Microsoft no longer permits local Windows 10 accounts if you want Consumer Extended Security Updates — support beyond EOL requires a Microsoft Account link-up even if you pay $30
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Now if only big software developers understood this and released business software for Linux...
Depends on what you're looking for, for some fields there are fantastic options already.
The others... Well considering the trajectory I'm seeing now (as a multiple decade Linux user), I think a lot more will start building for it. Maybe one flavor to start, but I do think it will be much more common.
I'm seeing it with some of my clients already.
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Don't worry, you can only get it for a single year. Next year it's new or Linux.
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I remain very skeptical about this.
It would not surprise me in the least to find out that "disabling" Recall only disables the user-facing aspects of it, but that the data collection still happens in the background regardless.
I have no proof of this, it is pure speculation, but it would be in line with behavior Microsoft has demonstrated before when adding new "features". Would anyone like to play Bejeweled?
You would kinda notice the disk usage. Last I saw it was quite image heavy and could use a fair amount if you had a lot of activity.
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I've occasionally tried using Linux in the past as my main desktop, because I think Windows as an OS is inferior, and lately because Linux's UI actually seems superior, but I always got suckered back into Windows because I wanted to play certain games.
I tried again last month, and this time, it's different. The games that I want to play work well enough in Linux. Some of them have native Linux builds. Others work well enough in Proton, which is Valve's version of Wine, a Windows emulation layer that can run Windows games in Linux.
I don't see any reason that I'd ever go back to Windows again.
What's really wild is that not only are games good enough on Windows, but tests lately are showing a consistent trend where the two are often indistinguishable in performance, and where they're not, Windows isn't consistently winning.
If you're not into the genre of competitive multiplayer games that have kernel anticheat, Windows isn't really better for gaming anymore, outside of being more familiar for many people. Today we've reached the point where it's a few fps either way, and people should use whatever they want, but if Microsoft keeps bloating Windows, it might soon be that the "Windows tax" also refers to the performance penalty you pay for using the familiar OS instead of learning something new.
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Yeah I mean how are they going to verify you paid without an associated account
A key, exactly like they did it for decades? Same way they verified you paid for that copy of Windows?
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A key, exactly like they did it for decades? Same way they verified you paid for that copy of Windows?
I mean... I have valid keys for various Windows versions I never paid for
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LOL That's literally a classic window bug. Try borderless-windowed. You're welcome!
this doesn't work sadly, I tried it already. it's not the act of tabbing out that causes it, it's the fact the window loses focus which is still done with borderless
You should probably try this again
I tried The isle 2 weeks ago but i guess I'll try giving it another shot
Lol I literally play this one on linux, and no, it works 100% without any issues or bugs.
I don't know what to tell you here. The phas proton db page for it is filled with others having the issue. Mic works in game, spirit box requires text mode, and no communication in lobby. I have tried GE 9-20, experimental, latest and bleeding edge, the issue remained. I have been waiting for another major update to hopefully address it. (I forgot to add, i have tried the launch option solution as well)
edit: made the parts I was referencing more clear cause full chain doesn't show in notices.
this doesn't work sadly, I tried it already. it's not the act of tabbing out that causes it, it's the fact the window loses focus which is still done with borderless
gamescope should work.
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A key, exactly like they did it for decades? Same way they verified you paid for that copy of Windows?
Don't you need a Windows account to buy a key?
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hatred against Microsoft aside, this change doesn't surprise me. With forcing an account, it allows them to tie your support subscription directly to an account instead of having it be a product key, which is annoying for both the user and the agent in trying to validate whether or not it's in support or not.
Like, I hate the mentality of needing to use Microsoft services to use a Microsoft system, but this is one of their decisions that I can somewhat understand, it makes it far easier for subscription based setups.
The article explicitly pointed out this extended security patching does not cover support
It's easy to agree with Microsoft when you don't bother reading the article and just make up a reason to support their decision
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Actually, I been much happier not being able to play League anymore.
Yeah I realised the only games I cant play on linux are the ones that really don’t respect my privacy/time/wallet so it ended up a net benefit
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My understanding is that a lot of it has to do with the Steam Deck, which is Valve's handheld gaming platform. Valve wanted it to run most of their catalog, but they also decided to use Windows emulation rather than Windows, so they forked Wine and put some money and effort into improving it.
But some games are harder to run than others.
If you use Steam, it might be as easy as installing it from Steam, because sometimes the games are multi-platform. FTL is an example of this that I currently have installed. But it seems like more and more game developers want their games to run on the Steam Deck, so they release native Linux versions. (Ironically, I think FTL doesn't run well on the Steam Deck.)
