How to disable Microsoft Recall & stop the AI from taking screenshots of your desktop.
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You do realize that most Steam games now work on the next natively correct? It's true, not all do, but a lot of them do.
It's gotten much better yes. But for some reason the majority of games that I play don't have linux support. It's a curse...
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I need Win11 for work. Specifically, Grasshopper. I've tried alternatives. They suck.
Thus, debloat methods are very welcome.
But my employers data has zero value to me
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MacOS doesn't run on my hardware, but yeah editing software and CAD software are the reasons I'm on Windows still.
Technically Davinci Resolve does run on Linux, but it's not always stable and lacks certain codec support.
I haven't found a good replacement for lightroom yet, darktable is too complex for me, and rawtherapee doesn't really manage my library well but is an OK RAW editor.
yup. Digital cinema / mastering here and most of our kit is still windows because linux just doesn't support the software. The previous suggestion of "JuSt uSe a MaC" can get in the bin for multiple reasons.
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You're seeing insufferable people who also happen to use Linux, as insufferable people also like to be early adopters so they can say they are different and therefore better.
There are plenty of super helpful people in the community, and Linux is well past the early adopter phase. The transition from Windows is smoother than it has ever been.
Man they must really hate the mass uptake. Makes them less special with every install.
(I keed, we all know they identity politic with the distros instead)
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Usability.
Windows and Mac are both easier to use for the standard user.
Not at all true anymore for Windoze. Windows 7 was the last installment where that was true. Linux distributions are consistent. Once shown how the basics works, e.g.,
apt install
orpacman -S
and the general whereabouts of settings or software, it's super easy to get them going, indefinitely. Even troubleshooting is within reach because searching the settings isn't a maze within a maze (except for Gnome sometimes). Windoze keeps changing shit constantly, reinstalls uninstalled software, search algorithm is horrible and has Bing search results within the menu enabled by default [the fuck?], updates don't indicate how long they'll last, setting a default program often requires configuring it manually for every file extension, oh goddamn fuckers I have to stop typing because Microsoft pisses me off so bad.
Tabula rasa, if I had to teach a 70-year-old who's never touched a computer before, to do so, I'd pick Linux every time. Consistency and customization is key.
Microsoft makes their users dumb by an illusion of convenience which shatters the instant something goes wrong, like riding a bike with helper wheels that constantly fail. Linux does none of that. It empowers users quite quickly by simply learning how to ride a bike properly. Sure, you fall every so often at the start, but that made mastery that much more satisfying.apt install as the basics? It's not even needed. Try LinuxMint, it's way more simple and usable than Windows, no shell commands necessary
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You what
Got very excited
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It's gotten much better yes. But for some reason the majority of games that I play don't have linux support. It's a curse...
Eeh, with so many that do work that is super rotten luck
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I hope you got a work pc seperates from your private one?
I dual-boot Kubuntu (
--minimal-install
; nosnap
fuckery) and Win11. I'm a contractor so the Win11 Pro side is technically my "business" installation. I've debloated quite a lot in Windows land, but still haven't figured out how to get rid of CoPilot etc. I self-host a GPU cluster via a server running CasaOS/Ubuntu-Server LTS. -
If you're really committed, Wine or Quickemu are pretty damn good now. Grasshopper may almost fully work. Worth a shot. If you're generous and it works well enough, you can create bugs for any gaps in behavior and help everyone else. But not everyone has time for it.
Grasshopper3D runs within Rhinoceros3D. Can "Rhino8 run with Wine/Quickemu?" is what I should research, though in McNeel's documentation, it's explicitly stated to not use Wine (I think). I suppose I could run on an older x86_64 Intel Macbook, but then I lose NVIDIA acceleration.
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Please sit down for what I'm about to tell you.
When a Linux user communicates with someone using Windows, the Linux user's sent data is still being harvested.
Uh huh, so what you're saying is that the other user also must be assimilated, then.
Resistance is futile
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I’m a technical person and even I struggle with what/how the hell I’m supposed to even install applications on Linux:
On my distro it's 1) Open App Store 2) Search for Software 3) hit "install".
Should I download the binaries? Should I use snap/flatpak/etc?
That's a matter of personal preference, but once you understand the difference, which is really not that complex, then the choice should be practically automatic.
If I do one vs the other which is more up to date?
You can check the version number.
If I can’t find it in the software store can I trust random online sites?
You have the same issue in Windows.
I wasn't asking for guidance, I'm just pointing out that these are all things that reduce usability. While you're right that some of these issues also exist on the windows side, it's not as prolific.
If more people grew up using Linux it might not be as bad, but even still Linux can still break easily and in many ways offers too much freedom for the average user.
I think that a lot of technical people forget that the average user is quick to give up and has a knack for breaking things. Many of the restrictive elements in Mac and Windows are to protect the average user, usually to the bane of the super user.
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Usability.
Windows and Mac are both easier to use for the standard user.
I'm a technical person and even I struggle with what/how the hell I'm supposed to even install applications on Linux:
Should I download the binaries? Should I use snap/flatpak/etc? If I do one vs the other which is more up to date? If I can't find it in the software store can I trust random online sites?
And that's just finding applications. Most people don't have hours of free time to read forums to understand how to fix something that broke (assuming the distro they choose even has a thread relating to the issue).
Windows is a marketing and spying platform. It is targeted by any and every scammer, hacker, used for harvesting your data by programs you install. It is sold as an "easy to use" computer - most ppl don't even know what an OS is - until 6 months later when the CPU is at 100% and you don't know why, the hard drive is filling up and you no longer know if your files are local or in "the cloud". I service older computers for friends and family on a regular basis. Half of them now have Ubuntu installed on old laptops and it's an eye opener for them. Because most people don't install new apps. They just want to browse, read emails, open documents, watch movies and listen to music. If you avoid snap and flatpak and install with APT or just download an AppImage you're going to be ok.
