• @[email protected]
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      110 months ago

      i used to use arch but it kept deteriorating over time and it was fun to fix but now im in year 10 with board exams next year lol(i dont have time for that)

  • @[email protected]
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    810 months ago

    I get these prompts on my work laptop and always go for 1. Nobody who uses your os just for work, want to get bombarded with these kind of requests

  • EherNicht
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    1110 months ago

    If you are cross-posting please mark it as such. My poor communist in c/memes.

  • Diplomjodler
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    7310 months ago

    I would always start all conversations with my friends with “Hey Windows peasants!” If I had any friends. These two things have nothing whatsoever to do with each other.

  • @[email protected]
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    11510 months ago

    Windows 11 has changed this, many many people now warn other people about not using Windows 11 because it is such shit. Doesn’t matter what you run, just don’t run Windows 11.

    • JackbyDev
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      510 months ago

      I literally can’t install Windows 11 on my current computer lol. I know there are workarounds for it but I don’t feel comfortable doing that for my primary computer.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      No… I’ve literally only seen this on Lemmy. I’ve never once encountered anyone in real life that does this.

      Edit: and to add, people really don’t like this. I love Linux, but hate this community at this point. It’s disingenuous and I see blatant lies all the time about where I’m going to see ads in windows. I’ve yet to see any ads at all so far.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      More windows hate circlejerk.

      Just upgraded to windows 11 and really like it. What’s so shit about it?

      • @[email protected]
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        410 months ago

        Doesn’t let you just do whatever you want. I turned off the windows firewall in windows 7 and went on with my life. Windows 11 wouldn’t let me download updates with the firewall off.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        “We like the clean design and improved performance of Microsoft’s latest operating system, but it still suffers from its fair share of issues. Here’s what people gripe about the most.”

        And they don’t even mention the ads or that Recall garbage thing that takes screenshots being forced on you even though the public made it obvious they don’t want that. That and all the telemetry; it’s pretty much spyware disguised as an operating system.

        I’m sure there are more things but those are just the ones off the top of my head.

        *Edit: I remembered the name of Recall

        • @[email protected]
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          210 months ago

          Most of those are tiny gripes, and to be honest I don’t care at all about most of them. The OS looks nice, runs well, and is pretty painless. That’s all I want in an OS.

        • Boxscape
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          10 months ago

          *Edit: I remembered the name of Recall

          You could say you … recalled it 😏

          Get your ass to Mars.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      I gotta be honest, I actually really like windows 11.

      Recall is awful and I hope enough pressure keeps it away (or at least as something you have to manually turn on). But besides that it’s mostly just windows 10 but better. I get better battery life, better performance, I actually mostly like the UI changes etc.

      Also does nobody remember all of the hate for 10 when it first came out?

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        Unusable on a hard drive, would just freeze while scanning all your files. Wouldn’t let you turn it off

      • @[email protected]
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        510 months ago

        That happened with Windows 8 and Vista as well. There was a running joke that every other Windows release was garbage when I was growing up.

        And the joke works with 8 and 10 both being shitty, because they skipped 9, which would have been the good one.

        They really should have gone with Windows Nine, to bring the naming scheme in line with Xbox One while also avoiding the startswith.('Windows 9') issue

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        I actually really liked both windows 8 and Vista too.

        8 was slimmed down and optimized vs 7. Bootup time on my HDD equipped machine halved, performance was better, and the search was so good I never actually saw the start menu because I’d just blindly hit enter and it opened what I wanted.

        Vista had a rough start because they basically had to start fresh with drivers. But I bought a nice new machine about a year after it came out and it ran it flawlessly. Aero looked (and still looks) so cool, and XP was just a crusty old OS by then, let alone 2014 when it finally lost support.

      • @[email protected]
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        2110 months ago

        Even the people I know that are otherwise relatively tech savvy don’t do this.

        Not to say it’s a good operating system, though.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Obsoleting a lot of relatively recent fast hardware means people are either faced with a fuck off or complicated work arounds. Then there is forcing people to log in with their MS email account which they may not have or want or again forcing people into complicated work arounds. The implicit privacy issues of recall if it was rolled out as planned.

        Ads in the windows UI both exiting and planned. The fact that they have discussed the idea of making Windows a monthly/annual fee.

