is that they have fTPM 2.0 embedded in the silicon. It’s actually in the overwhelming majority of devices that meet the other requirements.

    There appears to be no loss in functionality when bypassing the installation requirements… so why do they exist?

    Microsoft could provide a more limited Windows 11 experience to PCs that don’t meet the strict requirements

    Microsoft doesn’t go out of their way to hide the fact that you can install Windows 11 on unsupported hardware.

    By providing and sanctioning a “limited” experience, Microsoft would then have to dedicate resources to supporting that experience. I’ve worked with tons of legacy devices that had odd quirks that required workarounds in Windows 10, so I can’t really blame them for wanting to limit how they spend their support resources.

    • @ours@lemmy.film
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      57 months ago

      I second MBR2GPT. With a guide it’s quite straightforward to migrate from BIOS to EUFI but probably too scary for the average user.

    • @ddkman@lemm.ee
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      07 months ago

      No, you can’t blame them. You also can’t blame people for not upgradeing. The truth is picking totally arbitrary install requirements, especially ones that favour new hardware to high end ones alienated the early adopter base. Also microsoft killed any goodwill againtst them by bloating windows even more.

      • @ours@lemmy.film
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        57 months ago

        It’s not arbitrary. Securing an OS today is a huge challenge and Microsoft wants to leverage this tech to facilitate this. New hardware supports it, a lot of older hardware supports it and they strongly encourage this as the new standard.

        Yes it means some people won’t update without workarounds but they are setting a standard moving forward and for supported hardware, they were quite aggressive with the upgrade (I had to make sure the TPM was disabled in BIOS on a machine I didn’t wish to upgrade early on).

          • @ours@lemmy.film
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            17 months ago

            It allows Windows to create and store cryptographic keys and validate OS and firmware components haven’t been tampered with.

            • @ddkman@lemm.ee
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              7 months ago

              Okay, how is that inherently useful? All any form of trusted boot does is make sure, that the OS is whatever the manufacturer approves. If that is an outdated image full of backdoors and exploits, than that is what the TB enforces. TECHNICALLY a phone on android 2 is secure (by this logic) because the TB enforces that awfully outdated image. All trusted boot is good for is to make sure you can’t run acutally secure software on your device

  • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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    207 months ago

    It’s easier than ever to switch to Linux, especially if the thing holding you back was gaming.

      • @FeelThePower@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        37 months ago

        same here. switched back after years of dual booting because on all my DEs over the years I consistently had these issues, not to mention I make music and daws fucking hate Linux / wine. just made sure to debloat it before I used it.

      • @CeeBee@lemmy.world
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        27 months ago

        I saw in your other comment that you were using Gnome. A lot of people like it, but Gnome wouldn’t be my recommendation.

        I use a multi-monitor setup not that different from yours, and KDE handles it swimmingly. I also have an Nvidia card and I’m using X.org. I probably could use Wayland, but I’m in no rush.

        If you really want to stay with a GTK desktop, then XFCE is excellent also. Budgie too.

        • Neon 🇺🇦🇪🇺🇹🇼🇮🇱
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          27 months ago

          I tried Plasma, but that just ended in my 1080p Monitor freezing and turning off. Gnome did that too, but much much much rarer.

          So yeah, Linux just doesn’t like me.

          I am planning to move to a VR-Setup anyways, using my computer with “Virtual Desktop”.

          And that sadly isn’t available on Linux.

        • Neon 🇺🇦🇪🇺🇹🇼🇮🇱
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          17 months ago

          Nope. Flatpaks and native Nix Packages.

          Browsers and Steam would just randomly crash. I think it has something to do with scaling because the Programs always crash when i move them from Monitor to Monitor.

          • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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            17 months ago

            I’ve heard a few people say scaling was an issue for them. It hasn’t been for me, and I run various multi monitor setups, so maybe I’ve been lucky. Did you try enabling Gnome’s experimental scaling? I always do, and supposedly that’s been enabled as default in Gnome 45.

  • Tunahan Yılmaz
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    137 months ago

    I’ve stayed away from Windows 11 because of the bloatware and TPM requirements. Turns out, my old processor that was rejected by Microsoft actually had TPM 2.0, it just needed to be enabled from the BIOS. Well, I installed it a few days ago and everything look great. The bloatware was a problem but there are FOSS apps for that. The UI looks clean, the taskbar is uncluttered, and I feel stupid for not updating before. I don’t know if I’m the minority here but I think that for most users Windows 11 is easier and more accessible.

  • @kalanthil@lemmy.world
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    67 months ago

    That’s a really well written article.

    Looks like I’ll be going Linux. Better OS for casual use anyway.

  • doleo
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    57 months ago

    I don’t need to read this article to know that the Taskbar Calendar/Agenda Flyout is still missing.

    • HidingCat
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      27 months ago

      Man, they took that out from Windows 10? That was such a handy thing to have.

      • doleo
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        17 months ago

        And ‘replaced’ it with widgets that spam you with unremovable, gutter-press, shite

  • KptnAutismus
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    47 months ago

    guess who’s jumping ship as soon as win10 acts up again? i’m not gonna pay a win11 subscription.

        • Polar
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          17 months ago

          You mean going off reading the title of a post on Lemmy and not actually looking into it?

        • @ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          The AI integration certainly will be: Microsoft’s not giving away ongoing AI computation for a one-time purchase of the OS, even though it will be integrated with the Windows 11 OS as soon as the fall upgrades get forced down.

          Right now Copilot is free, but that’s only until enough people start using it and then they’ll paywall it.

          Note that Copilot uses the Office 365 framework (Microsoft’s subscription model) which should tell people all they need to know about how free Microsoft intends to keep it.