Despite Microsoft’s push to get customers onto Windows 11, growth in the market share of the software giant’s latest operating system has stalled, while Windows 10 has made modest gains, according to fresh figures from Statcounter.

This is not the news Microsoft wanted to hear. After half a year of growth, the line for Windows 11 global desktop market share has taken a slight downturn, according to the website usage monitor, going from 35.6 percent in October to 34.9 percent in November. Windows 10, on the other hand, managed to grow its share of that market by just under a percentage point to 61.8 percent.

The dip in usage comes just as Microsoft has been forcing full-screen ads onto the machines of customers running Windows 10 to encourage them to upgrade. The stats also revealed a small drop in the market share of its Edge browser, despite relentlessly plugging the application in the operating system.

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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    4 months ago

    People found out about the Win10 IoT LTSC version, which Microsoft alleges to be supporting for 10 more years.

    It comes with basically zero of the M$ bloat that everyone hates, as well. It’s just Windows.

    I just installed it on my father’s new (old) laptop, because he is not ready for Linux yet – possibly ever.

    It has no:

    • Cortana
    • Copilot
    • Windows Media Player
    • OneDrive
    • Office 365 Nag
    • Candy crush, Solitaire collection, etc.
    • Ads and nags on the lock screen
    • “Finish setting up your device and create a Microsoft Account!!!” nag every X number of bootups
    • Xbox Game Bar
    • Microsoft Store
    • Etc.

    It does come with Edge.

    Because it does not have the Microsoft Store you have to manually install anything that comes as a store app from the command line. I was taken by surprise that the Duckduckgo browser is packaged this way. But you can still do it. Normal programs install just fine.

    Yes, you can use it for gaming.

    Edit: I guess I forgot to drop the obligatory link to https://massgrave.dev/ , which is how I found out about this and got it running. Also hosted there is a tool that allows you to… license… various Microsoft products including your shiny new Win10 IoT install.

    • @Codilingus@sh.itjust.works
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      Just adding that 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC is also super solid and great for gaming, no bullshit installed, just Edge + Defender. I disable Edge- instead of uninstalling- with a tool that just breaks it, since Edge always gets installed again eventually.

      I got it from that same site, been problem free for months now. I only went with 11since my 5800X3D is still fairly new.

      Edit: Fine, no bullshit other than Edge + Defender.

        • @Rogue@feddit.uk
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          334 months ago

          Edge isn’t that bad. You need something to download Firefox with.

          The bullshit is when every windows link insists on opening in edge rather then your default browser.

            • @Codilingus@sh.itjust.works
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              44 months ago

              Winget makes fresh Windows installs much less painful!

              Just incase it helps anyone: For the 11 IoT LTSC, to use winget you first have to install 2 packages via power shell. First: VCLibs.x64.14.00.Desktop.appx Then: DesktopAppInstaller_********.msixbundle

      • @SuperSpruce@lemmy.zip
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        64 months ago

        Does this version of Windows 11 feel as snappy as normal Windows 10? And do the fans randomly flare up like on my installation of normal Windows 11?

        • @SailorMoss@sh.itjust.works
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          4 months ago

          Maybe it’s all in my head, but I tried it a while back and it felt less snappy than clean windows 10 but more snappy than stock windows 11. It also retains a lot of the annoyances of stock windows 11.

          Unfortunately I can’t use it because I have a WMR VR headset and it’s unsupported on the IoT and LTSC.

          There’s a YouTube channel called memories tech tips and he’s developing a script that you can add to your ISO that will have a similar effect to the LTSC. That in combination with Chris Titus techs ultimate windows utility after first boot makes setting things up much easier.

          • @Kyouki@lemmy.world
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            34 months ago

            This sounds nice, thanks for that information.

            How do you know stuff is particularly “unsupported” on a same os but different build? Other then errors of course?

            In my head it is the same os just different blend so wonder why it wouldnt work. Reckon maybe some missing system components. Though can copy those over?

            Anyway was curious if you knew! Thanks

            • @SailorMoss@sh.itjust.works
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              34 months ago

              It’s basically just Microsoft being shit heads on their development of the Windows Mixed reality drivers that creates that specific edge case. Hopefully the open source monado drivers will be a good replacement eventually. Most everything else should work fine.

              I only know because I had windows 10 LTSC when I bought my headset and tried to get it working and found reddit threads with the same issue. I tested the windows 11 IoT when it came out because I hoped it would support my headset then I found out they are dropping support next year.

              There needs to be a class action lawsuit about this to either open-source the drivers or to refund all those who purchased WMR devices.

          • @acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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            24 months ago

            Unsupported hardware

            Arcane incantations to get your system to look like a system

            Still bloated

            At this point, I’m assuming you don’t like yourself very much.

            • @SailorMoss@sh.itjust.works
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              3 months ago

              Well, I would like to switch to Linux but my VR headset is holding me back. Linux does have its own annoyances. I would probably still have to virtualize windows because of productivity software I need.

              I also use an engineering sample CPU so uhhh… I’ve learned to stop worrying and love the jank.

      • @finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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        24 months ago

        Nah, when my Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC (non-IoT) runs out in 2027 it will be the last Windows version I ever use.

      • God
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        114 months ago

        Yeah what do you do on a computer without Candy Crush. Could it even connect to the Internet?

        • swab148
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          114 months ago

          I thought Candy Crush was a dependency for File Explorer, TIL

          • @ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            4 months ago

            Unable to verify Minecraft account. Please check your Internet connection or your billing status.

            Retry

            Use PowerShell Lite instead

    • @SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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      154 months ago

      Sounds like Linux but worse. Got my dad on Mint and all he ever uses is a browser and mail program (2nd one is optional)

      • God
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        134 months ago

        All my mom does is browser and Office365. I tried to get her into LibreOffice and I saw her suffering through it for some time and decided to put her out of her misery by MAS’ing her Office.

