I only recently found out about Tiny11. Anyone used it/turned it into a daily driver for gaming/coding/media?

  • SSUPII@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    It will work, but Tiny11 lacks a lot of things. Will be useful, but some applications you expect to work will not.

    If you are tight on resources, consider keeping Windows 10 or switching to a Linux distribution.

    • Deedasmi@lemmy.timdn.comOP
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      1 year ago

      Gaming computer, I dropped Win11 because with PiHole blocking windows analytics, the whole OS slows down. Just opening the start menu took ~4 seconds with Ryzen 5950x on an m2 ssd with 64GB of RAM. Everything was sluggish. I’m back on Arch, but there are a few BattleEye/EAC games that don’t work I’d like to play again.

      • SSUPII@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        That’s extremely unoptimized by Microsoft just trying to phone home, holy hell!

        Again, I would suggest using Windows 10 for those. Unless I am mistaked and 10 too begins crying if it can’t see mommy Microsoft.

  • Cas@pawb.social
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    1 year ago

    I’d strongly suggest AtlasOS over Tiny11 once the Atlas team have finished adding 11 support- it’s really solid and does a great job of improving system stability and removing the bloatware/tracking without compromising important features and backend stuff.

  • milkytoast@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    i used it, and then my PC blue screened and i couldn’t restore. blaming it on tiny 11 bc normal windows has never done that. but aside from that, as great

  • hopolapopola@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I would not recommend any windows mods like that, what they do is often overwritten by windows updates and takes you back to square one (which, unless your computer never connects to the internet, you should be installing). the better option for “light” windows is to grab an enterprise or education version of windows and set group policy to disable telemetry and various features you don’t want/need without ending up with changes that revert themselves if you go the tiny11 route, or with changes that actively compromise security if you go the atlas os route