• bluewing@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      I have a laptop that runs Win11. I have had no issues with it since I did the upgrade when it first came out and as far a Microsoft products go, it’s OK. But with the addition of the AI, I know at some point it will piss me off and I will wipe it and chose a distro to take it’s place.

      I’m retired now, and I no longer really need the Fusion360 install that one customer requested I use for their designs nor do I play games beyond a little mahjongg and solitaire in the evenings if I feel the need.

      Windows is merely a tool and a means to an end. It’s NOT the end in itself. Use the tool you want/need to and feel the best with and just get on with the job…

      • thantik@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        With the work that Valve is doing on Wine, and Proton, it’s really becoming easier and easier to justify the switch.

        • aksdb@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          With the work that Valve is doing on Wine, and Proton, it’s really becoming easier and easier to justify the switch deck.

          FTFY

        • Blaster M@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Tried getting PCVR working with the Quest 2, unfortunately support is still a hot mess and leaves the system with a super janky flood of audio devices, in addition to legendary stutters that make it unplayable. Win11 still better for VR.

        • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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          5 months ago

          Only pita setback is things like fortnite and other multi-player games insisting on only using anticheat software that isn’t Linux compatible.

          • thantik@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I’m okay with this. I don’t support those publishers anyways. People should stop supporting them altogether.

      • agent_flounder@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Could be. If you’re running a core 2 duo I am fairly certain Linux will run markedly faster than Windows 10+…

        • Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz
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          5 months ago

          I actually still have some old servers with chips from that period, one of them is still being used as my firewall but until last year I was using others to run multiple VMs for email and web sites. Not as power-efficient but they do still work.

      • Abnorc@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        People on the fence may be convinced. Most will just buy new computers.

      • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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        5 months ago

        That’s not a guarantee on the Linux world either, but at least you do have the option of recompiling your distro to not use those options.

        There’s talks from some distros to start dropping support for such old CPUs because it’s holding back newer CPUs that could run even faster by using those instructions.

        • Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz
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          5 months ago

          Is it really that hard to include a fallback though? Obviously there’s a way to collect the information without that flag. I suppose if you didn’t want to take a performance hitting checking the flag all the time it could become a compile option (I would think anyone running that old of hardware would be willing to learn how to compile the kernel anyway), but there should be options available to keep the support available some how?

          • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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            5 months ago

            That’s pretty much exactly how it works already. You compile with -march=x86-64-v4 and it’ll use SSE and AVX all over the place.

            glibc does the runtime thing, but only once on application startup where the dynamic linker will link the version of the function optimized for your CPU. But it’s a manual process on glibc’s part, the variants are written by hand.

            Not every project cares enough to do it dynamically like that and it would be a nightmare that way.

            The fallback is, recompile with -march=x86-64 which will only use the base set of instructions. Or -march=i486 if you want to run on absolutely ancient hardware.

        • Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz
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          5 months ago

          Oh I’ve set up a couple of those at work! Their systems seem to be rock-solid (at least I’ve heard no complaints over the last few years), and their tech support is outstanding. Good luck with your new shiny!

      • ZILtoid1991@kbin.social
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        5 months ago

        Issue is, a lot of people still using Windows, and Linux pro-audio is still questionable at best (lack of drivers, etc.).

        • aksdb@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          I don’t think the venn diagram for people relying on pro-audio and using 20 year old computers has a large overlap.

        • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          Also there’s lots of industry tools where you can’t really use anything but Windows. Even if you could technically make it work, it isn’t a good idea because of how critical the system you’re interfacing with is.

    • z00s@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      The actual oh no is the amount of ewaste this will create as people buy completely new systems as they think that’s their only option

        • z00s@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Sure, but only a fraction will be saved. It’s criminal how much ewaste Apple and Microsoft are responsible for. That’s what happens when people are taught that profits can only increase year on year.

  • MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    People who use Linux don’t seem to realize how painful bandaid that is to tear for Windows users. And don’t get me wrong, I know Linux supports all of that and more, and in the long run it’s better for everyone. But breaking people’s habits is a tough achievement to make. People will get use to some pointless tool which is not available for Linux and that’s it. Deal broken. Not to mention having multiple tools that your job depends on. Sure you can learn a new thing or two, but that can be also overwhelming for many.

    • BURN@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Mines not even pointless. Lightroom and Photoshop are essentials for my side business, and there isn’t viable alternatives to either.

      Linux works for a lot of things, but not everything.

      • yuriy@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I have linux on everything except a surface pro 5, which ONLY exists for adobe and autodesk apps. Probably only works because I’m using the versions I’m comfortable with (from 2012) and they’re not too terribly bloated.

        It’s not ideal, but fuck if I’m gonna try learning freecad AGAIN.

    • nutsack@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      i am primarily linux and i cannot completely tear away from windows/mac. there are some use cases where linux just isn’t a good tool.

      • Holzkohlen@feddit.de
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        5 months ago

        I’d argue that linux is fine for every use case, BUT there are obviously some tools that do not work on Linux simply because the devs don’t support it. So it’s more a matter of having to learn other tools, which can be a huge undertaking I’ll give you that. The biggest step you can take towards using Linux is actually using all the open source tools on windows first. If all of your software works on both windows and linux, then changing the underlying operating system isn’t that big of a deal anymore. (some exceptions do apply, like some games will never work on linux because of kernel level anti cheat or the devs seem to straight up hate linux users, see Destiny 2 for instance)

        • nutsack@lemmy.world
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          I’d argue that linux is fine for every use case, BUT there are obviously some tools that do not work on Linux simply because the devs don’t support it.

          yes

          it’s more a matter of having to learn other tools

          no. in these cases the tools are just shit. i cannot use them to do my work.

        • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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          5 months ago

          No, it’s a matter of users moving to Linux so devs are forced to offer their products on it

      • MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        That’s okay. Half and half is fine. For a while I really wanted Linux phone, like pure Linux, but that prospect is not happening any time soon and why settle for inferior experience that much when you can get close to open source.

          • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I bet you’ll sleep easier tonight knowing that your computing decisions are deemed to be acceptable by some rando on the Internet according to their standards.

    • 𝚝𝚛𝚔@aussie.zone
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      People will get use to some pointless tool which is not available for Linux and that’s it.

      Irfanview for me!

      I’d debate calling it useless, but until irfanview works correctly on Linux (no, it doesn’t under WINE) I can’t change.

      • barsoap@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        Just looked at the feature set as it’s been ages and yep, infranview does stuff that gwenview doesn’t. For filters more complex than rotate, add basic text etc. I’d open krita, for batching there’s imagemagick.

        This actually goes into philosophy: UNIX follows the “do one thing, and do one thing well” approach. Imagemagick is a better batcher than infranview, krita is a better editor than infranview, gwenview… well, is a better program to throw at random desktop users just wanting to view an image folder and rotate their snapshots precisely because it is not so overladen with features. Infranview is like if you took winamp and added half of a DAW to it.

        It really should run under wine, though, things don’t tend to get platinum-rated by accident.

        • MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          I’d just like to correct you on UNIX following the “do one thing, and do it good” philosophy. UNIX preaches that, but is doing everything else than following it. From cat to grep to cp and dd and many many many other redundant tools that exist in the system. All that said, I would like to point out it’s a completely pointless philosophy which serves no purpose it once had.

          In the age of text terminals and when your work was managing phone books and writing documents, that made sense. Today we have far too complex systems to just expect people to work by making a pipe with 5 tools lined up to achieve something a single click in menu can do.

          • barsoap@lemm.ee
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            5 months ago

            From cat to grep to cp and dd and many many many other redundant tools that exist in the system.

            …redundant with what? Sure, instead of grep you can use sed -e g/re/p: First came ed which can do the same but requires the whole file to be loaded into memory so grep was written as a way to search through files ergonomically and quickly. Quite a bit later came sed to do more complex operations on files in a streaming manner: Sed is for streaming editing, ed is for interactive editing, they happen to share a common vocabulary but really are made for different things. grep knows exactly one word from that vocabulary and applies it to multiple files in a single command, something that’s not really suitable for the editors.

            Can’t think of anything that’s redundant with cp, unless we leave the terminal. dd and cat might have some overlap but only if you combine cat with shell redirection. I’ll freely admit that dd is a hell of a wart, though, it is so damn ancient it predates unix command line option conventions.

            Today we have far too complex systems to just expect people to work by making a pipe with 5 tools lined up to achieve something a single click in menu can do.

            No. The way it usually works is that an end-user makes a click and things get handled by five different tools, completely behind the scenes. Power-users then can come along and customise that stuff as they wish.

            • MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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              That’s the whole point, you are not suppose to use grep if sed works. You are not suppose to use cp if cat file > new.file works. That’s the “UNIX way”, which is stupid as cp brings a lot more features when it comes to files. Back when that “rule” was invented cat only printed files on screen or piped them through. Nothing more. Today you can do all kinds of things with it and to be honest am happy that there are multiple tools doing the same thing. Grep is fine for some things RipGrep and SilverSearcher for others. Am not going to handicap myself or wait for 16h for grep to finish digging inefficiently through files because someone said I had to do things “UNIX way”.

              It’s time we get rid of old ways and embrace modern computing, up to a point where people started building note taking applications in whole web browsers.

              • barsoap@lemm.ee
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                5 months ago

                That’s the whole point, you are not suppose to use grep if sed works. You are not suppose to use cp if cat file > new.file works.

                No. You grep if you are searching for something. You sed when you’re editing a file in an automated manner. You use cp if you copy a file. cat foo > bar is not, in the very slightest, idiomatic, and never was: cat foo bar > baz is and that’s precisely why cat is named like that, quoth the man page: “cat - concatenate files and print on the standard output”. cp can’t do that. If you use cat with a single argument then without redirection, as the equivalent of DOS’s type.

                Don’t think of “one thing, and one thing well” as “there must be no overlapping features”, but “every program has a clearly-defined use case”. If it can be used for something else, like single-argument cat, then that’s fine, but that doesn’t make cat the program to use when copying files.

                And it means “there must be no overlapping features when combining random programs in arbitrary ways” even less: Your cat foo > bar uses two programs, cat and sh. If the combination between multiple programs was restricted to not have features available elsewhere then you wouldn’t get any of the benefits of being able to combine programs, this explosion of possibilities and with that approaches is precisely the advantage of combination.

                Grep is fine for some things RipGrep and SilverSearcher for others.

                Never heard of silversearcher, but ripgrep is a straight-up grep replacement. Grep is 50 years old, ripgrep takes 50 years of experience people had with using the original to design a program that fulfils grep’s purpose even better. There’s no council of greybeards saying “there already is a program like that you shall use, we can’t have two programs doing the same thing”, that’s not Unix but python.

                It’s time we get rid of old ways and embrace modern computing,

                I tend to agree. I use nushell, haven’t really gotten into ripgrep I probably just don’t grep often enough to care. My editor is helix which breaks in may ways with the line that started with ed but keeps the core philosophy intact, nay, adheres better to it because it was bold enough to get rid of hysterical raisins. As ripgrep it’s an iteration of the same core idea and principles of an old program, in the light of 50 years of experience people had using it.

                up to a point where people started building note taking applications in whole web browsers.