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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        94 months ago

        Believe it or not my pops is readonably tech savvy. He was an engineer and does industrial control automation, and there are a lot of software suites for that which are firmly Windows only. Hardware license dongles and the whole bit. Our chances of getting that to run in Wine are below zero.

        • Redjard
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          54 months ago

          VM with one dedicated usb hub passed thru?

    • @Saltarello@lemmy.world
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      I bought an i7 NUC to use as HTPC some years ago. It has W10 IoT on it. Handles Dolby Atmos like a charm & 4K to a degree (YouTube. Last time i checked, Windows still liked to give 4K media files a purple hue)

    • @VeganCheesecake@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      84 months ago

      When I still had a Windows 11 install, it was running under an Enterprise License. Apparently, Enterprise and Education are the only editions left that allow you to deactivate all those unwanted components via the Group Policy Editor. Also the only editions that allow you to turn off telemetry.

      At some point, I managed to get all the stuff I needed running seamlessly on Linux, and I plan on never going back to MS.

    • @blind3rdeye@lemm.ee
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      74 months ago

      I’m still using Windows 10 on my personal work laptop, and I’ve got to say that what you’ve described sounds pretty appealing. Windows 10 with most of the crapware removed, and extended support. That sounds like a good deal…

      But on the flip side, I think it’s a bad idea to get an OS from a piracy site. Maybe it’s all genuine and tickety-boo, but being a reputable 3rd party source is a fairly high bar. I certainly wouldn’t trust a site I’ve never heard of to give me a legitimate copy of a better-than-standard version of Windows. Their offer to verify their own files is less than convincing. I think I’d need to be an active part of the scene to be able to trust something like that - because it certainly smells like an easy way to get back-doored.

      • Midnight Wolf
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        64 months ago

        You install windows as standard (from MS directly), selecting the IoT version during setup. Afaik it’s on GH so you can view the scripts, copy/paste if you don’t trust the downloaded .ps1, etc.

        I ran the OS for a couple months on a system and had no issues. No funky activity reported (no more than usual) with snort, no alerts from sophos. I didn’t extensively verify it, but I don’t have any suspicions to report.

      • @Broken@lemmy.ml
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        I agree. I need to trust where the OS (or any software) comes from. I’d rather get a legitimate windows copy and then debloat it and turn off telemetry and other BS myself. Then I know I’m good on both counts. But apparently the IoT LTSC version is legit, not a cracked copy. This is the first I’ve ever heard of it.

        • شاهد على إبادة
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          94 months ago

          VLC is better but a basic media player has been part of Windows for decades now. Any decent OS will come with one. The default on most Linux distros isn’t much better.

        • @RisingSwell@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          14 months ago

          I haven’t had vlc ork reliably in a while, any video playback was glitchy and out of sync. I use photos to look at videos now, worse features but it has no issues and honestly I just want to play a video file with no effort

    • @AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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      24 months ago

      If the LTSC was the actual Windows then they wouldn’t be losing any market share. That shit is crazy nice

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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        24 months ago

        Yeah, well. They make most of their money off of advertising revenue and the spyware bullshit. License sales are one and done per user, so there’s no recurring revenue there. And probably even less than that because everyone – individual users at least – just pirates Windows anyway.

        I know I sure as hell do. And I’m not recommending anyone else not do so, either…

    • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      24 months ago

      Huh, maybe I’ll consider replacing my current Win10 install that I never use with this. And maybe I’ll see about replacing my SO’s install with it as well.

    • @spyd3r@sh.itjust.works
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      14 months ago

      The store is there, its just disabled, there is some command you can run to enable it. I forgot what it was though.

    • @BrowseMan@sh.itjust.works
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      Ouah nice, if I can keep W10 for a few years the time to learn the specificities of Linux (let’s be honest for a total newb, there are a lot) with the Deck it’s perfect!

      This would also allow me to keep using software unable to run on Linux.

      Thank you for explaining this, I’ll check!

  • Snot Flickerman
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    4 months ago

    DO NOT PAY FOR WINDOWS 10 UPDATES.

    They’re pushing this plan to make people pay to continue to get support for 10 very hard.

    Don’t fucking do it. Make them eat this loss of a shitty invasive OS that nobody asked for. This trend is evidence that we’re in control in this situation, not Microsoft.

    Force their hand and make it so they have no choice but to keep supporting Windows 10 for free for five more years.

    Look, I’m a Linux user primarily, but that doesn’t mean you should just let these corporate fuckholes walk all over you. Windows 10 is ride or die. Make Microsoft pay for trying to fuck you out of a cleaner operating system that is less infested with spyware and actually works half the time.

    Not everybody has the time or energy to figure out Linux, but either way, the best way to fight Microsoft is by hitting them square in the pocketbook.

    • _haha_oh_wow_
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      724 months ago

      Linux is mostly pretty easy to install/use at this point as long as you stick with a main distro like Mint

      • Snot Flickerman
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        Even Mint you have to jump through hoops to not have to put in your password every time there’s updates. Hoops that are too complex for a newbie on their own.

        Most Linux users don’t want to admit that a huge thing that makes people hate Linux is having to type in their password every time there’s updates (and there’s always updates.)

        It’s seemingly such a small thing, and as Linux users, we know the why behind it so we don’t question it, but the average user doesn’t and they hate typing their password over and over to get into the computer, let alone to update it.

        To them, Windows is easier since the updates happen silently in the background, and aren’t in the forefront because Linux expects you to know what the fuck you’re doing.

        Every Linux box that I didn’t fuck with to make sure updates happened silently in the background that I gave to anyone else would always be wildly out of date the next time I touched it because they just… don’t install updates instead of typing in their password.

