• mox
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    21 days ago

    The right answer is definitely not landfill.

    Most people use their computers to run a web browser, maybe a word processor or media player, and… not much else. Even someone who has only used Windows can figure out those basics on a Linux desktop.

    If the charities are unable/unwilling to provide support for Linux, they could give computers away on Craigslist before dumping more e-waste into our environment.

    • Admiral Patrick
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      3721 days ago

      Even someone who has only used Windows can figure out those basics on a Linux desktop.

      You’d think…

      • @[email protected]
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        621 days ago

        Lol, I switched to kde plasma and because the windows logo bottom left was replaced with a K, neither my dad or my sister knew how to shut down the pc 🤦‍♀️

    • @[email protected]
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      3521 days ago

      My wife’s 90 year old grandma was able to pick up Mint with absolutely no issue. Just put the shit she needed on the desktop and that was that.

      • @[email protected]
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        2221 days ago

        I did that for my grandmother with FreeBSD many moons ago, on a Pentium3 no less. It ran for years and years like a champ. Booted straight into PySol since that was pretty much all she ever did on a computer.

    • @[email protected]
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      20 days ago

      I’ve done this for years with people in my family - either Ubuntu or Linux Mint. All most of them use is the browser, word processor, spreadsheets and an image and media viewer.

      For Desktop Environment I stick to KDE or something that looks and acts similar to Windows XP.

      I get very few complaints.

    • @[email protected]
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      120 days ago

      Biggest issue is teams Id guess. The nonprofit deals MS gives small nonprofits with free 365 licenses and management is a huge one around here

        • @[email protected]
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          120 days ago

          Some people has had issues with the moderation tools for meetings and connection to shared work files and note books via web, although the people having issues where on Chromebooks so might be different with Edge

  • @[email protected]
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    21 days ago

    I think there are a lot of gunky software out there that only works on Windows. I tried getting my mom on Linux but I was unable to find any good open source sewing and graphic alternatives to the expensive lock in hardware that she had already bought.

    Although I doubt these are the kind of road blocks charities are facing.

    • Zloubida
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      621 days ago

      “Companion softwares” for hardware are the only thing that still makes me use my Windows VM. In my case it’s my children’s educative computers which need a real computer to add content.

  • venotic
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    2021 days ago

    Linux. Each Linux OS, breathes new life into an old laptop. Least if that laptop is at least 15 ~ 20 years old. Laptops from the late 90s though? May have to go very old school Linux.

  • Back in the day, there was a distributed cluster OS called Mosix. Even back then I had several spare computers lying about, and the idea of being able to chain them all together and have one virtual computer that would automatically distribute processing without special coding was enticing. It turned out to not work very well unless you did specially code for it, or clustered the computers very tightly with fiber; it just wasn’t worth it.

    But when I see piles of compute like this, a part of my still wants to network them all together and run … well, whatever fills the shoes of OpenMosix these days, if anything does.

    • Max-P
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      921 days ago

      Some modern workloads can take advantage of multiple computers. You can usually compile using things like distcc and spread the load across them.

      If you make them into a Kubernetes cluster you can run many copies or many different things.

      It’s still an unsolved problem: we still end up with single core bottlenecks to this day, before even involving other machines altogether.

      • Yes. It’s always the bandwidth that’s the main bottleneck, whether CPU-Memory, IPC, or the network.

        Screw quantum computers; what we need is quantum entangled memory sharing at a distance. Imagine! Even if only within a single computer, all memory could could be L1 cache.

    • @[email protected]
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      321 days ago

      Yeah, I’ve always wanted to do something like that. I’ve always got a bunch of computers running virtually idle and it would be nice if they could just help out with whatever your main PC is doing.

  • @[email protected]
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    2221 days ago

    … that’s a really compelling reason for linux.

