• RedGreenBlue@lemmy.zip
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      2 months ago

      It’s all relative. Best match for their user analytics. So they get good numbers to show user engagement in their board meetings.

      Accidental clicks are engineered to juice those numbers too.

  • smeg@infosec.pub
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    2 months ago

    I keep a small Win11 partition on my 2022 gaming laptop in case I need to take a cert exam or use a gov website, and I booted it for updating for the first time in 6 months. It took over 6 hours and 6 reboots to update! At one point, it was going bu-ding every minute from random notifications so I had to mute it.

    Meanwhile, my 2012 Thinkpad T420 needed a full Fedora version upgrade, and that finished in 15 minutes.

    No wonder MS is losing users

      • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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        2 months ago

        wait till you find out companies that operated in South Korea had to support Internet Explorer until 2020

      • Confused_Emus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 months ago

        Ha! Oh, if you think that’s dumb… There are certain key sections of the IRS website that only function during business hours. Imagine if more sites worked like that. “Dang, it’s after 5PM, gotta do my Amazon order tomorrow.

      • De Lancre@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Serbia for example have it’s gov suit and drivers only for windows. You can’t login using your personal identification card on linux, afaik (like, even if you extract encrypted key from plastic card). Can’t even scan it to obtain profile pdf. They do have “consentid” app for android tho, that can be used to log in.

        Russia also falls in same category, also they don’t have plastic cards for identification, only regular passport. Digital key (basically a regular encrypted cert) can be issued thru government department responsible for taxes and again, will only work on windows for login, due to required software. It should be possible to install certificate on linux, but to login on government site you will need to use browser in wine.

        Dunno about other countries, only lived in those two. I heard some African countries also have same/similar system, don’t remember which one.

        • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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          2 months ago

          Not knowing much about Serbian smartcards, but I had done quite a bit with smartcards in Linux before.

          Have you seen this project? https://github.com/ubavic/bas-celik … looks to be cross-platform and do what you’re saying. Though you’d probably need pcscd, pcsc-tools, and possibly other similar packages, depending distro.

    • pedz@lemmy.ca
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      2 months ago

      Just in case you don’t know, unless it changed last time I checked, some organizations like Comptia didn’t allow computers with dual boot to be used to pass a cert exam.

    • Wispy2891@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Problem that powertoys are becoming bloated too. Before switching my 8gb RAM laptop to Linux, it was constantly swapping memory. I investigated and it was powertoys slowly eating everything. The two almost identical launchers, 300mb each. The eyedropper that you gonna use once a month 200mb, the help that comes out when you long press the windows key, another 80mb. Same for the screen ruler. Then the accent helper, and so on. My 8gb laptop only had 1 GB free Memory After a clean boot

      • ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 months ago

        AFAIK there was a memory leak in PowerToys. But it’s definitely ballooned in scope since it was first released. I suppose turning off the parts you don’t need would help but it really should still be more efficient. Doesn’t help that the Microsoft Department of AI Department seems to have started sinking its teeth into it as of the last few updates.

      • ackthxbye@feddit.org
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        2 months ago

        The last time I used the power toys was on W10 but can’t you choose which components you install? Surely you can disable the autostart for the ones you are not using?

      • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        Isn’t that the entire point of swap? If you’re only gonna access that memory once a month what’s wrong with it swapping to disk but becoming ready within seconds when you go to use it?

        • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Dude, Windows swaps like it’s its job.

          The job of swap is to be used after the RAM is full or is about to be full. It’s not to be used instead of the RAM.

          I bet SSDs were a huge freaking performance boost for Windows generally speaking because of the way it swaps.

          • SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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            2 months ago

            That’s not true. Linux by default also moves stuff to swap way earlier. Swap is not just a fallback when you run out of RAM. That is why I think Zram is the best. My system can swap as much as it wants to.

            • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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              2 months ago

              Linux swappiness is at least easier to configure + I haven’t really noticed it happen on anything with enough RAM to do the job it’s doing.