                You could also combine a text editor and maybe pandoc. Different notes? Different files, that’s what the file system is for. Need to find something in your notes? grep.

                You’ll be hard-pressed to find an actual use-case for a simple note-taking app under unix because the combination of things everyone half-way acquainted with the system already does it. There’s org mode, yes, but org mode isn’t simple. Also emacs is a completely different operating system.

          • jj4211@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Well, “duplicate” functionality isn’t counter, but generally it’s not quite “duplicate” either.

            cat doesn’t do much, and technically in most cases where people use cat, they can skip the use of cat. cat and grep aren’t at all redundant, but maybe you mean cat |grep , versus “grep file”, but really the first form is not a design intent, it’s that cat is a habit to “get content to screen” and “pipe to grep” is a habit to filter out whatever content was on screen.

            cp and dd are not really the same. dd is meant to take specific blocks from one place and put them in a specific place in one other file. cp is about copying whole files only, and can do a bunch of files to one directory.

            As to it being ‘obsolete’, well the thing is that UI design has been swinging back to “CLI-y” ways, because you only have so much real estate on screen for guided menu driven action, and a fairly open ended universe of things people want to do. When people use office, they usually just start typing what they want rather than trying to find it by navigating the ribbon.

            Though the “one tool and do it well” usually doesn’t happen in GUI land (closest I can think is NextStep had some of it, and vestigial bits of that are possible in macos, though never used), but it’s still plenty valuable.

          • asret@lemmy.zip
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            5 months ago

            The UNIX philosophy isn’t about having only one way to do things - it’s about being able to use tools together. The deliberately simple interface is what makes it so powerful - almost any existing too can become part of a pipeline. It’s adaptable.

      • MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Didn’t really call any tool useless, but pointless. As in there are other tools that do things similarly but not the same. But habits are habits and people are not willing to change always, especially if there are a lot of changes to be made, no matter how trivial. Comfort zone is called that for a reason.

        Also, not everyone knows how to make something for themself. When I switched full time to Linux we had few options in twin panel file managers which I was use to (Total Commander). None of them worked the way I liked them to. That is to say respected system theme and didn’t take a lot of time to refresh directory. So I wrote my own. But it’s an ongoing endeavor and I have to say an exhausting one.

    • smileyhead@discuss.tchncs.de
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      Same can be said for someone using Linux for years and switching to Windows. Not all tools are there, habits needs to change.

      I think people commening under posts like that mostly know that switching operating system is not the same as changing desktop wallpaper. They are not saying it’s easy, just that it’s easier for most than they think.

        • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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          5 months ago

          I use Krita, Gimp, Pinta, and Inkscape depending on the use case

          And would be considered a long term user now but thank you for offering a solution

    • tjsauce@lemmy.world
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      I just wish Linux had a way of EQing my headphones and virtualizing surround sound like with HeSuVi. That’s the barrier for me personally

      • Fijxu@programming.dev
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        5 months ago

        EasyEffects exists, there is something called Catia or Carla which it can be use to run VSTs IIRC. But I am not an audio pro on linux or something like that.

  • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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    At this point Microsoft should just be buying me the computer since they make all their money on collecting my data

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    In modern x86 CPUs, POPCNT is implemented as part of the SSE4 instruction set. For Intel’s chips, it was added as part of SSE4.2 in the original first-generation Core architecture, codenamed Nehalem. In AMD’s processors, it’s included in SSE4a, first used in Phenom, Athlon, and Sempron CPUs based on the K10 architecture. These architectures date back to 2008 and 2007, respectively.

    That effectively bars mid-2000s Intel Core 2 Duo systems and early Athlon 64-era PCs from booting Windows 11 at all, not that they officially supported it in the first place. This means the change should mainly affect retro-computing enthusiasts who spend their days making YouTube videos in the “we installed Windows 11 on a potato, let’s see how it runs” genre rather than users of actual systems.

    You can check if your CPU has SSE 4.2(Intel) or 4a(AMD) but it sounds like unless you’re running some real old stuff you shouldn’t have to worry.

    • Nougat@kbin.social
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      But isn’t Microsoft just so evil for making it so their operating system doesn’t function flawlessly on twenty year old hardware?

  • snownyte@kbin.social
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    5 months ago

    May I ask - why is anyone bothering to install Windows 11 on old hardware in the first place?

    Old hardware is better for Linux. Either install Linux or you can get used to having your old hardware be used as a paperweight.

    • HC4L@lemmy.world
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      In this context an unsupported cpu would be an i7 7700K for example. Hardly e-waste and can perform quite well…

      • Evilcoleslaw@lemmy.world
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        Those aren’t supported but they’re not affected by this specific change. The latest chips that won’t be able to boot are Core 2 Duo and the Athlon X2 chips that predated AMD Phenom. Old old.

        • IHawkMike@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          My 3930k is still alive and kicking. Just need it to hold out until Gen 15.

          It also runs Windows 11 just fine.

          • ArchAengelus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            i7-950 here. I don’t use it every day, but it still runs very smoothly. Even though the memory is a little slow at times

      • PeterPoopshit@lemmy.world
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        I finally upgraded from a 3rd gen i7 to a 6th gen i7. There was no actual performance difference besides my gpu vram getting hotter, I just did it because the motherboard wasn’t as shit. I’m sure the difference between a 6th gen i7 and an 8th gen i7 is equally unnoticeable. I didn’t want to ever boot Windows again anyway.

        Edit: huh, I’m intrigued by the downvotes. Is it because I used the wording “no actual performance difference” rather than providing benchmarks and proof? Is it because computer technology isn’t improving at the rate it used to and people are in denial and/or easily triggered about it? Or maybe because I’m “probably a troll” based on my username?