        Often, they’ve forgotten the fucking password, if you’ve made it so they don’t have to put a password in when they log in (my mother has done this one countless times).

        Until we figure out a way to make Linux secure and straightforward for end-users, people will stick with Windows.

        • @PlantJam@lemmy.world
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          204 months ago

          Linux expects you to know what the fuck you’re doing.

          I’ve heard people claim Mint is easy enough for non technical users (grandma, etc.), but I think that’s with the caveat that they will have someone to support the machine.

          • Snot Flickerman
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            Yeah, nobody’s paying me so I don’t have the time or effort to be everyone’s tech support for Linux. If they can’t figure out how to type in their password to install updates, it means most people are way too fuck stupid to handle Linux. No offense, but I mean really. If Linux still needs me to manage their system for them, it’s by definition NOT friendly to the non-computer-savvy.

            I’ve gotta be like one of the few Linux users who still sees it as too much for the average user, mostly because average users are fucking whiny crybabies who hate learning anything new ever. See also Bluesky vs. Mastodon.

            • z3rOR0ne
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              4 months ago

              That’s fair. I maintain a Fedora installation for my elderly mother, whose Windows laptop is on its last legs. I revitalized a 15 year old desktop with Fedora for her, installed everything she needed (browser, file manager, libreoffice, iscan, brother printer drivers, password manager, zoom meetings, etc.). But yeah, every month I hop on, open up a terminal and run sudo dnf upgrade, and every 6 months run the Fedora major version update.

              Don’t get me wrong, I’m impressed my Mom has been able to get all her business done using Fedora, but I definitely am acting sysadmin should anything in the slightest go wrong or confuse her. That said, I think she could run the upgrades if I left her with extensive notes (but if anything went wrong, she’d lose her shit, ngl).

              I don’t know, I think a Linux distribution with automatic updates would be a good thing if you could ensure every user would be guaranteed to not be greeted with any issues upon reboot from said update.

              But yeah, sadly, even on the most user friendly of distros, you still have to have a decent familiarity with the command line , and have the patience and knowledge of where to look for, and then read and comprehend, the documentation. And I doubt there will ever be a time in the future where 100% of users are comfortable with all that, though imho if you use any computer at all, you should at least try.

              • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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                54 months ago

                you still have to have a decent familiarity with the command line

                I think this is, for most people I’ve spoken with (including coders in games, my kids, etc) the major issue – they don’t want to have to use the command line for things. It’s fine if you can, but that alone is a massive wall for some people. People are exhausted right now, and having to learn a variety of command line prompts instead of just clicking on icons is too much for some people. That can be argued till you’re red in the face, but I think a major reason so many people bounce off linux, myself included, is that it’s not ‘as easy as windows.’ We need to stop telling people it is, because that means they won’t try again later.

                • z3rOR0ne
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                  4 months ago

                  I definitely hear you on that, and in some ways, it’s a shame more people don’t have the option to learn more about how their computer works.

                  The Linux OS is, in my experience, one of the most amazing things I’ve ever taken the time to learn. In my pursuit of not only learning programming and computer science fundamentals, but also the internals of the Linux operating system, I’ve gained a granular control over my computing devices that has allowed me to be spared the onslaught of forced “AI in everything” that has recently been pushed down people’s throats. I also have minimal exposure to invasive advertisements, and other unwanted features.

                  But the cost for access to said knowledge was an immense amount of time studying, an equivalent amount of patience, and a strong desire to learn difficult subjects. That’s a cost the majority of users are unable or unwilling to pay. They simply dont have the time and/or desire, and that’s just reality.

                  Ultimately, I don’t think it’s acknowledged enough that it requires a vast amount of privilege to have the time and energy to devote to such endeavors such as learning how Linux, the command line, and Computer Systems more broadly, work. I think this is because to acknowledge such would open the discussion up to the more broader topics of the qualities of our education systems and our cultivation of more positively reinforced learning models, which is a much more difficult topic to navigate and argue about when contrasted with the “It’s easy to install Linux. Windows bad, so just do it.” argument that pervades the discussion space.

              • @SorteKanin@feddit.dk
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                34 months ago

                would be a good thing if you could ensure every user would be guaranteed to not be greeted with any issues upon reboot from said update.

                Honestly this sounds like it’d be so far in the future that it’s not even realistic to contemplate right now. We’re clearly not even close to this being the reality.

                • z3rOR0ne
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                  4 months ago

                  Sadly, I’m in very much agreement with you on this. I love the Linux OS to death, but I’m very very much into learning as much as I can about computers right now, and I am not representative of the majority of computer users.

                  I understand now why updates are required, why they sometimes break things, and ultimately what has to be done either by myself or, usually, others, to fix them.

                  But most people seem to go absolute ape shit when things don’t work as expected, and I think that has to do more with human societies not cultivating enough patient, non-stressed, curious, people. And that’s what bums me out more than this whole Windows vs Linux thing…

            • @SorteKanin@feddit.dk
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              84 months ago

              You’re not alone, I’ve been screaming into the void about this for a long time too. People keep saying “Linux is user friendly enough these days for even non techy people” and I’m sorry but it’s totally not.

              I think most Linux users just don’t realize how technologically illiterate most people are. Most people can barely use a browser and send emails. They absolutely don’t want to mess with anything related to “updates” that they have no idea wtf is doing to their system anyway.

              • @Don_alForno@feddit.org
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                44 months ago

                People keep saying “Linux is user friendly enough these days for even non techy people” and I’m sorry but it’s totally Not.

                I guess people who say that think of the average non techy user as someone like me: I don’t really know how this works under the hood, but I do troubleshoot my own stuff, am willing and able to search for help and apply advice on my own, try different things, and hopefully realize when that advice starts to sound fishy.

                The thing is, that’s not the average non-techy user. That’s already “dabbling in tech”.

