• cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This needs to happen with Appl too. AppleTV/Safari/Messages/etc app for MacOS + SIP my ass. Its not integral and if you’ve made it so you need to unmake it so, along with other bundled crap. SIP should literally refer to that and only that in aggregate which is necessary to ensure the system is able to function, not per se function in an un-overruleable way for the maker.

    • penquin@lemm.ee
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      Don’t forget TV brands like samsung and LG who force some apps down your throat even if you don’t want them. You can’t remove those apps. Amazon is even worse with their firetv devices, they just install apps on your behalf that you can’t remove. We don’t own anything anymore.

      • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Ya but I can just use a box and not have the TV itself connected to the internet and you can have it in gaming mode so you basically never see the splash screen with all tha crap

        • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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          I do this as well, but the smart TV bullshit on my Vizio constantly switches itself back on.

          I have a button on my remote now that fixes my input by switching to the box in one fell swoop because this happens so much. There is no setting to stop this, as I already have it set to not change the input.

    • Octopus@thelemmy.club
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      Yes. They should allow removing apps like Safari and, as you said, Apple TV, iMessage, and other non-basic (on a computer) utilities, then downloading them again from the App Store.

      On an unrelated note, I also turn off SIP to change the icons of system apps.

  • badbytes@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Wait Windows users are allowed to manage their software ?!? Get out of town.

  • Sagrotan@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    You can remove Windows completely from your life with very little effort, no matter where you live and it’s free! In the world of today there is no need whatsoever for that exploitive and in short bad OS anymore.

    • 4lan@lemmy.world
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      This comment is so out of touch.

      I work in CAD and 3D printing and I’d be completely dead in the water if I used Linux.

      No fusion 360, no cura

      I bet there are plenty of other apps that I rely on that are not available on Linux.

      I’m not some sort of Windows fanboy either. I’m disgusted with their action in the recent years.

      I run Linux on my home server, but not my main computing machine

      Let’s be realistic here, your experience is not universal

      • cole@lemdro.id
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        1 year ago

        To be fair, PrusaSlicer and its derivatives do have native Linux support. And you can use Onshape from the browser on Linux just fine and it is honestly really good. I do a lot of this stuff too

        • Abnorc@lemm.ee
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          I’m not an expert, but I really doubt that most open source software can compete with the features and support of enterprise products. In almost every industry there are FOSS alternatives to professional software, but they mostly get ignored. If you really could pump out the same quality of work as quickly, I don’t think that most companies would forego the opportunity to save some money on licensing fees.

          • cole@lemdro.id
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            Well, first off I wasn’t presenting a “FOSS first” argument here. Onshape is a closed-source browser based CAD software but it works really well and I enjoy it. PrusaSlicer IS FOSS, but it is developed by the folks at Prusa who build the Prusa i3 printers - it is widely considered to be the “standard” for 3D printing slicers, better than CURA for sure.

            Second off, this argument has an element of truth but kind of misses the plot. It is DEFINITELY possible for FOSS to be better and widely used and there are a couple of examples. I don’t have a ton of time right now but just for fun I’ll list a few. Blender is a great one, don’t really need to explain how good it is. Also, KiCAD is really good these days too, second only to Altium. There are many more as well!

            • Abnorc@lemm.ee
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              I agree that’s it’s possible, and hopefully it gets to be more common in the future. It’s hard to compete with professional software since they often have large full-time dev and support teams, but there is a handful of examples of FOSS software that debatably outperform the competition.

      • Fedizen@lemmy.world
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        I mean some stuff is still running windows 98. What programs are you really needing to run?

          • sebinspace@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            God I love people that pretend switching to Linux is for everyone. They’re the same dipshits that install Mint on their grandmothers machine without asking, then get defensive when she takes issue with it.

            • Abnorc@lemm.ee
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              I want to say that there’s no way people would install Linux without consent on someone else’s machine, but people have done crazier things.

          • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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            I think almost every Microsoft product has a FOSS alternative (that works in windows usually too) if you want to get away from them. GamePass/The Xbox app/Windows store doesn’t, but that’s almost it. If there isn’t an alternative, it’s not unlikely that it’ll work through WINE. What software specifically are you looking for?

            • bamboo@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              Microsoft office and games with anticheat are two big categories.

              • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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                There are alternatives for office. LibreOffice, which has been around forever.