        • fatalError@lemmy.sdf.org
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          It’s probably because running such old hardware means your daily usage wouldn’t show much difference between the 2 setups. If you mainly browse the internet or play gpu boumd games, you simply wouldn’t notice a huge difference.

          Change that use case to cpu bound games or other cpu intensive tasks and you would likely see a not insignificant difference.

          Also newer hardware is more efficient(used to at least), so you should see lower power draw for the same performance or better performance for the same power draw.

          So just because you don’t see a difference, it doesn’t mean it’s not there.

    • LostXOR@kbin.social
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      5 months ago

      Or just… Stay on Windows 10? There’s nothing wrong with it compared to Windows 11 (though Linux is usually a better choice).

      • snownyte@kbin.social
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        5 months ago

        Windows 10 sucks as well.

        Like seriously, it freaks out when I try right clicking on anything on the left hand panel of Windows Explorer.

        And I have to keep restarting periodically, just to use not only my internal disc drive but also my external too.

        Windows 10 is just as garbage.

        • HC4L@lemmy.world
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          For all it’s shortcomings this sounds more of something on your end and also something quirky that you will any OS really…

            • HC4L@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              So you think that what you have described above is something all Windows 10 users deal with?

            • BassTurd@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Definitely really. Your’s is not a widespread case. I have personally never seen the issue and I oversee a network almost exclusively made up of windows 10 machines. I have no love for W10, but this is a you thing.

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                You can’t even prove that it’s a me-thing. Goes to show how little you actually know. Get off your little armchair and try to demonstrate some level of knowledge.

                • BassTurd@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  You are the one claiming to have the issues. I’m saying I have never had them, and over the entire lifecycle of windows 10 and working on hundreds of computers, I have never seen or heard of anyone else having this issue. The proof that it’s a you-thing is that you admitted to having those issues.

                  I’m not even sure what you mean by, “… and try to demonstrate some level of knowledge.” I didn’t present any information that requires more knowledge than being able to read my comment. My experiences, and based on other comments, other’s experiences, and a cursory Google search show that yea, this is a you-thing and not a widespread Windows 10 thing.

                  Maybe if you yourself weren’t so unknowledgeable, you’d have been able to fix your unique issues. It’s a bad carpenter that blames his tools.

    • BigDanishGuy@sh.itjust.works
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      Be me
      Teach intro to it-support/devops Course is relatively cheap for the school, as we only use the stuff that the IT dept has obsoleted
      Currently getting 4th gen core i7 machines Life is good, every student has a few i7 machines for clients (win 10) and windows server
      Microsoft announces end of life for win 10 Hate win 11, but if we must…
      MFW Microsoft announces the requirement of CPUs 4 gens newer than the newest machines we’re receiving. And I now have to tell my boss that the otherwise cheap course, with not enough students otherwise, will need an investment of at least 18 new desktop machines

      Anybody hiring?

    • tedu@azorius.net
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      Because people will click on the YouTube video you make trying it.

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    Itt: Use Linux Spam. This is not feasible for most users. Not all applicatopns are posted to Linux and some explicitly do not work. In particular for people that play games socially this just does not work. That being said they are unaffected by this change.

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      Lol. Every Windows article gets spammed to death with yOu ShoUlD uSe LiNuX.

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      Seems like this is a constant spam on Lemmy and it’s starting to drive me away from the platform. So much Linux spam.

      • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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        The Linux proselytizing combined with the rabid impractical political hive mind have combined to slowly take my usage of Lemmy from “increasing and replacing Reddit time” to “flattened out, going back to Reddit a bit” and now it’s moving solidly into the territory of “definitely using and visiting Lemmy less, spending more time back on Reddit”.

        This platform has so much potential, but the community sucks. Which is saying something, given that the chief comparison is the reddit community.

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        I’m sure it wouldn’t be too hard to make something that filtered out all posts/comments containing the word “Linux”, what software do you use to interact with Lemmy?

        • BURN@lemmy.world
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          Exclusively Voyager for Lemmy. I’m also not really interested in making custom tools.

          There’s also the problem of that filtering out half of the active content on the platform.

    • mods_are_assholes@lemmy.world
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      I’ve been trying to switch to linux on my daily driver for years, and every time I come to a critical issue, I can’t find useful help for it anywhere on the web and I give up and try again next year.

      And this isn’t a skill issue, I’m a 30 year greybeard IT vet that has administered to linux servers since the late 90s. Linux is simply not ready for daily use by your average computer user, and that’s mainly the fault of its fucktastically fragmented environment designed by insular egotists.

      And don’t even get me fucking started on the elitism of people who actually respond to help requests with instructions to read several hundred pages of documents before they’ll even tell you what’s wrong with your question.

      • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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        5 months ago

        What average users would need to convert is access to sympathetic and patient support… what they get is obtuse gatekeepers. People who on the one hand think that everyone should use Linux but on the other hand insist that using it means that you’re hyper intelligent, and by extension requires you to be.

        • mods_are_assholes@lemmy.world
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          Exactly this, but their argument fails because even hyper intelligent people get shit on by the linux community.

          They don’t want new adherents, they want people to recognize their decades of reeking basement skillz.

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      At this point the only games that don’t work on Linux are games using kernel level anti-cheats, and these are the largest games out there.

      If you don’t play any of those games then your game most likely works just fine on Linux.

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        This is simply not true. I recently tried Linux for gaming after several years because I read that Valve made some great progress. Installed Crusader Kings III and didn’t get Paradox Launcher to run which is necessary for any DLC.

