15 points

They don’t need the hardware to run an OS. They need the hardware to run their AI shit for reasons nobody ever needs - except Microsoft.

So maybe it is not Microsoft closing the door for older hardware, but older hardware closing the door for Windows 11?

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20 points

They need the hardware to run their AI shit

The requirement is for TPM, not parallel processing hardware. It provides trusted hardware, facilitates things like DRM.

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0 points

There are tons of low and medium boards that provide TPM, and they don’t suffice, IIRC.

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8 points

Did you read the article text? It’s specifically discussing how Microsoft will not relax the requirement for TPM 2.0.

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12 points

Thank you Microsoft after being a windows user since the 3.1 days your recent changes to Windows makes me happy to announce I bought my first MAC.

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17 points

So close. You could have gone to Linux.

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8 points

Why do people capitalize all of Mac?

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8 points

Because they don’t know that MAC is media access control, and Mac is Macintosh.

I suspect it’s the “Mac vs PC” stereotype, and they think C stands for computer and MA stands hell knows for what. Because a PowerPC PC is not a PC, and an ARM PC is not a PC, and a SPARC PC is not a PC (OK, it’s a workstation, of the noble blood, not like the rest), and I think I’ve lost my thought.

My reaction would not be switching to MacOS, because for something the users of which look down on Linux and FreeBSD, with all that “just works” and “made for Terrans” pathos, it surely is frustrating to use.

Just some well-supported enough Linux would do.

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1 point

Mac/PC is kinda a silly dichotomy now that they’re both actually EFI/ARM.

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1 point

They’re all PCs they just aren’t IBM (compatible) PCs. Anything from a Workstation to a Smartphone is a Personal Computer.

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1 point
*

It’s like in Unpretty, that 90s song by TLC:

you can buy your hair if it won’t grow

you can fix your nose if you say so

you can buy all the iPhones that MAC can make

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10 points

They bought a Mass Accelerator Cannon from the UNSC

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9 points

Its a Media access control address, AKA MAC address that he bought ofc. It lives inside his ethernet card.

I’m up too early, sorry.

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4 points

I would have installed Linux, logged into MSN.net, and then told them to eat shit on their support forum.

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13 points
*

I know everyone here foams over Linux, and for good reason… but please remember the average user is a techno-fobe who struggles to find the start menu. Linux just isn’t an option for a lot of people. Windows has been around so long and feels familiar. Until there is a major demographic shift and ECE training on general computer use an basic troubleshooting… the majority of the population will stick with whatever arrives when they turn it on because “It’s what they know”.

If Linux is to take over it must come PRE-installed, Must be fully compatible (read: plug-n-play); even with the weird printer your aunt found in a garage sale, at-least feel familiar to the majority of users… and for corpos… run MS office (read: excel) natively.

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1 point

Yeah, you’re right. Also, how bad Windows 11 is is massively exaggerated, once my machine was set up, all I’ve done is remove a few programs like One Drive from loading on start, and it’s been fine.

I do need to figure out how to get rid of the news and weather thingy on the start menu, to be fair.

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1 point

It’d take a fresh install, but W11 IoT Enterprise LTSC is how all current Windows should be. Only has Edge + Defender.

You can find it on massgrave.dev

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6 points
*

If Linux is to take over it must come PRE-installed, Must be fully compatible (read: plug-n-play); even with the weird printer your aunt found in a garage sale, at-least feel familiar to the majority of users… and for corpos… run MS office (read: excel) natively.

Or we could just not care if it “takes over”?

Even if Linux was and did all of those things – and many of them are already crossed off of the list – it may not “take over” and despite some corporate spend from some of the backing corporations, it’s not really a profit driven ecosystem. Linux doesn’t have to take over and do exactly what Microsoft does, Linux is just fine as is.

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2 points

It actually is a profit-driven ecosystem, otherwise Mr Poettering’s creations would still be something as weird and unpopular as Leechcraft, if somebody remembers that software, and so would Gnome after 2.* and KDE after 3.*, and we would probably have something more interesting instead of Wayland as the coming X11 replacement, but you are right, waiting for the rest of the world to move to Linux before you do is an illogical position to say the least.

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1 point

It’s not solely a profit-driven ecosystem is probably a better phrasing.

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6 points

Weird printer on windows 11, that’s not a thing. A weird printer in your CUPS server in Linux, totally a thing

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7 points

I have never connected a printer to my network or via USB, clicked the add printer button, and was able to print on my first try.

Then I tried to add a printer on Fedora Linux.

Cant say never anymore.

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5 points

Also Brother printers have their shit together for Linux drivers.

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5 points

The more of us that buy computers with it preinstalled the more it signals that there is interest.

Popular brands offer it. I’m not saying you have to go buy, but you can also let people know it’s an option.

I bought an XPS Developer edition and when asked I explained that when Linux had support from the manufacturer it can be as reliable as their Macs, often even more reliable.

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2 points

I’d argue it will be Android/iOS/ChromeOS over Windows, for better or for worse. This fucks over companies and governments than it does the average user, in aggregate.

I spend a few months here and there just using my iPad for everything I can (I got through my college degree with one a long time ago and it’s nostalgic for me), and it’s crazy to me how feature complete it is for most work flows. Exactly programming is an issue, for me, but I can create an STL to printing it all on device! Much less office and what not.

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10 points

even with the weird printer your aunt found in a garage sale

Windows isn’t supporting that anymore either.

at-least feel familiar to the majority of users

Start menu is at the bottom left of the task bar, you can start Chrome from there.

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6 points

Some random old printer is much more likely to be plug and play on Linux these days than it is on windows.

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2 points

Seriously, I’ve had way more printer issues on Windows than linux.

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44 points

Thank you Microsoft god bless I will stay on core 2 duo forever 🙏🙏

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34 points

It would be safer to use a Linux flavor and run the apps you need using Wine/Proton…

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26 points

Does it have Windows Aero?

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1 point

KDE Plasma + Klassy can do that. I think you can pull off a Win7 look with just those two.

KDE Plasma can get you far with its customization options, and Klassy adds more customization on top of that, and adds the translucent/transparent effects you need to emulate the Win7 look.

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1 point

Just a heads up while the look might be easy to emulate the feel part will at best be close. Which is actually good because a lot about that is rather shoddy in windows… and focussing on getting what you had with windows might make you miss stuff you didn’t think you wanted. Like MMB click on scrollbars, or dragging and resizing windows with Super+LMB/RMB

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17 points

It has KDE, which I believe has something close to it.

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4 points

There is a KDE windows aero theme. The panels won’t mimic the start menu and bar perfectly. But it absolutely gives it an overall flavor.

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13 points

The important questions. I miss aero so much.

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2 points
*

As a W10 user,…Oh no don’t…

…Come back.

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