                As for anti-cheat, yeah that’s up to the devs. Easy Anti-cheat supports Linux in the latest version, but it requires developers to implement it. I’ve been playing Hunt Showdown and it’s fine. Counterstrike obviously works. I’d say on average, most anti-cheat is fine. It does require actual effort on the devs though, unlike games that just run with WINE/Proton totally fine most of the time without them doing anything.

                • bamboo@lemm.ee
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                  LibreOffice is great if you don’t need perfect compatibility with Microsoft office. If you do, the only good option is, well Microsoft Office.

            • banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Ableton Live with plugins is osx or windows. Windows if you want custom hardware in any meaningful sense.

      • Sir_Simon_Spamalot@lemmy.world
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        Which one? apache2? mysql? php-fpm? python? ftp? smb? nodejs?

        Not sure about you, but I’m using those to make my living.

    • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.world
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      Agreed, I hate how people blindly use Windows because “that’s what my shitty HP laptop shipped with”

      • Stantana@lemmy.sambands.net
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        If it’s been a while you could try again as the kernel gets updated with support for various hardware.

        One of my laptops was awful with Linux but after a good while I tried reinstalling a fresh distro and it ran like a dream.

        • bastion@feddit.nl
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          Yeah. Many of the complaints surrounding Linux and hardware are BS. But complaints about Linux running well on cutting edge hardware are often founded.

          Linux devs can only stary supporting new hardware once they have access to it or to accurate specs. Often, this is only once the hardware has been released.

          But 6-month old, and moreso 1-year old hardware? Generally works like a (good) dream.

          This is why hardware vendors that design for Linux are so important (thanks, System 76!).

        • BrianTheFirst@lemmy.world
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          Yeah. I was thinking of a particular gaming laptop, which does run almost perfectly with the latest kernels. But it’s not all the way there yet.

      • tabular@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        As in the PC has some hardware which only has proprietary drivers from the manufacturer?

        • s_s@lemmy.one
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          Correct.

          You can run linux on just any hardware, yet somehow the capitalist still manage to fuck it up.

    • DudeDudenson@lemmings.world
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      I agree it’s very easy and takes very little force to remove windows from your life. Adopting another OS in the other hand…

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    Way too late…I switched away from Windows 100% already. Linux works perfectly fine.

      • irotsoma@lemmy.world
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        Like what? I’ve found alternatives or many run just fine using Wine. Might run a little slower if your computer is older, but likely everything else is running faster on Linux anyway, so it makes up for it.

        • GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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          I use many proprietary pieces of software that are only available for Windows.

          • irotsoma@lemmy.world
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            I find that unless that software needs access to hardware, or is very performance sensitive or uses some newer Windows APIs, most of the time Wine can run it. I still have Windows installed for those few things that require it. But over time that has become less and less.

            I even had to grab the TP-Link easysmart configuration utility yesterday to configure an old managed switch and the exe ran perfect on Wine. I was honestly quite surprised. In fact I first started it up and it didn’t detect anything and I was afraid it was incompatible, but turned out the second NIC in my PC was just set up on the same config in network manager because I had been playing around with some stuff. It also runs the old Windows Epson Scanner software and drivers that my old scanner requires that no longer work in Windows 11.

            Anyway, for old proprietary stuff I find that Wine emulates older Windows and DOS better than Windows 10 or 11.

    • 4lan@lemmy.world
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      Tell that to someone that uses fusion 360 to earn their living.

      If you are just going to Facebook and downloading movies and stuff sure…

      Linux is great for my home server, terrible for my main machine.

        • 4lan@lemmy.world
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          Why the hell would I buy an entire different machine just for web browsing and games? Should also get a third one for porn? Lol

          It’s great that Linux works for you but you need to realize that it does not work for everyone yet. Your experience is not the same as everyone else’s. If I could run every application I need on Linux I would switch today. I am not happy about my dependence on Windows, but I live in reality

        • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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          They seriously cannot stop talking about Linux… At this point, It’s endlessly annoying, as it’s on literally every post about any operating system.

          • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.world
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            Nearly every post is about Windows or MacOS yet when someone mentions Linux suddenly it’s a problem?

          • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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            Do you think people never hear about Windows, iOS, Android, etc?

            I think you just get irrationally angry when people bring up something you don’t use. We get it, you use Windows btw.