        This was literally the first game I installed from my huge library and it simpl didn’t work so I had to do two hours of research, trial and error and reading error logs to conclude that I wasn’t able to solve this problem.

        This is the exact reason why I use Windows for gaming. It simply works 99 % of the time. And I don’t have the time to troubleshoot my games all the time.

        • Samueru@lemmy.world
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          By recently you mean this year? The paradox launcher was broken on the steamdeck a year ago, should be working now.

          Also iirc that game has a native linux version.

          • Sockenklaus@sh.itjust.works
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            No, not this year but maybe last fall, early winter. The game itself was running fine but without DLC (which neede the launcher to work) was useless to me.

            Maybe I have to give it another try but this experience was the worst possible advertisement for “gaming on Linux” 😐

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              Maybe I have to give it another try but this experience was the worst possible advertisement for “gaming on Linux” 😐

              I mean there isn’t much more that can be done, these days that is usually the issue with gaming in linux, either the game has anti cheat which you cannot fix or the launcher of the application changes and you have to wait for it to get fixed.

              The good news is that more studios are starting to release native versions of their linux games, so hopefully in the future this isn’t as much of an issue.

            • Kedly@lemm.ee
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              Its certainly not as likely to run a game as windows, but I also think you just go INCREDIBLY unlucky with your first attempt at a game. The vast majority of games buyable on Steam can be run at this point out of the box (some might be a bit jank for the Steamdeck though)

        • SpunkyMcGoo@lemmy.world
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          more than 99% of the hundreds of games i’ve ran on linux have worked, it sounds like you got unlucky.

        • Harbinger01173430@lemmy.world
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          Play Stellaris and problem solved. It works on Linux through steam. Besides you won’t be stuck within a single primitive planet

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        I’m finding out that particularly complex modding can be a bit of a pain as well, but thats a more niche category than gaming in general

        (I’m having a TERRIBLE time trying to get Bannerlord Script Extender to work on my Steamdeck)

        • PopMyCop@iusearchlinux.fyi
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          Let me know, or make a big post if you solve it. I haven’t played Bannerlord since switching to Linux and don’t want to dive into a quagmire quite yet.

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            I’ll tinker with it more over the weekend, but I’m fairly new to linux myself, so we’ll see if I can figure it out!

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        This isn’t even true all the time anymore, helldivers 2 has a kernel anti cheat on windows but runs fine under proton!

      • mods_are_assholes@lemmy.world
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        Which is ridiculous because unlike windows, you don’t NEED kernel level access in linux to know someone is screwing with memory but none of the anti-cheat devs are interested in making a whole separate anti cheat for the 2% of linux users.

        If you guys want that, you need to write it yourself and give it to the game companies free, that’s the only way we are getting multiplayer online games in Linux.

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    do hack to make software run on unsupported hardware

    software stops working with update

    surprised pikachu

    “this is why i switched to linux” no shut up lol. this is not an issue for any average user and if you had the ability to hack the TPM requirements you have the ability to fix your borked install. this issue affects no one else. 🙂🙂🙂

    • kautau@lemmy.world
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      I agree with you, but did you read the article? This is about a specific CPU instruction, not TPMs.

      In modern x86 CPUs, POPCNT is implemented as part of the SSE4 instruction set. For Intel’s chips, it was added as part of SSE4.2 in the original first-generation Core architecture, codenamed Nehalem. In AMD’s processors, it’s included in SSE4a, first used in Phenom, Athlon, and Sempron CPUs based on the K10 architecture. These architectures date back to 2008 and 2007, respectively.

      • spujb@lemmy.cafe
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        5 months ago

        yeah i did read the article. to clarify for anyone confused, folks are already bypassing the TPM requirement to get these windows installs working in the first place. the POPCNT instruction issue is only affecting installs that are already using this workaround to force W11 to run on a device it doesn’t want to work on.

        • kautau@lemmy.world
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          Ah I see what you mean. No install would be possible without a TPM but hacked installs allow it, however now the update is explicitly using a CPU instruction that only works with CPUs that support TPM. Makes sense, thanks for clarifying

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            Gen-1 through Gen-7 CPUs also still work despite lack of TPM. If it was about trying to force the TPM thing, even just using AXV2 instruction requirement would have limited it to only Gen4-7 running without TPM. I’m sure there’s other ways they could try to limit installs with the TPM-check disabled.

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        You lot think that the solution to everything is Linux except you have absolutely no understanding of corporate IT. It’s hilarious. No wait, it’s annoying.

      • merthyr1831@lemmy.world
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        Honestly apart from newer COD i dont really miss any of my library but deffo always ways to improve for Linux gaming

        • Russ@bitforged.space
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          The only game that I keep Windows around for is Destiny 2… I know, but it’s the game my closest friends are often playing - but I’ve been playing it less and less so I might actually end up removing Windows completely if the next expansion doesn’t go well.

          Now that I have a Steam Deck, I have zero reasons to get into Windows-only games anymore.

    • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      Install Linux? Nah, you’ll love it! Just dump that Microsoft trash with the garbage already

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        You’re not really convincing anyone.

        Like 90% of everyone here already uses Linux, and those who do use Windows only use it because they are forced to because of work or some proprietary program that Linux doesn’t currently have.

        • Trollception@lemmy.world
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          I use Windows because I prefer it over Linux. I mainly play games on my PC and Windows never gives me any issues. I don’t need to have any compatibility layers and overall there is no hassle.

        • datelmd5sum@lemmy.world
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          Linux gaming seems to be always a bit behind with driver support. Last time I tried it there was no HDR and it was a dealbreaker for me. This time I’d expect FSR snd frame gen is not at the same level they are on windows. My work laptop is still Linux, I boot to Linux on my personal computer if I’m doing my own projects. My homelab server is naturally Linux and so is my personal laptop… but I still do basically zero Linux gaming.