                The average non techy user is Homer going “oh, a talking moose on the Internet wants my credit card number? Sounds fair.”

                • @SorteKanin@feddit.dk
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                  34 months ago

                  Yea, definitely. Also just the fact that you’re here says a lot. I don’t think you can find many (if any) of these “normal” users on the fediverse.

          • @SplashJackson@lemmy.ca
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            64 months ago

            That’s my beef. Most of the time I don’t have the time to reverse engineer my volume knob drivers via the command line, let alone figure out which obscurly-named (but generally under 8 characters) random function or shell script or what have you is the fix, but oh you gotta install the repository, but first you gotta find out which one is compatible with your kernel, and then do it all again cause you forgot to type sudo and your password at every goddamn step

        • @schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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          114 months ago

          Linux users don’t want to admit that a huge thing that makes people hate Linux is having to type in their password every time there’s updates

          Hell, people get mad about having to hit a ‘Cool, do that button’, let alone something like a password. It’s how we ended up with UAC v2, because people were steaming pissed about having to accept when a badly written app was doing something stupid that they just changed the scope of ‘stupid’ to be much less restrictive.

          In fact it’s even bled over to OS X, as people are SO mad about entering passwords they’re angry at Apple over it, too.

          Basically, any time a UI hops in front of you and goes ‘Wait! This is important!’ people get annoyed, and well, all OSes are moving towards more of that shit rather than less, as if they didn’t know that was annoying or something. Glad I don’t work in UX or I’d probably lose my mind at how much stupid hostile shit is being added constantly.

          • @SorteKanin@feddit.dk
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            64 months ago

            Basically, any time a UI hops in front of you and goes ‘Wait! This is important!’ people get annoyed

            It honestly baffles me how this keeps being a thing. Not just for OSs but for a lot of websites too. And the wild thing is that most of the time, it’s not even that important and the user does not and should not care about it.

            • @9bananas@lemmy.world
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              74 months ago

              on top of which it creates a security issue too:

              by teaching users to always instantly click on “OK”, “Accept”, etc, they stop reading the actually important messages, because they’re being bombarded by so, so many useless pop-ups everywhere…

            • @schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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              24 months ago

              Indeed.

              It’s to the point that even legitimate sites look like those dark-pattern fake scam ecommerce sites with all the popups, fake “deals”, and timers and shit.

              Windows of course feels much the same way - recently replaced a failed mac with a new Mini and holy crap is MacOS so fucking zen.

              I logged into my apple account and then was assaulted by… fucking nothing. No ads, no popups, no upsells, no candy crush, no enabling AI shit. I just landed on the desktop to do whatever the hell it was I was going to be doing.

        • @discimus@mander.xyz
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          34 months ago

          Macs also make you put your password in all the time for updates, installs, etc. Laymen seem to use macs just fine

        • @Don_alForno@feddit.org
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          34 months ago

          Often, they’ve forgotten the fucking password, if you’ve made it so they don’t have to put a password in when they log in

          The second my father asks me about this is when I revoke his computer privileges.

        • @Empricorn@feddit.nl
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          14 months ago

          Even Mint you have to jump through hoops to not have to put in your password every time there’s updates.

          That’s… by design. Nothing can change your computer until you decide to approve it. As you said, you can change that setting but it’s not an oversight. Many of Windows’ historic security vulnerabilities were because they gave every user admin rights and didn’t prompt for changes. It’s also how many users were unknowingly upgraded to Windows 11 without wanting it…

          • Snot Flickerman
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            34 months ago

            Absolutely, and it’s very good design.

            But people can fuck right off with this “Linux can be used by everybody” shit, because apparently remembering to type in a password is too god damned confusing for most.

      • NutWrench
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        214 months ago

        This. And if folks are worried that their computer’s hardware won’t be supported (wifi, touchscreen, mousepad, soundcard or a weird mobile graphics driver) I recommend testing it by booting from a live linux flash drive. If everything works with the live version, it should work with the installed version, too.

        • @teamevil@lemmy.world
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          24 months ago

          Yo it’s stupid easy to install on a Microsoft Surface watching a 10 min YouTube video. Everything works

      • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        104 months ago

        Yup. The main concern is if there’s specific software you cannot do without, such as:

        • Adobe products
        • big multiplayer games w/ anti-cheat
        • Xbox app/game pass

        But if you’re a bit flexible and are willing to try different software, then yeah, Linux is pretty rad. Most Steam games I’ve tried work, you can play Epic and GOG games through Heroic, LibreOffice is fantastic, VLC works the same, and you can get almost any web browser you want (Firefox, Chrome, etc). And if your hardware isn’t too old, it’ll probably work well w/ Wayland, which resolves a number of problems people have had in the past.

        If you have any questions about app compatibility, ask away! I probably haven’t used whatever it is, but surely someone else has.

      • @Monstrosity@lemm.ee
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        What people have to watch out for now is unlocking their bootloader if they want to test Linux on a USB drive or dual boot, for example, it will trip Bitlocker (conveniently installed on every Windows computer via update without notification or consent), and that will irreversibly encrypt their Windows hard drive without warning.

        Ask me how I know.

        • @renzev@lemmy.world
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          24 months ago

          Also the fact that linux installers seem to fuck up dualbooting like 60% of the time, effectively locking you out of your windows partition… Make backups you guys!

    • @Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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      94 months ago

      No. Go to 11 or go to a different OS. Been hearing these arguments since Windows95 came out, and they are never correct.

      You don’t own Windows. You cannot maintain Windows without Microsoft. Either get onboard or find a different OS.

    • Ænima
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      hitting them square in the pocketbook.

      I’ve been saying this for years to people, but it won’t happen, sadly, if history is anything to go on. The average consumer will always take the easiest path to convenience, even foregoing their leverage as a consumer, if given the choice for a simple monetary resolution.