            I find it kinda staggering you think it’s not appropriate for someone to mention alternative OSes on a submission where people are criticising an OS lol.

            Let’s apply that thinking to another product: Samsung TV does bad thing. Do you think it would be inappropriate or unusual for commenters to mention that other TV brands exist? If not, then why is it different for this other tool?

          • flamingo_pinyata@sopuli.xyz
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            It’s not like there an infinite number of OSs. Unless you have a Mac the choice is basically Windows or Linux.
            It’s absolutely logical that any operating system post will have comments pushing Linux.

            I hope that one day someone makes another better OS, because Linux is annoying as well. But until then you’ll have to suffer these comments.

        • LinkOpensChest.wav@lemmy.one
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          In both cases, I’ve encountered a lot more people complaining about them than I have obnoxious Linux users or vegans

        • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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          We constantly hear about all the bad shit MS is doing, then somebody points out an alternative, and then people like you get pissed off about it. “NO. I don’t want to hear about the alternatives! I’ll stick to Microsoft, they’ll stop their antics some day, I can fix her them ❤️”

          Maybe if people don’t want to hear about OS alternatives, they should stop complaining about the one they have?

          I don’t understand the anger that springs up when people say “this isn’t an issue on Linux”. If your washing machine kept leaking water all over your floor, and someone said “hey have you considered getting a different one?” it’d be insane to get angry at them for that, yet it happens all the time with OSes. It’s just a tool. You don’t owe allegiance to an OS.

          • 4lan@lemmy.world
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            That analogy about the washing machine doesn’t quite work.

            I cannot run applications that I rely on for my business on Linux. It is not even an option even if I wanted to.

            The hassle of switching operating systems isnt problem, It’s the lack of compatibility.

            • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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              Then don’t use Linux for that use case? Nobody is telling you to. I’m not trying to convert you.

              I’m saying that people need to stop getting so upset when someone recommends tool B for job X when people complain about the issues with tool A.

              If the people that use tool A are tired of hearing about how tool B doesn’t have the issues they’re facing with tool A, then maybe those people should stop publicly talking about those issues.

        • tabular@lemmy.world
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          Vegans care about the well-being of other creatures, so that’s actually a kind comparison.

          Too kind for me. There would be more software made for me if others stopped letting proprietary software take advantage of them.

  • Octopus@thelemmy.club
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    Does this also impact Apple, will they also need to allow removing Safari? If yes, is it possible that they might allow removing other things like iMessage and Apple TV?

      • Octopus@thelemmy.club
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        They regenerate after an update, there is also a way to remove Edge on Windows by manually running the uninstaller from the terminal with some options, but that doesn’t change the fact that it’s not easy and you can’t just uninstall it like any other app.

        • icedterminal@lemmy.world
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          there is also a way to remove Edge on Windows by manually running the uninstaller from the terminal with some options

          Well to this statement, no. Microsoft disabled that method with the release of 22H2. Attempting to do so now does nothing. I was aware of this and it was shared on Reddit and other forums all the time until it stopped working. In fact, just six months ago people were sharing it on Reddit and realized it wasn’t working. https://www.reddit.com/r/privacy/comments/140d0y2/how_do_i_uninstall_microsoft_edge/

          I do agree with the sentiment. It should be easy to uninstall these apps.

          • Octopus@thelemmy.club
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            Manually removing the files is still an option 😈

            I don’t understand why they won’t allow it even with the command line. People who hate Edge and want to uninstall it to free up disk space should be able to. They will never use it anyway (max accidentally).

    • Lemminary@lemmy.world
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      I’m surprised I own my shoes at this point. Any tech bros wanna take care of that with an app?

    • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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      C’mon bro, its nowhere near that facile although I’ll concede that once people are more aware of the options, it might help get things going in the right direction. Bes positive and joyfully share you expertise ;)

    • dan1101@lemm.ee
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      So far, but try uninstalling Edge and then imagine an average non-technical user trying to.

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    If even MS themselves calls it “benefits”, why not enable it for all by default?

  • Ganbat@lemmyonline.com
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    I give it less than a year before this goes the way of the Windows 10 start menu registry tweak.

  • answersplease77@lemmy.world
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    Can you just do right click uninstall? or do you have to follow a 12 step hacker method that would cause updates to stop working until you reinstall windows again?