    I mean the next few years are going to be rough. Being able to recycle these things for basic use is going to be huge. Windows, mac, people need the internet more than anything else. It’s a sad way to gain adoption but it could be insanely impactful…

  • @[email protected]
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    5221 days ago

    Install Linux on them and give them to school children so they can go to school online and not have to worry about being shot. I also see a lot of lithium in that pile.

  • @[email protected]
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    20 days ago

    Any organization that promotes Linux should find some of these charities nearby and offer to assist them in installing Linux distros that feel like Windows. We need not divert this into an argument over which ones are best. The point is that besides keeping a lot of hardware out of landfills it would help spread awareness of how user friendly Linux has become. I’ve been using Mint Cinnamon for over a month and barely notice the difference from Win10.

  • @[email protected]
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    2420 days ago

    I’m so tempted to do a charity program on my own and just receive 50k of these and put Ubuntu 24.04 or another user friendly Linux and drive around with my car trunk open and with a sign that says “free computers” while driving through New York

  • @[email protected]
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    1321 days ago

    One-click Linux cluster. Local compute, NAS, or self-hosting. Be a shame if it all ended in landfill.

  • Ulrich
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    7521 days ago

    That doesn’t sound like a tough choice at all…

    • @[email protected]
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      921 days ago

      Yeah, both my Linux PC’s probably wouldn’t even run Win 10, let alone Win 11. As long as they work, pretty much any PC from the last decade can still run any distro and be sufficient to do any kind of productivity workload.

      • Impleader
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        820 days ago

        Can confirm with Ubuntu 24.04 LTS vs my previous W11 install, it’s astonishing that a company with Microsoft’s resources can’t make an OS that runs as smoothly and efficiently as the open-source alternatives. Is it all just because of telemetry and whatever else Windows is phoning home with?

        • Baldur Nil
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          119 days ago

          As a company, Microsoft doesn’t reward anyone for improving the performance of the OS. That should be enough of an explanation 😆.

        • @[email protected]
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          520 days ago

          I think it’s just that they don’t care about performance. It’s been the case for a while that typically games run faster on Linux through WINE/Proton despite using a translation layer.

          And there’s a bunch of background services taking up memory and CPU on Windows that are hard to turn off.

    • katy ✨
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      1821 days ago

      seriously i just deleted windows and put mint on my laptop (which is only like from 2020ish) and it runs better than it ever did on windows

  • @[email protected]
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    21 days ago

    It breaks my heart that so much of these will end up in landfills. Resell them. Or send them to device recycling. There’s a shitload of rare earths in modern-ish but obsolete computers. And downcycling is possible too - my router is an old Lenovo thin client with a dual port 10g SFP+ card slapped in it.

  • AtHeartEngineer
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    3221 days ago

    How much ewaste has Microsoft caused just by wanting to sell more copies of the next version of windows.

    • @[email protected]
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      320 days ago

      Windows 10 was released ten years ago. How long do you think they should provide support? For comparison, Redhat gives 10 years for LTS releases, and Ubuntu and Linux Mint give 5 years. Extended support beyond the LTS period requires a paid subscription, similar to Windows.

      • @[email protected]
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        1120 days ago

        Every OS just mentioned can be updated, no support needed? Just overlay the next kernel over the last and all these distros provide a pathway for that.

        Moreover, Arch, Void, Gentoo etc are rolling, so no loss of support.

        I figure a multi-million dollar company could do the equivalent of exactly that.

        • @[email protected]
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          20 days ago

          Windows 10 can be updated for free to 11. This is only impacting the ewaste laptops that some vendors sell. Like the ones with 64 gb storage or 4-8 gb of ram or no tpm chip… All of which are roughly as shit as each other.

          • @[email protected]
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            420 days ago

            This also affects laptops with anything up to a 7th gen i7 and any amount of RAM and storage. Even if they have the correct TPM version. On a technical level, these devices are absolutely capable of running Windows 11, Microsoft just didn’t wanna.