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If i ask "how do i change the oil filter on my *insert car model here*" and you answer "get an electric car" i'm gonna think you're annoying and a bit of an asshole, especially if you keep doing it over and over on every similar question. It's not a "solution" that interests anyone when they ask that kind of question. Fuck off.
Ya idk. Trading a combustion car with issues for a free electric car with less issues seems like a win to me.
That’s the real comparison here. You pay for Windows. Linux users don’t pay for Linux.
Look in the mirror my fren. People are just trying to help.
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Setting up a laptop for a nephew, gonna remember this tomorrow.
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Just switch to Linux.
This is like saying "put some salve on the wrists where the shackles are binding you". For fucks sake just walk away from the abusive computing relationship.
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I need Win11 for work. Specifically, Grasshopper. I've tried alternatives. They suck.
Thus, debloat methods are very welcome.
Last I checked Rhino was gold in winedb. Did something change?
But I set up work machines when I need windows. Using corporate licensing help set some pretty good group policies. Then I just remote into them when I need to use something or work on something windows related. You can keep an instance in the cloud or a physical box, whatever works for you.
Remoting in with a linux machine on a semi decent connection is about the same as being there.
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I recognize it may be a pretty niche issue, but i still haven't found a Linux app that i can build Monte Carlo simulation models with, though I think some of the developers of these types of apps have made MacOS ports. The ones that I've historically used are Excel add-ons, but i haven't found anything similar yet for Libre Office, or stand alone app.
I would think you would want to do that in python anyways, regardless of the OS. I suppose it might be relative to what you want to do, there are several monte carlo applications for linux but they are focused on certain fields. Whats yours?
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Usability.
Windows and Mac are both easier to use for the standard user.
I'm a technical person and even I struggle with what/how the hell I'm supposed to even install applications on Linux:
Should I download the binaries? Should I use snap/flatpak/etc? If I do one vs the other which is more up to date? If I can't find it in the software store can I trust random online sites?
And that's just finding applications. Most people don't have hours of free time to read forums to understand how to fix something that broke (assuming the distro they choose even has a thread relating to the issue).
Wait, this seems completely backwards.
Windows: Here is some forum post to some rando's software. SomeShit.exe. Should I install it?
As opposed to Linux: I look in the category of the software I am interested in, click install.
And as far as breaking... I use linux because it doesn't break. I don't have time for windows bullshit.
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I wasn't asking for guidance, I'm just pointing out that these are all things that reduce usability. While you're right that some of these issues also exist on the windows side, it's not as prolific.
If more people grew up using Linux it might not be as bad, but even still Linux can still break easily and in many ways offers too much freedom for the average user.
I think that a lot of technical people forget that the average user is quick to give up and has a knack for breaking things. Many of the restrictive elements in Mac and Windows are to protect the average user, usually to the bane of the super user.
I wasn’t asking for guidance, I’m just pointing out that these are all things that reduce usability.
I wasn't giving you guidance, I was just pointing out that you are making it sound like some insane struggle to get and install programs on Linux. Usually it's even more straightforward than in windows, especially if you already know what you are doing.
I’m just pointing out that these are all things that reduce usability.
Those are all examples of things that increase usability. Having multiple different ways to install a piece of software is only a problem if you allow choice paralysis to consume you. Right now you know just enough to know those options exist, but not their purpose or function. Literally less than 1/2 hour of googling would answer all of those questions, and with the benefit that you now better understand the useful functionality of your operating system. You only have to spend that 1/2 hour one time, and for the rest of your life you wouldn't stress out over a flatpak vs a binary, or whatever. And again, for a new user they are probably best served by just opening the app store and hitting install. Easy, breezy, beautiful.
While you’re right that some of these issues also exist on the windows side, it’s not as prolific.
That's just not true. Linux has had app stores for decades. Windows didn't. Until recently, if you needed an app for Windows you had to trust 'random online sites' to get software. Now that Windows has it's own app store, you can use both ways install apps in Windows- no different than in Linux.
I think that a lot of technical people forget that the average user is quick to give up and has a knack for breaking things. Many of the restrictive elements in Mac and Windows are to protect the average user, usually to the bane of the super user.
I just remember being a new Windows user and having to learn what a .dll and a .exe was. What the registry was, what installer 'wizards' were and how to properly use them, how to find the place in the control panel where you uninstall programs, how to update my system, what 'fragmentation' meant how how to solve it, how to not get viruses and how to remove them if you did, how the file system was set up and how to navigate it- There was a lot of stuff to learn, and you either learned it or you weren't able to properly use your system. Same when I briefly switched to OS X.
It's no different in Linux. People just don't want to take the time to learn how things are done in Linux. The reality is it's really not that hard to get up and running in Linux at all. And while you can always go deeper and learn more- its typically not necessary nowadays. I put Linux on my moms old computer when she was in her 70's. She was not a techie person at all (extreme understatement). It took about 5 minutes max to get her up to speed. It was never an issue.
Many of the restrictive elements in Mac and Windows are to protect the average user
It's simply a matter of readjusting your mindset. If you are about to do a simple and straightforward task that you already know how to do, chances are in Linux there are 10 other ways to accomplish the same thing- but you are in no way forced to know what they are or how to do them. If you are curious and want to know- that's great. Take a little bit of time and learn them. If not- don't.
Choice is good.
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I've used Shutup10 on my Windows partitions for years. Surprised I didn't see it mentioned here.
Good control over copilot and any other Wndows nastiness.
Run it after every Windows update. MS loves sneakily re-enabling some settings.