    Windows has become the most bloated ad-infested spyware os in existance and more people are leaving it more than ever before. In just few more years, it will be a thing of the past

    • egerlach@lemmy.ca
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      Reading the article, you do some registry edits to tell Windows that it’s in Europe. Then you uninstall as if you were in Europe. No word on what other consequences this might have.

      • Patches@sh.itjust.works
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        If you have to tell Windows that you are in Europe then the title is nonsense.

        “You too can drink alcohol even if you’re underage”… All you have to do is Lie, and get a fake ID". > Wow thanks.

    • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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      You Linux supremecists are so edgy…

      I use Linux sometimes, too… But like… This shit is getting so old.

      We get it, you like Linux. Now let people talk about other platforms without constantly talking about your platform.

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        I only have Linux on my servers at home and at work, as well as on my laptop, and I agree with that, it’s arrogant and getting so damn old. Lemmy has such a boner for Linux and loves shoving it in everyone’s faces.

        • d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz
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          You do realize that Lemmy is an opensource platform, which runs on Linux, and is maintained by volunteers who are passionate about Linux? Does it really come as surprise that Lemmy is full of Linux enthusiasts?

          If you don’t like all the Linux talk here, feel free to move to a proprietary social network instead, maybe one with a red alien logo or with a blue ‘f’…

          • stephen01king@lemmy.zip
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            Being an enthusiast doesn’t mean you have to preach about it everywhere you go. This post isn’t talking about Linux whatsoever. They’re starting to remind me of religious nuts that always make everything about their religion.

            • d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz
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              But its not the same person preaching about it everywhere now is it? If you think you’re seeing it everywhere, it’s because this is a community built and run by Linux enthusiasts, so naturally you’ll see a lot of people talking about Linux here.

              This post isn’t talking about Linux whatsoever.

              No, but OP was talking an alternative solution, which of course, was tongue-in-cheek, but apparently it triggered the parent poster in a PTSD sort of manner.

              • stephen01king@lemmy.zip
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                It’s not the same religious nut preaching about it everywhere, either, doesn’t make it any less annoying. It also doesn’t make it any less annoying to be preached everyday even if you live in a community based around the religion.

                It’s also not about people talking about Linux. As a subscriber to Linux memes and Linux gaming communities, I have no issue with people talking about Linux. It’s when they are plugging Linux in an article that has nothing to do with it, especially in a community that is very aware about the existence of Linux, that it simply becomes a circlejerk and an attention seeking behaviour, instead of providing actually useful response to the post.

                Everyone here knows Linux is an alternative to Windows, we don’t need the crazy Linux fanboys reminding us by posting stupid jokes about it on non-Linux posts.

              • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥@lemmy.world
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                No, but OP was talking an alternative solution, which of course, was tongue-in-cheek, but apparently it triggered the parent poster in a PTSD sort of manner.

                Or maybe people think tuxangelicalists are annoying

      • d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz
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        your platform.

        You do realize you’re posting this on a opensource platform, which runs on Linux, and is maintained by volunteers who are enthusiastic about this stuff?

        If you don’t like all the Linux talk here, feel free to move to a proprietary platform instead, maybe one with a red alien logo…

      • BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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        I don’t get why you’re offended by someone jokingly pushing Linux?

        To be fair, there are so many opportunities to make these jokes because of how Microsoft behaves that maybe that’s the real issue here?

        • lemmyingly@lemm.ee
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          It doesn’t look like they’re getting offended to me.

          Imagine you have a friend that you see daily. Every time you see them, they make the same joke. How quickly do you think you’ll get tired of the joke?

          • tobbue@feddit.de
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            Everyone here makes the joke only once. But you have many friends here!

          • tabular@lemmy.world
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            Stop driving into things, Jerry, and we’ll stop making jokes about how you hit them!

        • rmuk@feddit.uk
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          People like you make me so fucking embarrassed to be a Linux user.

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        1 year ago

        You food supremecists are so edgy…

        I eat food sometimes, too… But like… This is getting so old.

        We get it, you like food. Now let people talk about eating human shit without constantly talking about what you put in your mouth.

        We just want to eat human shit in peace. Stop telling us there’s a better way, we get it, you don’t like human shit and you think we should be eating food instead. Stop preaching about it.

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        1 year ago

        Because Linux, by its very nature, is the solution to these kinds problems, but if you insist on suffering through using Windows thats on you.

          • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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            So what? I was not talking about situations where there is vendor lock-in. I needed Windows for Photoshop in the past, I’m not that dumb.

            I’m talking specifically about stuff like ads, privacy, unremovable bloatware, forced logins and such. And I stand by what I said: Linux by its very nature will not have these issues. And its very reasonable for people to recommend it in face of those.

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                If you use Windows you know they will re-enable that on the next update, after you took your time turning all the garbage off. That was the final drop in the bucket for me to switch away from Windows some years ago actually.

                I do agree Windows can be pretty decent when you do that, but if I am to have all this work to set up my machine, and then having them undo it, then I might as well learn a system that actually does what I tell it to.

              • Shatur@lemmy.ml
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                It’s good, but you can’t know for sure if you removed all bloatware. Also if you install updates you can easily miss newly added ones.

                Windows is like Reddit. There is more content and users, but we use Lemmy for a reason. So I’m not surprised that many people joke about GNU/Linux in this thread. GNU/Linux is not for everyone, but so do Lemmy.

              • hightrix@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Same. I recently built a new machine and considered putting win10 on it instead of 11 due to all the complaints I’ve read. Instead, I just went with 11 to give it a try. After install it took me about an hour, but I had all recommendations, ads, and other annoyances turned off. After that setup, I’ve really liked the OS. Everything just works. Plug in new hardware and it just works. Download some random new software and it just works.

                I say this as a software engineer that works with Linux systems daily.

                For my personal use, I want my pc to just work. I spend enough time configuring and making things work at my job, I want my home pc to be no hassle and to work with everything I throw at it.

                For this, windows is, by far, the best.

          • tabular@lemmy.world
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            I hope you’ve got backup solution if Windows ever prevents you from working.

            It must be important if you’re prioritizing it over your software freedom…

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                Hopefully a reinstall is the most you ever need and there is no chance Microsoft would ever happen to make changes that shaft you.

                Software freedom is about being in control over your own computing. If being in control of your research and the results is important then I think it should be important to you too.

                I consider myself like a smoker telling you smoking causes cancer in regards to my use of proprietary software. I am proud of the efforts I’ve made over the years to reduce using proprietary software.

                • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Can’t be in control of your own computing if you can’t do your computing at all. From their responses, it’s clear that Linux is not supported for hardware essential to their workflow. How is this difficult to understand?

        • Lemminary@lemmy.world
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          Last time I used Linux it came with its own bag of problems like hunting down drivers and incompatibility issues and random bugs that wouldn’t let me use the wifi without digging up solutions in some obscure forum. Maybe it’s not the case anymore but I don’t hear many people lauding it for its competitive UX and ease of use.

          • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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            GNOME’s UX has come a looong way in just like 3 years.

            I assume the same is true for KDE now that Valve is investing money in it.

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            Huh, my experience is the exact opposite. On Linux there was zero hunting for drivers of any kind. At all. They were all just included in the Linux kernel. Out of the box drivers for everything I had.

            On windows it was: ok first I need my motherboard chipset driver, now I need my WiFi driver, and now my graphics driver, now the driver for this microphone, and finally the driver for this controller.

            Each of which I had to search online for the right website, download an installer, run an installer, and delete the installer afterwards.

            To me, that was a much more clunky experience.

          • d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz
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            1 year ago

            When did I say that? I implied it’s only natural for there to be a lot of Linux enthusiasts, in a community built and run by Linux enthusiasts. So it shouldn’t come as a surprise seeing these sort of posts everywhere.

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        1 year ago

        I mean… Linux does solve the problem described. Why pay for a platform with the problem when the solution is free?

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            You’ve never bought a laptop with Windows?

            But aside from that, even if you downloaded an ISO then cracked it, you’re still paying for it in the same way you pay for Google services - with your personal information.

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              Most people who think Windows came with the computer for free don’t know that the licence cost is baked into the total cost.

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        1 year ago

        Honestly, your bitching was far more intrusive than this unharmful joke. That joke was actually funny.

        • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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          You’re either being intellectually disingenuous, or you’re new to Lemmy. Every goddamn thread about Windows here ends up littered with “jokes” about how great Linux is, and how shitty Windows is.

          It’s beyond exhausting at this point.