      If the average consumer had the fortitude to resist getting something they wanted now for better pricing/functionality, a lot of these businesses wouldn’t be doing the bullshit they have been doing with price hikes and enshittification. We are simply not a society that can live without these conveniences.

      Those that try to “vote with their wallet” (econ 101, baby) know the power the consumer has if principled enough to give up convenience for leverage. Unfortunately, as long as someone can throw money at a problem and call it fixed, it will be difficult to pressure companies to do anything to improve their product. I’d love to be proven wrong.

      Hell, maybe one silver lining of the impending tariff disaster is the consumer will be unable to afford it as stuff we need gets too expensive for the stuff we want.

    • Steve Dice
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      4 months ago

      lol this is the exact same rethoric people were spewing when Windows 7 went EOL because Windows 10 was sooo bad and now everyone’s fighting tooth and nail to keep using it. W11 is basically a better skin on W10. Just move on.

  • andyburke
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    1234 months ago

    I’ll uh … be over here continuing to use an OS that doesn’t <checks notes> show me a full-screen ad.

    • @shalafi@lemmy.world
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      74 months ago

      All I have ever seen is a single sentence on the login screen promoting MS products. Do none of you still use Windows? Are you saying stuff like this based on memes?

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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        834 months ago

        No, this is absolutely a thing that happens now. It came through in the last couple of updates. Sporadically it pops up a screen in your face like this:

        I just got one on the little pseudo-netbook we use to run one of the barcode scanners at work the other day, despite this machine not even being “eligible” to run Windows 10.

        • @discimus@mander.xyz
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          74 months ago

          This hasn’t happened to me but probably because my computer doesn’t support Windows 11 (it doesn’t support TPM)

          • @Zorque@lemmy.world
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            74 months ago

            Apparently there’s ads for upgrading your computer to be able to run W11. I haven’t run into them myself.

          • @Don_alForno@feddit.org
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            34 months ago

            Same here, but I did occasionally get a similar full screen reminding me of that fact and urging me to buy a new PC. I installed Mint instead.

      • teft
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        244 months ago

        I’ve seen the full screen ad on windows 10. It’s not just memes.

      • andyburke
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        174 months ago

        I’ll uh … be over here continuing to use an OS that doesn’t <checks notes> show me an ad when I am logging in.

        🤷‍♂️

        • @FinishingDutch@lemmy.world
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          74 months ago

          They’re not. I got one last week, the one about ‘buy a new computer with Windows 11’. And I’m in the Netherlands.

          • @kusivittula@sopuli.xyz
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            14 months ago

            well, i stand corrected. i only have win10 on my laptop that i use for school and haven’t seen any popups. may be because updater is broken beyond repair…

      • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        14 months ago

        I don’t use Windows and haven’t for well over a decade, but my SO does and they haven’t mentioned anything. Not sure if that means it didn’t happen, or they just don’t care.

        That said, I remember seeing the ads for Candy Crush and whatnot in the start menu, and that was annoying. I also played w/ Win 11, and it seemed to have similar nonsense, plus they moved everything around again.

  • @zephorah@lemm.ee
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    894 months ago

    Our old asses are over here learning mint and Ubuntu on new machines. That wasn’t on our 30s-40s disco card.

    It’s fun. Everything looks good, then attach the external monitor to the laptop and it won’t detect. There’s a workaround, there’s almost always a workaround, but these basics of windows are in pieces in Linux.

    The basic expectations with windows, like monitor detection, aren’t necessarily there.

    Spite is a hell of a fuel though. Oh and I still have my win 10 disc and put a fresh install on another machine.

    • @Killer57@lemmy.ca
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      384 months ago

      The Steam Deck and it’s desktop mode are why I decided to try jumping head first into a single boot of Bazzite on my main computer, it’s basically like using a Steam deck, just across four monitors, a year in and I haven’t looked back.

      • @jdeath@lemm.ee
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        114 months ago

        linux desperately needs/needed something like apple for macOS to drive usability. the steam deck is exactly that- one hardware set to really nail the UX and then expand from there.

        thanks for the recommendation, I’m going to give that a try myself!

        • @prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          24 months ago

          Another recommendation for Bazzite. I’ve been using it on my main laptop for months now and it’s been great. Had to learn a little bit about how to install things on immutable distros (tip, search using “silverblue” instead of “bazzite,” the solution will be the same), but now that I understand it, I really like it as a concept. Incredibly stable.

          Oh and gaming just works. Bazzite comes pre-configured for gaming (and that includes monitor switching, etc).

      • @treverflume@lemmy.ml
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        24 months ago

        Sunshine worked right out the box too. Very much recommend bazzite. Tried pop os and just could not get sunshine to work with my 3060.

    • @InFerNo@lemmy.ml
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      254 months ago

      I plugged in a monitor yesterday on my work laptop 's HDMI port and it did nothing. After some troubleshooting I apparently had to unplug the USB-C dock for it to work. Let’s not pretend Windows is smooth sailing all the time.

      At a meeting I was given some kind of remote dongle to duplicate my screen to a monitor and it did nothing. Had to run some exe first. Again, not plug and play.

      But there was always a workaround.

    • @Zink@programming.dev
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      144 months ago

      On my work machine, just a Dell laptop with a dock and some monitors, Mint Cinnamon actually gave me a better out-of-box than win10.

      I didn’t try Mint until 21 (the version before current) and it’s just so smooth now.

    • @jdeath@lemm.ee
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      94 months ago

      that’s why i switched to a mac instead of linux. i love linux on my servers, but for day to day productivity? nothing beats the “turn it on and go” of a mac. of course you pay for it with money (for a mac) or time (for linux)

      but at least i don’t get full screen ads for windows 11!

      • @BangCrash@lemmy.world
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        164 months ago

        I tried the apple ecosystem way back when.

