• SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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    59 minutes ago

    If you are living on the coast and the water is rising due to climate change, just sell your house and move.

  • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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    4 hours ago

    This is kinda funny, just thinking someone believes you can “trade in” a PC at all. Even more so when they are trying to say those same Windows 10 machines will be so useless you need to trade them in in the first place, making the value of such a trade in what, next to nothing?

  • deathbird@mander.xyz
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    4 hours ago

    A testament to the shot development standards at MS. An OS literally should not in a million years be this resource inefficient, especially out of the box.

  • katy ✨
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    6 hours ago

    jokes on them i just erased my windows and put mint on it

      • iii@mander.xyz
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        48 minutes ago

        “In the name of our Lord I implore thee to embrace Linux Mint. For it is a software that shall free thy computer from its earthly shackles and grant thee access to infinite knowledge of the cosmos.”

        Matthew 23:23

  • DFX4509B@lemmy.org
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    7 hours ago

    Alright then MS, (this is hypothetical as I haven’t ran Windows as my main OS in years and don’t plan on going back) since you want me to trade in my hardware, how 'bout I trade in your OS instead? :p

  • oplkill@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Kinda funny the same statement to Tesla owners, where comments are telling that it’s easy…

    • BURN@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Adobe and ease of use

      I need Adobe, specifically Lightroom, because there’s no alternative. I can’t just stop using it as a semi-professional photographer (I make money from it, just not a ton).

      Darktable doesn’t handle large libraries well and also is missing features such as AI remove and integration with photoshop for splitting photos up for social media posts.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        9 hours ago

        Then Apple. Their M-series are fantastic, and their support cycles are great. Also, taking marketshare from Microsoft is generally a good thing because it’ll force them to make a better product.

      • InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        Fair, but that’s not a Linux problem. Publishers need to support the platform. Is windows bad for not “running” final cut?

        • octobob@lemmy.ml
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          10 hours ago

          I’m going to go against the grain here a bit and say that people considering a switch to Linux need to have certain expectations going into it. There are zero guarantees that anything Linux will be a “just works” operation. Especially when you get into the laptop scene and proprietary hardware.

          Like sometimes an update will break things. Sometimes you will break things and spend time fixing it. Sometimes a piece of software and/or hardware will just not work at all and you’ll try convoluted workarounds that may or may not work. Linux support is often an afterthought considering <5% of desktop users use it. Popular programs and software are often just not available at all and the FOSS alternatives lack features you may need.

          I truly feel that Linux is like the “I own an old hotrod in my garage and work on it as a hobby” compared to “I drive a cheap commuter car and just want it to work”. Yes windows breaks sometimes too, and I hate using their current operating system at work with telemetry and ads and knee-crippling limitations or random ass crashes, etc.

          But I’ve also been in the position that I woke up one day and updated Garuda Linux and spent the entire day trying to not boot into a plain black screen when I had my KVM connected. I finally got my fstab working to mount my NFS share of my NAS after months of fucking with it when I feel like this is an incredibly easy “problem” that’s solution should have been apparent for the last 30 years or so and in my eyes should be something the OS should just “do on its own” automatically.

          All that being said, I still love Linux and will never use anything else on my systems. I enjoy the tweaking of things, experimenting, having all the control I could ever want.

          • lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            6 hours ago

            Especially when you get into the laptop scene and proprietary hardware.

            Pro-tip for those who go this route: get a Thinkpad T or P series. Both are highly-supported by Linux, come in Intel and AMD flavors, and even have extra power-management features and utilities no other laptops have.

          • dustyData@lemmy.world
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            10 hours ago

            The Linux experience is a spectrum. Just like owning a car, sure there are people who own custom hotrods. But there are also enterprise level work trucks that can carry thousands of tons. There’s all sorts if in between, including small town cars, hatchbacks and buses. Just like they’re all vehicles of all different sorts, there’s also all sorts of Linux.

            Buy System76 or Framework laptops and you’ll never have a driver problem. Use a stable user friendly distro like Mint and your experience will be smooth sailing. Use an immutable distro and you cannot wreak your system. Hire a pro data center and they’ll set you up with enterprise level servers. TrueNAS sells hardware and also distributes a high compatibility community Linux distro for NAS.