Some games run simply by telling the Steam launcher to use Proton as a compatibility tool. So, the only hard part is choosing which version of Proton to run, which involves picking it from a list inside of Steam, which then downloads that version of Proton, and then trying the game. And if it doesn't run well, then try a different version of Proton and iterate. IIRC Rocket League is a game like this. On my computer, it seems to run best with the latest Proton beta. For me and my 5 year old computer, it doesn't run as perfectly as well as it did in Windows, as it can stutter a bit when there are explosions on screen, but for me, it doesn't seem to impact my play. And it takes longer to load, but I don't think it's possible for an emulated game to load faster on the same hardware.
And some games require you to look up how to install them, and you end up having to install some Windows things into your Proton runtime using something called Protontricks. Skyrim is an example. It took a lot of fiddling to get it set up and the audio working correctly. But now I can't really tell the difference between how it runs in Windows vs. Linux, except that it takes longer to load in Linux.
They also give a lot of money to Codeweavers, the developers of WINE, so that WINE can have enough developers to support it.
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WINE is not an emulator
For the new guys, you'll notice a lot of this kind of thing because developers think recursion is clever.
For example, GNU stands for "GNU's Not Unix"
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Don't you need a Windows account to buy a key?
Back in the days of Dinosaurs and AOL CDs, you could just go to Best Buy and buy a CD with the Windows software and a key was printed on a scratch-off panel.
You could even just buy a key electronically from some grey market websites.
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Jellyfin. The HDDs were only ~$110 each. Seagate 5400s but w/e it's mass storage. No raid, drives will just be filled, cloned, and the clone dropped into a second system, also with no windows 🤬
Look at ZFS, it's a bit more intelligent about using the space. They'll be part of a pool of drives that you create 'datasets'(basically virtual drives) from and you can choose your level of redundancy (including none at all if you want to roll the dice there).
I have a 20TB array, 16TB available. It's already saved me from a lost disk. Using Seagate 5x 4TB 5400s also, with a NVME drive for the ZIL (speeds up writes). I have a 32GB ARC (a ZFS cache in RAM) so, even though the drives are slow the RAM and NVME drives ensure that it always feels snappy.
You can use zfs-send to clone the data to a new system without them having to have an exact copy of your original setup (like they would if you're using drive images). It is also a copy on write filesystem so it supports snapshotting (creating backups of the block level diffs, so it is very space efficient as it only stores the block-level changes to the file).
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and it certainly looks a lot slicker.
As someone who is still required to use Windows on my work laptop, hard disagree.
Im genuinely curious as to what themes and DE you’re using that looks better. In Windows everything is slick and polished, stuff slides and bounces around, the colours are consistent and work together, it’s all pretty elegant. I’m using KDE right now and all that I get is the start menu thing changes shade when I hover the mouse over it. I also use Gnome and XFCE, Gnome is pretty good and XFCE is obviously really basic.
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I've occasionally tried using Linux in the past as my main desktop, because I think Windows as an OS is inferior, and lately because Linux's UI actually seems superior, but I always got suckered back into Windows because I wanted to play certain games.
I tried again last month, and this time, it's different. The games that I want to play work well enough in Linux. Some of them have native Linux builds. Others work well enough in Proton, which is Valve's version of Wine, a Windows emulation layer that can run Windows games in Linux.
I don't see any reason that I'd ever go back to Windows again.
Exactly. I tired SuSE back around 2001 and Ubuntu around 2006. It was not a better experience so I never stuck with them.
I started using Mint last year and it just stuck. There are some quirks and learning curves, but it's a good experience. Linux has changed a crap ton. -
Back in the days of Dinosaurs and AOL CDs, you could just go to Best Buy and buy a CD with the Windows software and a key was printed on a scratch-off panel.
You could even just buy a key electronically from some grey market websites.
It was still like that up until Windows 8, at least.
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"Linux can't run my cock and ball squeezing app!"
Good thing that Linux can run pretty much everything I want to play.
Ckb-new and and Streamdeck-gui still need some finishing touches so that E:D and DCS are identical to old Windows setup, but everything else seems to run without a hitch. -
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Back in the days of Dinosaurs and AOL CDs, you could just go to Best Buy and buy a CD with the Windows software and a key was printed on a scratch-off panel.
You could even just buy a key electronically from some grey market websites.
Right, well, its not 2003 anymore