        Fuck me I hated iTunes!

        So glad to be out of that walled garden

      • @PaulieDied@lemmy.world
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        94 months ago

        I generally like my work mac, but external monitor support (used as an example against Linux here) is awful.

        Sure, if you connect one (1) monitor and still use the laptop screen, it’s fine. But try to connect multiple, or disable the laptop screen, or try to lock the dock to your main monitor and you have to jump through all sorts of hoops or it just doesn’t work.

        In the end, macos is just another OS, a good one in general, but definitely not without it’s quirks and issues. I run Arch (btw) with KDE/Plasma on my own desktop and am very happy with it

            • @gaael@lemmy.world
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              44 months ago

              We have a job opening for you in the coming administration, are you going to be available for a job starting in january ?

              • Darth_Mew
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                14 months ago

                you must have a sad life to throw politics in so randomly. stop watching Fox News and get some sunshine

        • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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          4 months ago

          I was almost gonna be a smartass and say you can, but then I realized that there are no nVidia drivers. You CAN use an AMD external GPU on newer Intel Macs, but even the newest Intel Mac is pretty old now. They still get software support, but the performance isn’t comparable to Apple Silicon anymore, so you’d have to sacrifice a lot of CPU power and efficiency to be able to use an eGPU that doesn’t even have CUDA.

    • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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      84 months ago

      Sometimes I wonder what’s going on with other peoples’ setups. Like where do all these issues come from?

      I just plug in my external monitors, usually through the usb-c hub at work so both of them at the same time. But sometimes just a single one. Always gets detected. I’ve had Debian and now TumbleWeed on my work computer, neither gave me an issue with this.

      There are other issues I’m having - such as I wish I didn’t have to open the lid for a second and then close it back when I’ve just connected the externals and want to use it in clamshell mode (as Apple calls it; idk if there’s a name for it outside of Mac/Apple). But all the expected functionality is there.

    • @pHr34kY@lemmy.world
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      54 months ago

      Strange. I have a displaylink box ar home. My Ubuntu machine works first time every time. My wife’s Windows 11 PC takes 10 minutes of stuffing around every time I try to connect it.

    • lime!
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      14 months ago

      one method that helps is to not think of it as a workaround but as assembling a kit. the base system only comes with what everyone will need, and adding on an extra piece makes it more yours. that also helps with motivation to do a good job of it.

  • @LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world
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    814 months ago

    I work at an MSP and a lot of our clients have to follow specific security compliance standards. Because Windows 10 is eol soon, we’ve been slowly upgrading folks to 11. I die a little each time I do an upgrade. People, including my coworkers and I, are not happy with it overall, but nobody can do anything because ✨compliance standards✨

      • @smeenz@lemmy.nz
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        174 months ago

        In the corporate world ? Generally not, because IT can’t force group policy out using AD.

        • @bradd@lemmy.world
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          74 months ago

          One of the biggest hurdles, and one of the only reasons Windows is still alive. Linux doesn’t have a decent AD alternative.

          I think I heard some very large governments, maybe Germany, was going to completely abandon Windows soon. This will generate a ton of demand for an AD alternative so I’m excited to see what happens.

          Until then you have ansible, or salt may be more suitable for workstations 🤷

        • Joe Cool
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          24 months ago

          Oh there is policy, telemetry and lockdown software for Linux. My BYOD archlinux worked fine until a company I contract for rolled out their zero trust bollocks. They wanted me to install Ubuntu, Redhat or SLES and their spyware.
          They now sent me a corporate Win11 laptop for remote access.

    • @ansiz@lemmy.world
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      34 months ago

      I know executives don’t tend to go for it but you could always get in a ESU for 3 years past the EoL date. That was semi popular with Windows 7.

  • @ipkpjersi@lemmy.ml
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    754 months ago

    An ad blitz doesn’t matter if your product is junk. Make something that isn’t garbage if you want to retain people, people want good products.

    • @NateNate60@lemmy.world
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      384 months ago

      Microsoft has realised they have a captive market and are milking it for every dollar (euro, pound, yen, rupee…) they can get.

      • @tempest@lemmy.ca
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        134 months ago

        It isn’t really captive.

        People are rapidly moving away from laptop/desktop computers and applications now a days are predominantly web based which means people can use anything that runs Chrome.

        • @RootBeerGuy@discuss.tchncs.de
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          224 months ago

          You are overestimating the capabilities of the average person. They don’t care its all in the browser. Their “computer looks different” and becomes unusable to them. Tech-illiterate people have a hard time with the concept that all browser based things basically work the same independent of OS.

        • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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          74 months ago

          means people can use anything that runs Chrome.

          Yeah, but a lot of work things are painfully uncomfortable to use on a phone (ERP and EMR software is so much easier to use with a keyboard, mouse and properly sized screen) and most companies aren’t going to be running Linux because of all the extra support load, nor are they going to yeet Macs at regular everyday users. Chromebooks don’t really get taken seriously in corporate environments IMO.

          Similarly, home users who are old school and still want to have a computer - some will switch to Macs, power users will switch to Linux (and switch their family to Linux), but many will just use Windows. Some will use Chromebooks, but those have a bad rep because they used to always be the lowest spec possible (I think it’s gotten better now?)

          And finally, gamers - personally I use Linux for gaming. Hell, I used Gentoo Linux for years. Yes, for gaming. But a lot of people, particularly younger folks, want to play games with invasive anti-cheat. And those don’t run on Linux.

        • @NateNate60@lemmy.world
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          14 months ago

          Businesses are bound to Microsoft Office products which only reliably work on Windows and Mac. Windows is the cheaper of the two, by far, and there are way more IT professionals that are able to work comfortably managing Windows systems than Mac ones.

    • @Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      174 months ago

      Me: Hmmmmmm, maybe it’s time for a new PC. Lets see what’s out there.