        • @[email protected]
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          220 days ago

          The counter is that all of a sudden instead of windows 10 it was 10 from 2020, then 10 from 2022 and so on. Instead of only being the last version it became a succession of short lived versions that people still weren’t upgrading.

      • @[email protected]
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        720 days ago

        It’s more that the hardware requirements for 11 are pretty arbitrary and not based on how powerful it is. My old PC can’t run it, not that I care to in the first place. But it’s much more powerful than my work laptop that can and does run win11, though not by my choice.

      • @[email protected]
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        720 days ago

        They don’t need to support Windows 10, they just need to not artificially block the installation of Windows 11 on old hardware.

      • Norah (pup/it/she)
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        4221 days ago

        On a machine that can run it. If you have one of the machines that are the subject of this article, the only upgrade path is to buy a new one, for which Microsoft takes a healthy OEM fee for including Win11. You can easily see that cost on devices like the Legion Go S that cost significantly less for the SteamOS version.

        • @[email protected]
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          120 days ago

          The technical requirements for 11 were reasonable when it came out and even more so today. Laptops being ewaste when they were built that way isn’t Microsoft’s fault.

          • NostraDavid
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            19 days ago

            The technical requirements for 11 were reasonable

            My 8700k (from 2018) disagrees.

          • @[email protected]
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            420 days ago

            They’re the ones that keep making the requirements more and more unreasonable with every update.

            • @[email protected]
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              19 days ago

              What is unreasonable about 4 gb of ram, a processor made in the last decade, and a tpm chip? Even Linux doesn’t run well under 8, let alone 4, because linux’s memory management and handling of low memory is a catastrophic embarrassment. (Yes it uses less idle, but you get to 80% and the system will lock up)

              • @[email protected]
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                119 days ago

                Linux runs just fine in 4. Or much less. It depends a lot on what you use it for. My 486 had a whooping 32 Megs of memory and ran Linux just fine.

                Regarding MS, the main problem is the changing of the goalpost. And I’m not so sure there’s even any point to the whole TPM thing anyway.

                • @[email protected]
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                  18 days ago

                  Well if we’re going to just talk about the kernel with 1-2 embedded apps, sure.

                  or if you’re going back to 1990 yes, applications back then we’re less demanding than chrome. However that was 35 years ago.

                  But this article isn’t about your little nxp chip or the much weaker 486 chip, it’s about laptops humans are using with like…modern web browsers. Which will happily eat 10 gb of ram if you let them. And then Linux will shit the bed and lock up the moment you’re out of swap or zram.

                  I have no idea what you mean by moving goalposts.

                  The TPM attitude is common among Linux fanboys and I don’t really get it. It’s a chip for making security simpler for the average user. If you’re worried about laptops getting trashed because users won’t install Linux, the tpm chip is for them. Also it’s over a decade old.

              • @[email protected]
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                118 days ago

                Whether or not an older machine “runs well” is highly dependent on what you’re using it for. I only very recently (like, after the new year) retired a 16-year-old laptop with 2GB RAM that was running Gentoo, when I got a good deal on something that would compile gcc in a reasonable amount of time rather than needing to be left to run overnight. However, most people don’t need to compile large software on a regular basis, and the old machine was still doing okay in its role as a large-screen-coarse-resolution pseudo-video-iPod, ssh client, quick lookup device for Perl manpages, emergency Internet query device, and general backup/light-use system. Worthless for gaming and somewhat sluggish on the Web, naturally, but that wasn’t what I needed it for.

                I’d expect anything with 4GB RAM and 4 CPU threads to produce somewhat acceptable performace on most individual webpages (multiple Javascript-heavy sites might be a challenge, though, so stick to 1-2 tabs at a time), which would make the main issue most people would have with my old laptop disappear.

                • @[email protected]
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                  18 days ago

                  TPM chip is a decade old, built into all but shit laptops, and is a net positive for overall system security.

                  Id argue it’s more than not required under Linux, it’s barely supported under Linux and is a giant pain to get working.