          • Tiger Jerusalem@lemmy.world
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            And the goddamn distros can’t even support a fingerprint reader nor a nvidia card, or forces you to do some terminal voodoo to make the thing work, or crashes without warning after an update.

            But somehow that’s better than Windows. -_-

            • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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              to be fair its not Linux that doesnt support nvidia, its the other way around.

              and it works fine if you dont have more specific use cases.

            • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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              It’s Nvidia that has poor support for some standards, not the other way around.

              And it’s not like people don’t run into issues, probably more often, with Windows update. The last time I updated Windows my audio got fucked and even rolling back the update and reinstalling audio drivers didn’t work. I had to reinstall windows entirely, which takes a bizarrely long time.

              And yeah, IMO, it’s far better than Windows, and it’s not even close. But it’s just a tool. Use Windows if you want to use Windows.

          • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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            Windows fanboys will justify anything just because it locks them in and forces them to use it. People with stockholm syndrone justifying terrible anti-consumer decisions by Microsoft are the ones really exhausting me.

            Use it if you want to, or need to, but don’t be mad at the people actually trying to come up with and improve the solutions we have.

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                1 year ago

                Funny how my Linux PC works flawlessly without intervention then.

              • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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                Funny, this is my main gripe with Windows. It doesn’t just work in the same way Linux does. I get an update, it takes 5-25 seconds and everything still works, every time.

                I get a Windows update and I’m filled with dread crossing my fingers everything still works when it finally reboots, and that it hasn’t “accidentally” reset all the telemetry settings I turned off.

                Plus not having to hunt for drivers and use weird installers for software that I have to hunt for online. Some windows listening to my dark mode preference and others not, etc etc.

                To me, my PC is just a tool. I don’t care what runs on it, as long as it works reliably, is intuitive, looks cohesive, and doesn’t get in my way. Windows unfortunately doesn’t hold up to that.

      • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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        What I do to install software on my Linux PC:

        Open the app store. Search. Click install. Done.

        Updates are done through the same app store that I used to install it.

        What I do to install software on my Windows PC:

        Open my web browser. Search for the software. Pick the right website (with most software this is easy, for some software it’s not immediately clear, be careful not to download from a dodgy site). Navigate to the downloads page. Pick 64-bit Windows (not Mac!). Press download. Open file explorer. Navigate to Downloads. Find the installer exe. Double click. Go through the installer. Press next/tick/untick options. Press finish. Go back to the file explorer, delete the installer exe. Go to my desktop, delete the shortcut it has added (I hate it how every installer seems to do this!)

        Updates are either done when I open the app and it does a check, which is frustrating, when I open an app I want it to open, I don’t want to see a prompt to update, OR through a separate updater app that runs at startup, making my PC sluggish at boot.

        There are shortcomings in Linux, and there are things Windows does pretty well. It’s funny that you picked the thing Linux is literally the best at hands down, and Windows is the worst at, hands down. It’d be like if you complained about MacOS not being visually consistent lol

        You should have picked something that Linux is genuinely bad at, like HDR support or something.

        E: pictures say a thousand words. Here’s the difference:

        Installing an app on Windows: https://imgur.com/a/QoLzZlk

        Installing an app on Linux: https://imgur.com/a/prsi9ZW

        Again, truly, I’m not here to say Windows is unusable and Linux is perfect, but of all the examples to praise windows and shit on Linux for, you chose software installation? Are you actually insane?? lmao

        • TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I’m sorry, but the “fragmentation” of Linux distros and the number of ways to install a program on Linux are also issues.

          On Linux (or at least Ubuntu), you have to manage sources to install some programs, and that is WAY too complex for an end user. Fine, you can always use the CLI or search online, but then you run into fragmentation issues. “Why is there no Ubuntu download? Do I click the RPM one?”

          On Windows, yes, it’s more clicks on average, but it’s a very consistent experience across all programs. You either open up the Microsoft Store, or you Google the name of the program you want and hit “next” until it’s done. No managing sources and no deciding which file extension you need. The only issue would be deciding between 32 bit and 64 bit.

          • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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            No, you search the store, pick the app, press install. The end user doesn’t care or know whether the package manager is installing a flatpak or an RPM.

            It’s not like people installing Windows programs need to know whether the installer is an .exe or an .MSI file, they just know that pressing the installer they downloaded brings up an installer. They don’t need to know about the low-level packaging fundamentals.