      Stores: Windows 10 and 11

      Me: Nevermind!

          • @oldfart@lemm.ee
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            34 months ago

            Yeah, I use and love Linux, but it’s unusable on random unsupported hardware.

            • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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              54 months ago

              For the person who posted it, it could also be that the hardware IS supported, but it’s so obscure that no mainstream distro includes it in their kernel build, not even as a module.

              Of course, for the average person, not having the kernel module built pretty much means it’s unsupported.

            • @Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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              14 months ago

              That’s why I wish they’d release a concept like the Raspberry Pi, but for fully realized mini-pc’s. The thing I love about it is I could have 10 SD cards all sitting in a box. And I slide one in, now my raspberry pi is a retro gaming emulation machine.

              Then I turn it off. Slide a different SD card in. Now it’s a pihole.

              Slide a different card in, now it’s home automation.

              Any new distro you want to try, slide out the sd card, slide in a new one. Your old distro is saved exactly how it was. Just slide it back in, and it’s exactly like you left it.

              No commitment.

              And the hardware is centralized. So if the distro is built for the raspberry pi, you KNOW it’ll work. The downside is, it’s a rinky dink little arm machine.

              • @oldfart@lemm.ee
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                14 months ago

                Except with real PCs users expect some performance, so these would have to be swappable NVMes. Which is of course prohibitively expensive.

                But for a Raspberry, yeah, the ability to turn my Kodi box into a game console is awesome

              • @prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                4 months ago

                Maybe get a Steam Deck? Only kind of joking… Switch to Desktop Mode, and it’s literally a fully functioning Linux PC with an immutable distro

    • @CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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      84 months ago

      I hate Windows 11, for a multitude of reasons. But it is still a better experience than Vista. An unbelievably better than Windows ME. Windows ME for me was the worst desktop OS I think I’ve ever used. If we open it up to just any old OS, then I want to say Novell was the worst I ever used.

      • @theangryseal@lemmy.world
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        124 months ago

        I was fortunately running top of the line hardware when Vista came out. I didn’t understand all the hate at all… until I sat down and did some work on my uncle’s computer with Vista Basic. Holy shit, even with all of the features that required better hardware removed from the OS, it was the slowest and most miserable experience I ever had on a computer. It was brand new and covered in stickers advertising Vista and it still wasn’t capable of running the damn OS.

        That was true with nearly every computer I touched that had it on it.

        Mine was awesome though. No complaints.

        I haven’t used 11, but it sounds like they’ve done it again.

        • @CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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          14 months ago

          How? The 7 and 10 are among the better received versions of Windows, for stability, performance, hardware compatibility, etc. What was your experience with Vista that was so good and 7 and 10 being so bad?

          • @alsimoneau@lemmy.ca
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            14 months ago

            Everything that people liked about 7 was a thing in Vista. AFAIK, people hate on Vista for performance, the automatic updates and the admin access pop-ups. The first one is because they tried to upgrade old XP hardware, a new system ran fine. 7 didn’t really increase performance, people just had new computers by that point. The other 2 issues never changed since, people just got used to them.

            8 had an amazing search feature that got completely garbled in 10. The “start menu” wasn’t well received, but worked fine. 10 brought back a smaller compromise version of it. 10 also has much more telemetry, came with the Cortana and default edge Bing searches and had overall a much less pleasant experience.

            I feel like Vista and 8 get a bad rep because they where so different from the previous ones, even though they rolled some of that into the successors and worked really well. And 10 really accelerated the enshitification of Windows.

    • @Mwa@lemm.ee
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      84 months ago

      Windows 11 is: buggy (Remember That bug where AMD Cpus where slow with 11), slow,maybe training your personal data on ai (Maybe),Very Ugly,Cannot be customized.

  • @Shadywack@lemmy.world
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    524 months ago

    Well, Microsoft said way back when that “Windows 10 will be the last version of Windows” so a lot of enterprise went to it. To this day I’m dealing with vendors that have a certified “Windows 10-only” solution. Another funny one is stuff like Ford’s FDRS software still only officially supports Windows 10 Pro.

    Platform changes and all that are fine, but when Microsoft says basically “This is gonna be your LTS forever” and then bails on it, shit like this is no surprise at all.

  • Sabata
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    4 months ago

    “But people love getting spammed with advertisements…” -Shareholders

  • @umbrella@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    im forced to use it at work and holy shit. 11 is so heavy for no reason, 8gb of ram is not remotely enough anymore, even if you yank out some of the garbage. theres no apparent change in functionality to justify it.

    the ssd smart says its almost at its end, and i suspect its because its constantly swapping. paging file is always full, unless i set it to something big like 8+ gb

    • @Zetta@mander.xyz
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      304 months ago

      I’m pegged at 95% RAM usage all day at work 16 gigs and I’m not doing anything too heavy. Windows is a bloated gross mess

      • @Dupree878@lemmy.world
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        44 months ago

        And I can still run a 2010 MacBook with 4GB to do photo editing and render non HD video

        Bloat is too mild a word for Windows

      • @whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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        34 months ago

        Same but I blame work. My surface tablet at home is vanilla windows professional and memory usage is fine with 16gb.

        That said I don’t use Chrome at home and Chrome is absolutely insane with memory consumption

        • @jj4211@lemmy.world
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          54 months ago

          Yeah, as much as Windows feels… subpar for my day to day vanilla, it really turns crappy with my corporate’s mandated load. System is constantly chewing on some bloat from one of the various ‘security’, monitoring, or fix management solutions that they have on this.

          Unfortunately, if a company pitches their extra crap as ‘enhancing security’, the execs just have to say yes, because to be an exec who ever said ‘no’ to more security is to put your job at peril. Even if three of that vendor’s competitors already got their equivalent solutions into the load already…

      • @prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        That’s wild… I’m currently running Steam and Firefox and I’m at about 8GB.