    • Andrenikous@lemm.ee
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      For real. With the improvements to running windows applications(games) on Linux over the last year it’s perfectly fine for the majority of pc users.

        • arc@lemm.ee
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          Because Windows is also perfectly fine for running Windows applications & games. It can also be a royal pain in the arse to set up Windows emulation on Linux depending on your graphics card and some other factors.

          It’s actually easier to get Linux running on Windows since it has WSL. I have Ubuntu running under Windows with IntelliJ open at the moment and postgres running in the background right now.

        • Giooschi@lemmy.world
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          Because some very important applications (microsoft office, adobe suit, some very popular multiplayer games, cad software etc etc) still don’t work.

          • Resol van Lemmy@lemmy.world
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            So not having enough software is due to not having many users, and not having many users is due to not having enough software, and the cycle repeats.

            This is how Windows Phone got killed, ladies and gentlemen. But since Linux is open source, it’s basically invincible.

          • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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            Including a lot of corporate stuff like the Citrix application suite which admittedly barely even works on windows, and a whole load of telephony systems that require windows.

        • Andrenikous@lemm.ee
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          Others have given a lot of good reasons but those mostly have to do with more business related reasons than casual computer usage. Biggest reason people don’t switch is that the average computer user, who only needs it for casual usage, has no clue how to install an operating system. They simply use what is available at the time of purchase and big box chain stores predominantly sell windows machines. Now and then you may see someone offering a system with a flavor of Linux but that is few and far between. The fact that there are so many variants of Linux is both a benefit to why tech savvy people love it and a hindrance to mass adoption because people like consistent convenience. That is why the iPhone has done so well, each device has the exact same OS and experience. And that consistency with mass adoption means there is a certain level of support that the general user expects. They can go to most PC repair shops and get their windows system fixed no problem but with Linux not every shop is willing to touch the machines so there needs to be more self reliance. So when I say most casual users would be fine with Linux it’s true but for adoption it’s a tricky uphill battle of mass availability of a single user experience that has broad in person technical support.

        • WalrusDragonOnABike [they/them]@reddthat.com
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          Specific software requirements for work is the main reason for me.

          Also, last time I used linux, it kept breaking, so I had to reinstall the OS about once a month and I had no clue what kept breaking it.

        • Lost_Faith@lemmy.world
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          I am in the process of changing before W11 is the only W choice. Many of my steam games work on nix, using the latest Ubuntu now but may need to shop around for another distro, including VR. Except my OGVive won’t display, the steam client loads and the mirror comes up and if you move the headset you can even see it move in the environment but… no video on the screens. No VR is a hard deal breaker and I do not have $1000 for a newer headset. Once I get over this hurdle on my laptop I can begin to migrate my desktop.

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    So if you got Win11 to install on an “unsupported” CPU it might not boot now?

    Backward compatibility is a big selling point for me. It bugged me for years when Windows got rid of 16-bit compatibility.

    Looking forward to Linux instead of Windows 11/12, I know it will be a learning curve but Linux is getting better and easier.

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      Honestly, it’s easier to keep my Debian machine from killing itself than any Windows install.

      It seems like Windows actively sabotages itself for no reason.

    • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.world
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      It’s only CPUs lacking a specific extension. Nehalem or newer for Intel or Phenom or newer for AMD will still work. Those CPUs aren’t even officially supported by their weird restrictions.

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      So this is anecdotal I know, but I work on a Mac, so I’ve only ever held on to Windows for gaming. (Sidenote: The Mac isn’t my choice, either, but it has a terminal, and it does the job)

      I’ve definitely tried to go fully Linux in the past, but it was always gaming that killed it for me. Wine was just never very consistent for me in this area.

      Long story but, I recently lost my gaming machine, and was gifted a friends old one. Also a long story, but he ended up putting Linux on it for me. I figured I’d use it as is until payday before buying a key for Windows.

      Holy shit gaming on Linux become has easy! Steam/proton is amazing!

      I won’t lie, it’s not always as simple as install and run, but the tweaking that’s been required has been orders of magnitude simpler than what it used to be. Click a box 90% of the time, Click a box and add a run parameter for another 5%.

      The only games that haven’t worked for me are Starfield and Cyberpunk (accounting for the last 5%.)

      Starfield might just be too much for this old machine, but Cyberpunk I have no idea. Neither are a huge loss to me when Balders Gate, and Elite Dangerous are running fine. Also long standing favourites like Just Cause 3/4 work perfectly too.

      I’m thrilled and a little shocked to say I think I’m finally done with Windows

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        I installed in dual boot configuration save for the fact that I haven’t yet booted back into Windows since.

        Generally my games just work. More than that, the performance is great and the tweaks are few and far between where necessary. It’s an absolute world of difference in usability compared to a few years ago.

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      Do it. I made the switch a few months ago, and it’s gone better than I’d expected. Now running Linux Mint on my desktop and laptop. I set my laptop up with dual boot, just so I can easily and natively run Windows apps if needed.

    • no banana @lemmy.world
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      I’d recommend everyone switch to Linux! I only had to go back because of a very niche problem with head tracking support. Linux is ready for most people though.

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Freetrack in my simulation games is why I still have Windows on my old gaming desktop - the tracking protocol that those sims use isn’t supported under Linux 😔 as well as another that specifically looks for the Logitech G hub to interface with the wheel.

        Aside from the simulators, I’ve been gaming on Linux on my deck and haven’t run into any issues at all, especially with Proton-GE handy to run “unsupported” titles

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    With all due respect, that sounds very much like what something unsupported would do.