              My 8 GB Thinkpad will swap quite a bit running PyCharm, docker and Firefox on KDE Plasma. My 32 GB desktop has near-zero swap usage and it has even more shit running at all

  • nul9o9@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    Typing in powershell? How a about a bing search of Windows Power Settings? Not even the settings menu, just the fucking web search.

  • tomiant@piefed.social
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    2 months ago

    Use Everything! search for Windows. Literally one of the strongest points of NTFS is lightning fast indexing, using tools like Everything and WizTree. The only things I miss on Linux. Oh also AutoHotKey.

    I just set the Everything window to appear on ALT+3 (I have found this to be a very useful shortcut because it’s rarely used by anything else and is easy to reach quickly)(some function keys also work well for it), you just type, it highlights, you press enter, you’re done. And so many sorting options.

  • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    As a software dev I wonder how does this even happen?

    • The movie snippet somehow has bigger weight for ordering - why would that ever be preferred?
    • The ordering is random?
    • The movie snippet is faster than App and Folder snippets?

    It’s incredible how incompetent Microsoft is.

  • ∃∀λ@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    KDE’s Plasma Desktop has a web search plugin that I use all the time. Typing the Win (Super) key followed by wp:Sistine Chapel and then the Enter key brings me straight to the Wikipedia entry on the Sistine Chapel. imdb:Jurassic Park brings me to the IMDb page for Jurassic Park. yt: will search YouTube, and so on. There are around 200 keywords pre-programmed into it, including for searching programming language documentation. Unlike the Windows feature displayed here, it doesn’t use the network unless you specify a prefix and it accesses only the service you specify by the keyword. Whoever added this feature had to do so very little work compared to the payoff. It just takes the part after the colon and inserts it into a search URL for the corresponding service and opens that URL in the browser. It’s very convenient. None of this web search stuff comes up when you’re just searching for apps and there are no surprises.

    • JonHammCock@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Is there a word for “a thoughtless action by someone else so incidentally awful that you can’t help but wonder if it’s intentional”?

      I mean, I don’t think they’re intentionally engineering it to delay EXACTLY the amount of time it takes for me to begin the process of clicking. That would take thoughtfulness, strategy, research, etc…… right?

      …right?

  • Undaunted@feddit.org
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    2 months ago

    On first glace I thought I’d be looking at the UI of a streaming service. This is so awful

    • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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      2 months ago

      Yeah that’s my plan. My processor won’t even support Windows 11, so that’s not an option. (I used to think it was a TPM2.0 issue, but checked more recently and it’s not. They just even more arbitrarily decided my processor is too old, while also claiming Windows 11 has the same or lower overhead than 10!) I’m also not far away from needing a hard drive, RAM, and GPU upgrade. So I figure some time reasonably soon I’ll build a new PC. That one won’t be getting Windows on it, unless I discover a game or something that I can’t run on Linux.

      • justme@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 months ago

        I haven’t met a single game yet that isn’t running, but I’m not into AAA games anyway. Worst case you just resort to dual boot (don’t forget, always install Windows first) or VM.

        • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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          2 months ago

          Amusingly, just a couple of minutes after posting that comment, I went to the aoe2 Reddit to check if I was missing some details about a recent patch (for details related to this Lemmy post I had just made). And one of the first posts I saw was this one complaining about that very-much-not-AAA game failing to run recently.

          The games in that franchise are like 90% of my gaming tbh. They all get great scores on ProtonDB, but the use a kinda weird hybrid of your Steam account and your Microsoft/Xbox account for syncing player details, and one of my concerns is the Xbox account might not work correctly.

          Worst case you just resort to dual boot (don’t forget, always install Windows first)

          Yeah, dual booting was definitely the plan. I didn’t know you need to install Windows first though, that’s…disappointing. And frustrating. My plan was to install Linux, stick with that for as long as I can, and if I later decide I need Windows for something, install it then.

          or VM

          Could be a good option. Dunno how smoothly these games would run in a VM, but worth a shot, and much better than needing to dual boot, if it does work smoothly.

          • justme@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            Is not strictly necessary to install Windows first, it just makes it easier, because Linux will setup the bootloader for you. Windows in the others hand tends to nuke everything that was installed prior, so you would at least need to repair the bootloader. To be completely safe you can just disconnect the Linux drive, while Windows is installing. Definitely a path, if you want to go for Linux only for now.