            Now, use a niche experimental distro packaged by a single developer on their free time. Well, don’t act surprised if it breaks.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            9 hours ago

            Linux is like the “I own an old hotrod in my garage and work on it as a hobby” compared to “I drive a cheap commuter car and just want it to work”

            Really?

            Linux gives you choice, sure, but it doesn’t just randomly break unless you’re doing something exotic.

            Garuda Linux

            There’s your problem, you’re using a bleeding edge distro, which is like having a hotrod.

            If you want a boring commuter, install a boring commuter distro, like Debian. If you want something fresher, there are a lot of options before you get to Arch-based distros, like Fedora. Stick to the most popular distros and you probably won’t have problems.

            Don’t get me wrong, Arch can be fantastic, I ran it for several years with minimal problems, but you really do need to be ready to step in and get your hands dirty.

            My main advice is to go in expecting to need to replace software. A lot of stuff works (e.g. discord, Steam, etc), but a lot of stuff doesn’t. If you’re flexible, use a mainstream distro, and stick to what’s available in the repo or on flathub, it’ll probably be more stable than Windows. Just don’t expect your random RGB app or whatever to work, and be ready to swap some POS hardware if the manufacturer doesn’t support Linux (e.g. certain WiFi vendors that aren’t Intel).

            Also, don’t expect Linux to make things faster, you’re still limited by your hardware. But do expect common tasks to work well.

            • lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              6 hours ago

              Linux is like the “I own an old hotrod in my garage and work on it as a hobby” compared to “I drive a cheap commuter car and just want it to work”

              Really?

              Linux gives you choice, sure, but it doesn’t just randomly break unless you’re doing something exotic.

              I see it more as a pre-built kit RC car (like Traxxas or Arrma stuff) that in stock form (like a Debian or Fedora distro) is acceptable for 99% of the things we want to do with it, but also allows you to get under the hood and tweak/upgrade/change the inner workings to your liking with support from the manufacturer. Unlike other prebuilt cars from the toy store that have no real upgrade opportunities and don’t want you under the hood, they are as-delivered with no other options…

              Anyway…

              Also, don’t expect Linux to make things faster, you’re still limited by your hardware. But do expect common tasks to work well.

              Very well put.

        • kazerniel@lemmy.world
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          12 hours ago

          Not the fault of Linux, but these are still the “problem” OP asked about regarding switching to Linux.

          • InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world
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            12 hours ago

            It is, but i wanted to contextualize it for them and others reading. People sometimes have some idea that it would be impossible to port due to some inhernat aspect to linux. Might be true for something that makes heavy windows API use, but for many others its just a business case. And I wanted emphasis that a bit

            • ripcord@lemmy.world
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              9 hours ago

              I have never run into anyone who thinks it would be impossible to port Photoshop to Linux.

          • jh29a
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            10 hours ago

            pragmatist and whatever you call the other guy talking past each other

        • ripcord@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          The question was why it’s hard for people to switch to Linux. They answered the question. It doesn’t matter if it’s Linux’s “fault” or not.

        • kazerniel@lemmy.world
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          12 hours ago

          Sadly nothing for Adobe InDesign, which is like 2/3 of my workflow :( (Also I don’t see an option to filter to Linux programs on that site.)

          I spent half hour searching on alternativeto.net just now, but for the 3 Adobe programs I use (InDesign, Illustrator, Photoshop) all FLOSS Linux options seem to be lacking essential features. Based on comments, even in more popular alternatives, features like PDF exporting or CMYK colour handling require workarounds or additional external programs.

          (Re. searching only for FLOSS: I’m not opposed to paying for software, but when I enabled that option on alternativeto.net, a lot of results were subscription-based, which I do strongly oppose :/ )

      • katy ✨
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        6 hours ago

        steam and heroic launcher makes it very easy

      • burghler@sh.itjust.works
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        10 hours ago

        From games with anti cheats exclusively functional on windows I’m assuming. Otherwise gaming is on par

        • Takumidesh@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Gaming is 100 percent not ‘on par’ I’ve exclusively used Linux for years now, and consistently run into issues not present on windows.

          Is it good enough? Almost, but there are hugely critical aspects missing.

          Lots of simulators (I racing, fanatec) lack support Anti cheats as mentioned. Plain old poor performance.

          Protondb only lists 20 percent of titles as ‘platinum’ rated, with most gold games needing tweaks.