        Then the carry overs from 10 The fact that the start menu search is less useful than any linux DE or windows XP Re-enabling crap that people disabled on purpose Certain kinds of links opening in Edge even if people use chrome

        • @[email protected]
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          610 months ago

          Wait i have w11 in my laptop… i dont have a windows account sign in. Is that a forthcoming change?

          Ads are fucked, thats fucked.

          But it mainly seems like microsoft policy, not necessarily w11 itself is the issue?

          I ignorantly think a monthly subscription would never happen and we’d see mass linux adoption.

          I have a dual boot in my near term plans for my desktop. I would pull that trigger immediately if ads or subscriptions materialized.

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            Pro or Home? It looks like home is going to try to force you into a microsoft account a lot harder than pro. There are a couple of tricks to bypass it in the OOBE. But if you do sign into an MS account you can go into settings and there’s a button somewhere to switch to a local account. You’d just have to seek that out and it’s a pain.

          • @[email protected]
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            710 months ago

            Ads are…already a thing. Shit like putting candy crush which allows you to spend real money to pay to win. Search suggestions in the start menu. The app store is an attempt at an Apple style money grab except the money grab only exists on the apple side because its the only way to get apps on the machine and MS never got much out its store in comparison.

            Ads and subscriptions would already have happened if they had succeeded in using secure boot to lock machines out of alternative OS

          • jawa21
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            1110 months ago

            iirc it is during install now. You have to do things that are way beyond the average user’s knowledge or ability to enable a local account.

  • @[email protected]
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    1010 months ago

    After the latest bullshit from Microsoft I would make absolutely sure to recommend literally anything but Windows to everyone that talks to me.

    • @[email protected]
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      510 months ago

      After the latest bullshit from Microsoft

      I like how your comment works regardless of whether you consider “latest” to be the past year or the past decade lol.

  • nelson
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    210 months ago

    Missed opportunity due complain about recall, bloatware, spyware and ads in an OS people pay for.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        The word distro is a commonly used for Linux distros, where the OS is Linux, I would say.

        Edit: this sentence is wrong

        • Rain World: Slugcat Game
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          010 months ago

          unironically: most distros are actually mostly gnu, just with a linux kernel. bit annoyed when people just call it “linux”

        • @[email protected]
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          510 months ago

          I wouldn’t say the OS is Linux any more than the OS of an Apple computer is XNU. Linux is just the kernel. Similarly the other OS isn’t “Windows NT kernel,” but Windows 10 or Windows 11.

        • @[email protected]
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          310 months ago

          The kernel is linux. From wikipedia: An operating system (OS) is system software that manages computer hardware and software resources, and provides common services for computer programs.

          Linux being designed to work with so many things (and so many things designed to work with linux) all combined make the OS. This is also where the famous quote comes from. https://www.gnu.org/gnu/incorrect-quotation.en.html

  • Rolling Resistance
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    2310 months ago

    My workplace has this common braindead policy where we have to change our passwords every 3 months. So every time I change it, Microsoft page asks me, “HOW WAS IT?”

    Like it wasn’t annoying enough.

    • @[email protected]
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      510 months ago

      So does mine, and we just got hacked. Almost like users make stupid passwords when required to change frequently.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      I never understood the purpose of this.

      Unless you are REAL stupid levels of lucky to have one of the mandatory password changes the day after a compromise that you werent aware of, all mandatory regular password changes do is make people use less secure passwords.

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        Once upon a time it was a recommended best practice both by NIST and Microsoft if I recall. Both deprecated that practice years ago but most a lot of institutional inertia keeps it going, plus industry standards based on that time that don’t update as often perpetuate the problem.

        • @[email protected]
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          10 months ago

          “Security theatre” is what I’ve named the contact in my work phone for the call center I have to call every time I accidentally use the “one time password” more than once (because god forbid they implement proper SSO, meaning I have to do a shotgun login run every morning). When I call them all I tell them is my name and that my account is locked.They click a button and we’re back. Complete waste of time on everyone’s part.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        Technically it reduces the window for a successful brute force.

        That said, it comes with serious drawbacks. Mainly making them impossible to memorize, so then users end up just writing them on post-its and putting them on their monitor. Or other equally dumb things.