            VM is a good method once it is set up, but needs more initial tinkering with the passthrough, depending on your hardware. I don’t know how those Kernel level anti cheat things work. Otherwise the game shouldn’t even know it’s in a vm.

            • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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              2 months ago

              I don’t know how those Kernel level anti cheat things work

              Not something that matters to me anyway. I don’t own any such games currently, and don’t intend to change that.

              But thanks for the tips re the bootloader!

              • justme@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                2 months ago

                Btw, if you want someone that just works out of the box for games, have a look at bazzite. Steam and drivers installed right away. I run it happily for some time now.

                • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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                  2 months ago

                  That’s definitely interesting, but I use my PC as a general-purpose computer. I’d rather go with a general-purpose distro, like Ubuntu.

          • dustyData@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Don’t dual boot. Instead, invest in two drives and dedicate each to each os fully. Way less headache and far more control. Easier to keep windows oblivious of Linux existence so it doesn’t fuck with it.

            • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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              2 months ago

              Isn’t that still dual booting? Unless you have two PCs (even if you somehow rigged both PCs up in the same case with separate power buttons), you need a bootloader to choose which drive to boot off of. And unless I’m mistaken, two drives is not going to look notably different to the bootloader from two partitions on the same drive, is it?

              • dustyData@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                There’s a technical difference. On a single drive, GRUB (or any other modern bootloader) can handle multiple OSs that coexist on the same boot chain. Windows doesn’t like this of course. On different drives it is the UEFI that chooses which drive boot sector to boot from, regardless of which bootloader it has. Here, Windows doesn’t get a say, and it is less likely to break.

                Historically, the first case was called dual booting but the second is not called that. If the same result is achieved, maybe the distinction doesn’t matter anymore. However, in the olden days, there was only one disk allowed to have a master boot partition, the Device 0 in an IDE bus. Consumer PCs were limited to two IDE busses, with a device 0 and device 1 each, only one hard drive could have an MBR on the primary IDE. Now a days it is much easier to have multi-disk boot capabilities in hardware thanks to EFI system partitions (since mid 2000s), but it used to be necessary to fiddle with an MBR even if the OSs were on different disks.

                It is an important distinction because dual booting, as a concept, almost always exists in relation with Windows. If you have two, three or more Linux OSs running on the same disk drive, it is not called dual booting, it is just booting and choosing your distro, as bootloaders like GRUB are multi-booting by default.

                So, yeah, maybe it is dual-booting as well, but it is not what the original term used to mean. It is just Windows wasting space in a quarantined disk, which I still prefer.

                • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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                  1 month ago

                  Whoops. Just cleaning up some old tabs and realised I never responded to this. Thanks! It was some really interesting info.

                  dual booting, as a concept, almost always exists in relation with Windows

                  Hard to dispute this, except perhaps for the really niche situation of someone dual booting Linux on a Mac. Not especially useful very often, since Macs are a UNIX system. And because of that, not very common compared to Windows on a Mac, or dual booting Windows & Linux.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 months ago

      That was when they broke it.

      I was working at MSFT when they rolled out Windows 8.

      Basically broke all internal workflows for a month or two.

      Then quickly had to re-enable the 7 UI they told even us employees did not exist in 8.

      They did some kind of hackjob, called that 8.1, and fast forward a decade, Windows 11 had, last time I checked at least 4 different ‘eras’ of UI schemes/frameworks, if you dig far enough into all the settings menus.

      I am not even joking when I say that people literally screamed at me when I used the word ‘refactor’ in a sentence, while on the MSFT campus.

    • blinfabian@feddit.nl
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      2 months ago

      i have a couple of QR codes with “qr” in the file name… guess im not allowed to use 'em anymore

  • KiwiTB@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    To play devil’s advocate, only people unfamiliar with Windows would look for a terminal that way.

    • PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.social
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      2 months ago

      I disagree. Being able to slap the windows key and type the name of the program I’m looking for is one of my favorite features of both Gnome and KDE and I wish Windows worked similarly.