        Bazzite with KDE Plasma. I loaded up on RAM this time when I got this laptop, and I haven’t even come close to maxing it out lol. It’s nice to not have to worry about though.

      • @Xatolos@reddthat.com
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        14 months ago

        Wow, what is running in your background though?

        I have Windows 11 and it uses a total of 5.6 GB of RAM (I’m also using a Surface Pro 7 if that matters) at idle. I would bring up task manager and see where all that RAM is going.

        • xapr [he/him]
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          14 months ago

          5.6 GB RAM usage on idle, I presume on a fresh boot, is just outrageous for an OS, especially relative to 8 o 16 GB total RAM.

          • @Xatolos@reddthat.com
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            24 months ago

            Wait until you see what the new OSs will need soon. Windows Copilot+ PC, macOS with Apple Intelligence, and newer versions of Android all have a starting need of 16GB (for background AI processes that are done on device). I doubt they will have a small idle RAM footprint.

            (iPhone and iPad OS hasn’t been stated for their RAM requirements, but they never do.)

    • @surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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      It’s just a hunch, but my suspicion is it’s already capturing a lot of data for Recall to process later after it’s launched.

      I can’t think of any other reasonable explanation for the severe performance decrease on Windows 11.

      • @vonbaronhans@midwest.social
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        164 months ago

        I think it’s simpler than that.

        I think Windows 11 feels unresponsive because of how many features have Internet-enabled features built deep into them. All those little delays opening menus, etc, I think are actually network delay, so the little ads or other stuff have time to fetch and load and show simultaneously with the rest of the UI. Meaning the UI itself has to be delayed slightly to make it less obvious what’s being fed to you from online vs local.

        Nothing makes my Windows 11 PC shit the bed harder than an unreliable or interrupted Internet connection. Literally crashing the whole PC sometimes.

        • @surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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          44 months ago

          Could be they already have their servers processing the data, and Recall is just their effort to offload the processing cost to the end user.

          Or it’s just straight up spying.

          • @Womble@lemmy.world
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            34 months ago

            They 100% are spying and not even hiding it. That isnt what makes a system laggy though as its just a background process snitching on you once and hour or so.

            • @surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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              34 months ago

              Walk me through that thinking. You believe constantly capturing screen grabs/key presses/file content/etc, processing it, packaging it, and sending to the home servers would have no impact on system resources?

              • @Womble@lemmy.world
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                14 months ago

                its not grabbing screen grabs and and key presses as you do them, its logging things that you interact with in the background and then packaging that up as a telemetry package to asynchronously send off to a server.

                No it doesnt have no impact on resources but it negligable compared to what the previous poster mentioned about making everything dependent on network services and introducing latency that way.

                • @surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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                  14 months ago

                  You should read up on Recall. It is openly designed to use screen grabs. And my suspicion is they’re already collecting the data for it.

    • @lud@lemm.ee
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      44 months ago

      No, 8 GB is nothing these days. It’s not an enjoyable experience on Win 10, 12, Linux, or MacOS.

      • @prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        8 GB works just fine on my laptop running EndeavourOS. And I know there are much more lightweight distros than that. Not ideal, but fine.

      • @umbrella@lemmy.ml
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        its great on linux (regular distro, not particularly lightweight) and reasonable on windows 10 for me.

        unless you are pushing too many tabs and/or many heavy programs

  • @jpablo68@infosec.pub
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    414 months ago

    The main problem is that Win11 can only run in special hardware and Microsoft can pry out my potato computer from my cold, dead hands. I won’t change my hardware to update my OS.

  • @zingo@sh.itjust.works
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    4 months ago

    The market share for Win 11 has dropped because people are “downgrading” to Win 10, holding on to that for another year before support runs out.

    The Windows computers in our house never upgraded to Win 11.

    No surprise there.

    Some people are also jumping ship to Linux, fed up of Windows BS all together.

  • Codex
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    334 months ago

    The dip in usage comes just as Microsoft has been forcing full-screen ads onto the machines of customers running Windows 10 to encourage them to upgrade.

    Yeah no shit! When my computer does full-screen, disruptive things that I didn’t tell it to do, I figure out how to remove that malware. I’ve been off Windows at home for about a month now, thanks Linux Mint! Getting some games to work has been challenging, but most things have just worked and quite a few work much better!

    Performance is up overall, and my confidence that my computer isn’t running a bunch of secret ad and spy ware is way up. Hardware like my gamepad and microphone would randomly disconnect and have issues on Windows, all working perfectly now.

    Unfortunately I’m still deep in MS land for work, but there’s almost a comedic quality to it. Everything’s very slow, everyone has constant issues with Teams, or Office online, or Dynamics, or copilot shoving it’s tendrils into everything. Watching businesses struggle to keep operating in the face of Microsoft’s inadequacy is like being a mechanic watching a motor grind to a halt because the owner/manufacturer replaced all the oil with syrup.

    Like yes, it’s my problem to fix, but I’m just glad it’s not my car.

  • @TheFeatureCreature@lemmy.world
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    324 months ago

    Not going to change unless Microsoft does a complete 180 on how they’re handling Win11 which I don’t think they will do because it’s just not in their corporate strategy at the moment. I imagine most people are just going to keep using Win10 after the support period ends.

    Microsoft seriously needs an upper management shakeup. They have been dropping the ball badly in numerous areas and have their heads lodged too far up their own asses to see it.

    • @orclev@lemmy.world
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      194 months ago

      That was my plan until MS installed copilot on my system without asking. A month later I installed Linux and haven’t looked back. I did dual boot just in case I needed it, but I actually haven’t had to boot into windows for the last 4 months. It’s gone so well I’m currently planning to do the same to my wife’s computer in a few months when I give it its hardware refresh.