          30 percent of titles are silver or lower.

          I still to this day get hitching and stuttering as data is streamed into memory in many games, sekiro recently comes to mind, making any level transition exceedingly annoying.

          • burghler@sh.itjust.works
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            4 hours ago

            The anticheats harvest data that has value, it’s a business decision rather than a technical problem.

            For your particular situation, checkout the site protondb. It’s a user contributed site on how to get all games to work

  • salacious_coaster@infosec.pub
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    14 hours ago

    Hot take from an IT guy: save your important data, make a plain vanilla W11 boot USB (nothing fancy, no Rufus tricks), wipe your hard drive to zeroes, and install W11 like normal. I’ve reimaged a ton of older PCs and literally never seen it not work. My 10 year old Optiplex, supposedly ineligible for W11, runs W11 just fine.

    Microsoft might someday break it, sure. That’s not new. Microsoft products were always, in practice, available to us at Microsoft’s pleasure. This is the same company that allows massgrave to exist on github because they’d rather we pirate MS Office than allow LibreOffice any oxygen. We’ll probably be fine.

    • Polderviking@feddit.nl
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      11 hours ago

      Also IT guy. Hot take indeed. I’ve done this but won’t support this. I will almost guarantee some update will break shit at the most inconvenient time humanly possible and the people you’ve done this for will need your help, all at the same time.

      I’m using this opportunity to expand Linux market share.

      Most people only use a browser these days. People that ask me about Windows 10 eol get pushed towards Linux. There is really no need to spend money to replace a machine mainly used to browse the web.

      Only if they need stuff that won’t work on Linux or they really really want Windows to use Chrome or Firefox on for some reason I’ll recommend complying with Microsoft’s hubris.

      But not before suggesting Apple sells pretty and user friendly computers as well. Because I really want this to hurt Windows’s market share and by golly I’ll do everything in my power to help.

      • TwoBeeSan@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        I’m imagining me doing this to my building of elderly, it dies and then opening my eyes to 40 work orders. Lmao

      • salacious_coaster@infosec.pub
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        10 hours ago

        I will almost guarantee some update will break shit at the most inconvenient time humanly possible and the people you’ve done this for will need your help, all at the same time.

        Well, yeah. That’s life as an admin under the best circumstances. There’s a running list of Windows ticking time bombs over on r/sysadmin. There are lots of good reasons to ditch Windows, but I wouldn’t say the risk of MS shutting down technically unsupported hardware is one of them (because I don’t agree it’s a substantial risk).

        • Polderviking@feddit.nl
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          8 hours ago

          Well, yeah. That’s life as an admin under the best circumstances.

          I don’t disagree, but I don’t see the reason in tempting/inviting work to spawn. Especially in the cases where windows itself is optional.

          I also think it’s interesting you’re not convinced it’s a reasonable risk. I’ve had updates break things on clients under my control on several occasions, particularly post Windows 7 with the bigger feature releases.

          It’s definitely a “when”, and not an “if” to me.

          It’s also worth pointing out Microsoft has already actively been working against allowing you to bypass the requirements. It’s very clear to me they want to go towards some kind of hardware lifecycle management and I would definately not put it past them they deliberately make windows stop working on unsupported platforms at some point.

    • rwtwm@feddit.uk
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      9 hours ago

      I love how memes (in the Dawkinsian sense) work. Lots of people have enjoyed this, but I can imagine this being quoted as the original is lost to the sands of time.

      Young people everywhere thinking that Aquaman was someone who just bought failing assets from everyone.

      • BenReilly97@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        What’s especially funny is that he didn’t even script that, he just came up with it on the spot. And now it’s the joke he’s most known for.

    • alphabethunter@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      What’s 10 dollars? The people saying this are too rich to understand poor numbers. They probably think in terms of “a new pc costs less than an hour at my favorite spa, people are complaining too much”.

      • ericatty@infosec.pub
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        16 hours ago

        Arrested Development tv show. Pretty funny. The family fortune started with the dad opening a banana stand in his youth.

        ALT: 2 panels. 1st panel- Rich mom from Arrested Development sitcom, holding a cup, opulent home, saying “I mean it’s one banana, Michael. How much could it cost? Ten dollars?”

        2nd panel- Michael sitting back, head on hand saying “you’ve never actually stepped foot in a supermarket, have you?”