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    2025 will likely be way more the year of massive e-waste than the “Year of the Linux Desktop ™” - but I still think it is in the realm of possible that Linux market share close to doubles into the 5 to 8 percent range.

    While I already regularly use Ubuntu and Ubuntu Touch for my “infotainment” desktops, laptops and tablets - I have 3 desktops in my studio that run Windows 10 that work great for my pro audio work needs, none of which qualify for Windows 11 according to MS’s “PC Health Check” app. So I’ve been investigating running Ubuntu Studio dual booting on one of my machines as a possible way of keeping these boxes going after Win 10 stops getting security updates. Some things look promising, but given I was not able to get the available kernel module device driver to build for my Merging Anubis (which is my main audio interface for my mastering studio) I will likely still need to get a Win 11 box in order to be able to continue my current work flow.

    • digital_roach@lemmy.world
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      Or the year of grand piracy. “Someone I met” told me that while it is nearly impossible to purchase a legit copy, Windows 10 IoT LTSC is going to be supported until 2032. It is truly Windows as its meant to be without tons of bloat, telemetry, ads, and the option to decline feature updates. Scripts readily available on the web to activate the product, runs so cleanly and efficiently.

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        To me, this gives off the same sort of energy as “Americans will do anything to avoid using the metric system.”

        Getting an OS from questionable sources that MS is almost certain to be aware is not a legit copy and relying on their goodwill to in order to avoid either getting new hardware or switching to a more reliable and usually monetarily free OS.

        Maybe it’s that I’ve not been running Windows for over a decade but, I just don’t get it. You’re presumably going to be entrusting the OS with a Steam install and other potentially sensitive things.

        • digital_roach@lemmy.world
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          Hahaha very funny analogy and also very true. Ideally, yeah you’re 100% right. But in practicality, Linux/GNU is only free if you have time to spend. I do run Debian and openSUSE on some machines because there are use cases where it is unparalleled. However, there are times where you have to get hacky and pour over documentation to get it to do what you want for applications that would just work right out the gate with Windows, so the choice is obvious if you’re running against a clock or lack technical skills.

          Secondly yes it is sketchy but I would compare it to finding sources of information in the world of academics. All about where it comes from and if the affiliated community is trustworthy/expert enough to verify integrity.

          The individual I was referring to has been using LTSC since it’s launch 9 years ago and has never had a security breach (knock on wood). Their initial motivations were to avoid being part of the MS botnet and being fed up with advertising on software they’d paid for, but seeing the regression of the OS to its current state serves to confirm their sentiment.

          TL;DR sometimes there’s no practical choice but Windows and ltsc is the best one, if you’re careful

    • Nakura@lemmy.world
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      I too do pro audio work. I don’t like Windows and love Linux and have several laptops running Linux Mint, but I don’t think Linux is quite where I want it to be for me to switch fully for audio work. So I consider using Windows just an occupational hazard of sorts for now.

      • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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        My wife does pro audio work as well. We both got fed up of the pure trash quality of MS’s updates (offline is not an option as remote sessions are sometimes needed). It got so bad that she had to comp a full session due to driver issues. So, despite loathing Apple, we bit the bullet and got a MacMini from Costco. Not quite Linux but it is unix- like and extremely stable.

        For Linux, maybe check out Ardour, if you haven’t yet.

      • KptnAutismus@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        for laptops, linux is king. but many use cases still don’t work yet.

        and since a desktop needs to be able to do so much more, it’s going to be a long-ass time before i can switch.

        already learning to use it though, so the switch will be as smooth as possible.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      One use case that I think is going to make more people able to adopt Linux in the next couple years is mechanical CAD. FreeCAD is approaching a 1.0 release that is going to be actually adoptable, which I think may free up some folks to switch from Fusion360’s drawbackware tier.

    • mods_are_assholes@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Look into the service: 0patch, they can keep your EoL win10 machines safe.

      For about $30 a year I still get patches for my Win7 gaming rig

  • EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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    5 months ago

    when they say “older” PCs they’re talking about machines with CPUs that are over 14 years old now.

    You’d need to have replaced that CPU by now anyway.

    • laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Hard disagree. If this was the 80s or the 90s, you would have a case. But nowadays? 14 year old PCs are quite capable for many everyday uses.

      The only people trying to convince you that you have to upgrade things every other year are the ones who sell them.

      • elephantium@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        IDK, it’s a far cry from “dropping support for stuff 14+ years old” to “we’re going to coerce you into buying new hardware every other year”.

        I bought a laptop at the beginning of 2010 and used it until spring of 2021. It was long overdue for replacement by then, so even that wouldn’t have been affected by this.

        • laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          What made it long overdue for replacement, though?

          Because I bet a mom or pops who only browse facebook could (technically) still use it for five more years*.

          *Though facebook is not the best example because they are constantly bloating their own product.

          • elephantium@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            For me: I like to play games. It was still fine for games like Dwarf Fortress or Civilization, and it could handle Factorio decently well (enough to launch a rocket, not enough for a megabase, heh).

            For my mom? IDK, I was already pushing it with how long I stayed on Windows 7. I’m not sure that this particular laptop would have been a good hand-me-down in 2021.

            Finally…I have to repeat: I bought the laptop in 2010. I got eleven years out of it for a type of device that most people replace every 2-3 years. Why isn’t that good enough for you?

              • elephantium@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                Thank you!

                I was pretty thrilled at how much use I got out of that laptop. I originally picked it up as a companion machine to a desktop, but about a year later, I switched over to using the laptop almost exclusively. I got a docking station and hooked it up to my desktop monitors, and all was well. It did limit the games I could play, but hey, I guess you could call me a “patient gamer”.