            It’s not just more clicks on average, it’s more confusion, more prone to installing non-genuine software, and still fragmented. Do I install 32 bit? 64? Arm32? Arm64?

            As for there are too many ways to install a program, what nonsense is that? You’re not made to open the terminal, just as you are not made to open powershell and use Winget. You can literally use this exact same argument against windows, yet you aren’t.

            Look at the pictures I linked to. One is far easier than the other, and Windows isn’t the easy one.

      • SaakoPaahtaa@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Uhm actually its very easy you just

        Sudo apt ant sofo lror irir 8 6 9 7778 k j hofor -76

        And press enter and debug your missing dependencies for the next two weeks, I mean how hard is that?

        • TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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          You’re so incredibly dumb. Smart people know that you should really write a script with vim and then run it. I only had to restart my computer once before saving!

        • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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          More like:

          Search in the app store, press install.

          As opposed to the absolute nightmare of finding executables on random websites, downloading them, running an installer program, pressing next a bunch of times, then deleting the installer afterwards.

          App management is something Linux does very well, and Windows very poorly.

          On no other OS is it the norm to do it like you’re expected to do it on Windows.

          I can chat about bad points in Linux all day, I’m not blind to the faults of any of these OSes, but a Windows user saying installing software on Linux is hard really does have me giggling

          E: pictures say a thousand words. Here’s the difference:

          Installing an app on Windows: https://imgur.com/a/QoLzZlk

          Installing an app on Linux: https://imgur.com/a/prsi9ZW

          Need I say more?

          E2: people still saying installing apps in Windows is easier despite photographic evidence to the contrary cannot be helped. You’ve gone too deep. Next you’ll be saying climate change isn’t real and the earth is flat lmao. The evidence is right there in front of you!

          • Index_Case@feddit.uk
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            I’m afraid Linux is more complex for most regular people.

            Yes, a lot of stuff is managed by a package manager (though you have to decide between 2-3 options of the same app, as one is flatpak and one is something else you’ve never come across before) and when that works, it’s great. But it’s far from comprehensive.

            I’d rather press ‘next’ or ‘ok’ a few times than have to learn an entirely new and non-intuituve language and interface just to add an app or driver that is among the 20% of stuff that still won’t just work out the box.

            • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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              I really don’t know where you’re getting this impression from.

              I search for software. It’s there, I see an install button. I press it. You can click a drop down to pick between, say, an RPM package or a flatpak, but it’s not something a normal user would do.

              Installing windows programs, as I’ve already said, is a lot more than just pressing ok. It relies on knowing what site to pick, finding the download page, picking the right installer, finding the exe you downloaded, going through the install wizard, deleting the installer after.

              It’s not easier. IMO app management is the biggest weakness of Windows. There’s a reason genuinely no other OS has that as the standard way to install programs.

              I don’t understand the part about learning a new language either? What? I open the app store, I search, I press install. There’s no need for multiple languages? And the interface is a lot more intuitive than finding the right download on every single website, that all look different, and going through every installer, most of which look different.

              Seriously, if you were talking about idk, HDR or gaming (outside of emulation where it’s a solid Linux win) or something, I’d be agreeing with you and saying Windows is easier, despite Valve getting Linux pretty close.

              But installing programs? Nah, Windows is the one that’s a complicated clusterfuck. People are just used to it so they don’t really think about it.

              E: lmao you people are downvoting yet you can’t refute it. Stop simping for a $2.8tn dollar company. I’ve already proven what I’ve said is true. Me criticising an OS isn’t a personal attack lol, stop fanboying.

              • Index_Case@feddit.uk
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                I’m getting this impression as someone who just installed Linux mint, because people like yourself who say there won’t be problems and it will all just work. It didn’t. There were problems, and there still are.

                Even on Linux I still have to search online for info and for what app to install to meet my needs. Which also relies on knowing what site to trust, and what info you find varies hugely from helpful to incomprehensible for a beginner. Especially when there’s a hundred unfamiliar options.

                The whole finding downloading and installing something on windows is straightforward for most people. Search, go to site, select, install, follow instructions. Done. I’m not sure why you’re making it sound like some frought and impenetrable nightmare. There’s also the windows app store for (like the mint package manager) about 80% of stuff.