                I did have to repair it a couple of times – I replaced both the cooling fan and the hard drive around 2015-2017.

                It was funny, what finally spurred me to start looking for a new machine was a free giveaway of Total War: Shogun 2 on Steam back in 2020. Free game? New computer!

      • Ziixe@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 months ago

        14 year old PCs are quite capable for may everyday use

        I got a core 2 duo (3gb of ram and a HDD as a boot drive, really ancient I know) computer, it’s the only computer I have and I absolutely hate it since it sucks, even with Linux (xfce as a desktop) it takes so long to boot (usually 3 to 4 minutes, windows took like 6 to 7) and not to mention it being so laggy it struggles with launching Firefox and for example a file browser at the same time, and loading a webpage also takes a long time (around 20 seconds for Google, YouTube about 30 s)

        Yeah, these computers are really just unusable even for really lightweight work, yeah “upgrade to a SSD, it will be blazing fast”, wouldn’t that just speed up the boot time? The least important thing? Since like I can just walk somewhere and then come back before it boots, but when I’m waiting for a webpage to load or a program to load up it’s really that I do have to wait there, doing nothing in the meantime

        • Macros@feddit.de
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          5 months ago

          An SSD really is the solution. You believe it just speeds up boot time, but it does speed up nearly everything else too.

          Your Webpage? Your Browser loads it, stores new data into the cache and stalls while waiting for the HDD. Or it knows elements are in the cache and stalls waiting for them.

          You click on the application menu? You PC tries to load 20 icons, tiny amounts of data an SSD has ready in a microsecond. Your HDD takes a full second because the seek between the 20 places where the icons are on the HDD takes so long.

          I have some very old PCs I manage (mainly for relatives) and one couple uses a Core 2 Duo E6400 which should be quite similar to your PC. This PC is very usable for daily browsing with Ubuntu 22.04, boot time is about 25 seconds, then about 10 seconds to load up ebay. (I admit I optimized boot time quite a bit) The other PC they have is even slower than that, I just do not remember the exact CPU right now. That one is even used for old browser games similar to candy crush.

          Of course it is not what I would use given the choice. I want to compile code in seconds, watch videos in glorious 4k and play a 3D game from time to time. But for them it works perfectly well, so well that they deny my offers to upgrade them

        • laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          What makes you think that an SSD won’t help with the rest of the operations?

          Every time I upgrade a computer from HDD to SSD, it injects new life to it.

        • WalrusDragonOnABike [they/them]@reddthat.com
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          5 months ago

          IMO, it’ll probably still be slow at a lot of things. The gen-6 i5-U laptops we at my job use have SSDs and 8GB ram (granted, also running windows because required for some software) and they’re still really slow compared to things like my personal desktop and laptop. Boot times are fine at least, but web browsing isn’t as quick and responsive as I’m used to (<2 seconds per page). They probably take more like 10 pages to load pretty basic pages (no videos).

          Still, probably a ton faster with an SSD than without one.

        • limelight79@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          It would help the boot time but also loading software. But I agree a Core 2 Duo is pretty much cooked at this point.

          I just replaced a Core 2 Quad in my server, which mostly is a file server and database, that sort of thing. It was doing fine until I started trying to do virtual machines on it (running Home Assistant), and that just killed it. But as a machine I’d be using directly? Nah.

          My desktop machine was an i5 from about 2015 and was fine, but I recently upgraded the desktop and put the guts of that in the server.

        • EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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          5 months ago

          It sounds like your machine is full of crap. Or maybe the hardware you’re using is shitty.

          Or maybe you’re giving your machine too much to do at once. Or maybe the antivirus you have is shitty, I don’t know I haven’t seen what you do with your system. I don’t have any problems with my windows machine, because I know how to use it and take care of it.

      • ferralcat@monyet.cc
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        5 months ago

        You can have it, but expecting modern windows to run seems a bit silly. It’s a for sale product not a community supported hobby project.

        If it was worth supporting for old ATMs or POS terminals, Ms probably would. But the people with those systems aren’t paying for windows updates.

        • laughterlaughter@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          I never said 14 year old PCs have to support modern Windows as it stands now.

          But anyway. With all the billions Microsoft has as its operating budget, why can’t it launch a Windows tailored to low spec machines? Not profitable enough. That’s why.

          • EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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            5 months ago

            My old system was starting to run like shit anyway I had it for over 10 years

            Hardware doesn’t last forever and older hardware is vulnerable to more things.

            It certainly would be nice if you never needed to upgrade anything and could just run the same hardware forever, but we don’t live in that world.

            I get it, there’s that old saying “what Intel giveth Microsoft taketh away” but I’ve said it several times in this thread, you need to periodically upgrade hardware anyway to stay safer from certain kinds of malware

      • riodoro1@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Progress mate. Shit gets old because we came up with better shit (thats gonna get old too) so you toss it and forget about it. Repeat until planet fucked.

    • Hadriscus@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      Well, no. There’s no reason you should, plenty of uses for a 14yo Linux PC around the house

      • EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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        5 months ago

        Yeah you could just switch to Linux on an old PC like that

        The stuff that Microsoft is making mandatory for Windows 11 is hardware security features older hardware is more vulnerable to malware that runs at deeper levels of your system

        If you want to be secure at the hardware level…or at least more secure at the hardware level, you need newer hardware

        Core isolation for example won’t work on hardware that’s incompatible with windows 11

        A lot of malware can’t run on a Windows machine once core isolation is enabled. Like I always say, if it won’t run with core isolation enabled, it’s probably malware