                Honestly, I don’t find the package manager much different, since I still need to search for something (to identify the right software / tool etc). And hope it’s included in the package manager. Then I’m asked to approve some dependencys that I have no way, as a beginner, of evaluating of they’re safe or not. So just click ok, and just have to trust the package manager / software (Another click) is safe. No different to me that some downloaded executable on windows.

                And as for the different versions, yes, I mean why are there two or three versions of Firefox when I search in the Mint package manager? What makes flatpak ine different from the other one? How can I evaluate ? As a new user, even the descriptions don’t help.

                And when I say a new language, I’m talking about having to go into the terminal (?) And enter a bunch of unfamiliar commands that I have no idea if they’re the right or safe thing to do, In order to be able to get something to work. In my case a switch pro controller and an Xbox one controller (when the pro didn’t work). Both of which just work on windows. That’s just one example, and I don’t think it’s an especially unique or niche one for someone coming from windows. Got them to work on Yuzu, but wouldn’t work with a browser for some reason.

                To be clear, I’m not dissing Linux (nor you!) I just don’t believe it’s easier that Windows, nor does it yet feel ready to help a new user do fairly ‘normal’ stuff they might want to. I also recently started using a Mac, and while that was laerning curve, it was still far more novice friendly than Mint. In my experience.

                • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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                  I’m getting this impression as someone who just installed Linux mint, because people like yourself who say there won’t be problems

                  Anybody who tells you you won’t experience any issues on a piece of software as large, capable, and complex as a desktop OS is lying. Don’t tell me I’m a person who’d say that, because I’m not. You will face an issue from time to time on Linux. You will face an issue from time to time on Windows. You will face an issue from time to time on MacOS.

                  Even on Linux I still have to search online for info and for what app to install to meet my needs. Which also relies on knowing what site to trust, and what info you find varies hugely from helpful to incomprehensible for a beginner. Especially when there’s a hundred unfamiliar options.

                  Applies just as much to Windows (or Mac) as it does to Linux. We aren’t born with intimate knowledge of every program ever made.

                  At least on Mac or Linux the app stores (that people actually use btw) have app categories and spotlights on apps to help you find good ones.

                  The whole finding downloading and installing something on windows is straightforward

                  I’m sorry but no it isn’t. You’re just used to it. There’s a difference. It’s an awful and potentially dangerous way to get software. It’s worse and it’s needlessly cumbersome and complicated.

                  I keep repeating this, but there is a reason nobody else follows that model.

                  To me, it’s a fatal flaw in Windows that Microsoft needs to sort out. I’m struggling to even sum up in words how much of a broken system it is. There’s no defending it. Even Microsoft themselves acknowledge it’s a broken system.

                  E: pictures say a thousand words. Here’s the difference:

                  Installing an app on Windows: https://imgur.com/a/QoLzZlk

                  Installing an app on Linux: https://imgur.com/a/prsi9ZW

                  Come on. Don’t try to gaslight me into thinking that’s intuitive, straightforward, or convenient. Because it isn’t. You’re lying to me and to yourself.

                  There’s also the windows app store

                  Which has barely any apps, a malware problem, and is full of open source apps uploaded by people who aren’t the original developer, charging money for them. Even the most die hard windows fans think the Windows store is bad.

                  And when I say a new language, I’m talking about having to go into the terminal (?) And enter a bunch of unfamiliar commands

                  You don’t need to use the terminal. I could make this same complaint about the command prompt, powershell, or windows terminal (why are there 3, btw, Microsoft?! Why make this needlessly confusing??) Or about having to navigate the nightmare that is the Windows Registry when something doesn’t work.

                  In my case a switch pro controller and an Xbox one controller (when the pro didn’t work). Both of which just work on windows.

                  Huh. I have the opposite experience. I plug a controlled into my Linux PC, it just works. Not the same on windows. Ironically, Microsoft’s own controllers work better on Linux than they do on Windows. And don’t get me started on using PlayStation controllers on Windows.

            • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              That’s true. And if they actually did more vetting of their app store I’d probably use it!

              But right now it seems to be full of software that isn’t updated as frequently as the separate installers for some reason, missing almost all apps, or has open source apps uploaded by someone who isn’t the original developer, and charging money for it…

              • LinkOpensChest.wav@lemmy.one
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                Even if they vetted their apps properly, I’d still not want to use it tbh. Microsoft is untrustworthy, even from a “massive corporation” perspective.