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    The great escape (from Microsoft)

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved No Escape from Reality
    14 Posts 6 Posters 235 Views
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    • M
      Muscle Car @Pavel
      last edited by

      @Pavel Great note, and I’ll add www.areweanticheatyet.com has a running database of which anti cheat options have been made compatible with Linux while requiring no login. Cheers!

      Got what you wanted, lost what you had.

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      • O
        Ominous
        last edited by

        I’m still with Windows, but at least I’m not part of the Apple ecosystem like my partner and almost all of my coworkers.

        Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam

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        • MisterBoringM
          MisterBoring
          last edited by

          Strangely, because of my job, I will always be on all three. I have a Windows machine, a Macbook, and two Linux systems (one on Debian and the other currently being used to test Omarchy.)

          Proud Member of the Pro-Mummy Alliance

          O 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • O
            Ominous @MisterBoring
            last edited by Ominous

            @MisterBoring Academia? I had to do that when I was a Chemistry major. The Physics department’s computers, which we had to use for some thing, were Macs, we used Microsoft, and the computer the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance machine was hooked up to ran on Red Hat Linux.

            Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam

            MisterBoringM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • MisterBoringM
              MisterBoring @Ominous
              last edited by

              @Ominous No. I work in IT and have to be knowledgeable about all three major OS environments for work, so I slowly have collected a trifecta.

              Proud Member of the Pro-Mummy Alliance

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              • HobbieH
                Hobbie
                last edited by Hobbie

                Aw yis a topic near and dear to my heart.

                Ever since I found Copilot in Notepad, that was it. 2025 was the year of Windows going from “passable” to “steaming manure”. All the adware and telemetry and forced AI and bunged-up local search reminded me too much of using Internet Explorer 5 instead of an actual operating system.

                In July I got a new SSD for my boot drive and was able to set up Linux Mint (Ubuntu for cowards like me, if you believe the internet!) for dual-boot. I say “dual-boot”, but I haven’t booted into Windows ever since I got the Linux distro up and running. I genuinely haven’t needed to.

                The worst issue I’ve had on Linux is one that actually ate up a few hours last night, where my wifi card decided after a kernel update (which didn’t resolve on rollback, itself a super-easy process) that it would make one connection total, and if you tried to swap SSIDs it’d just kark it and NetworkManager would crash. That led into a deep dive that taught me a lot more about how NetworkManager works, the joys of wpa_supplicant, and why my excellent crash-hot infinitely-tweaked tri-band router configuration was more of a hindrance than a help. Fixing that, and accidentally making the household wifi a lot better, I feel like I learned something.

                Had that been Windows, I never would have known it was a problem, and it would have been “wait for a patch”.

                When it comes to gaming, praise be to Gaben our lord and saviour for Proton. The only game I’ve found that was more than plug-and-play was Bannerlord once you start installing mods, because those need a few Windows dependencies which are easy enough to install with Protontricks once you do some research. When it comes to Anticheat, I’ve found most of the stuff I’ve played worked great out of the box. The only exception is, to no surprise, EA, which is actively preventing Linux machines from playing their games because “omg piracy lol”.

                A lot of this pontificating on my part is because Linux works for me. My day job is DevOps so I’m always writing BASH and spinning up containers and virtual machines etc. I will absolutely dig into an OS to get it running to my specifications and I will constantly prune things that I don’t need. For the average user who may well use the AI more than my blistering hatred permits, who doesn’t care about the telemetry, who isn’t fussed about localhost suddenly being inaccessible, yeah Windows is fine. I wouldn’t tell my wife to stop using it. But for myself, I really like how this stuff isn’t being (re)installed now with every update.

                If you’re looking for a change, willing to get into the weeds, and bothered by what Microsoft is doing, I recommend at least investigating swapping the OS. If you’re a daily user, then to be honest you don’t lose much if anything by staying on Windows.

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                • MisterBoringM
                  MisterBoring
                  last edited by

                  If you can’t escape Windows, but want to escape Copilot, you can use Group Policy Editor to disable Copilot permanently. (Microsoft is required to leave this setting in their OS by the many many many companies that either don’t want to deal with AI stuff at all, or have contracts with other AI firms for their AI nonsense, so it’s just a part of all versions of Windows.)

                  Just run gpedit.msc, find User Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Windows Copilot. There’s a policy called “Turn off Windows Copilot”. Enable that, and voila, no more pesky Microsoft AI on your system.

                  Proud Member of the Pro-Mummy Alliance

                  PavelP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                  • PavelP
                    Pavel @MisterBoring
                    last edited by

                    @MisterBoring And because Microsoft is… well… Microsoft, you may have to check/update this setting every few updates or so. I’ve definitely had to chase up stupid settings changes that updates have made counter to my desires.

                    He/Him. Opinions and views are solely my own unless specifically stated otherwise.
                    BE AN ADULT

                    MisterBoringM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • J
                      Juniper
                      last edited by

                      A post after my own heart. I’ve been working on ditching Microsoft and Google, but it’s a PROCESS.

                      I have a side laptop I’ve been tinkering with as a way to dip my toes into it, but I think as a side effect of being easily 10+ years old, this thing runs like a fridge. It has Debian (LXQt) on it now, but tends to freeze and crash.

                      Windows ran fine on it but I do wonder if it’s just so old that it needs something more lightweight. If you know any distributions that are particularly well suited to ancient shitboxes, I’d appreciate a recommendation.

                      PavelP MisterBoringM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • PavelP
                        Pavel @Juniper
                        last edited by

                        @Juniper Lubuntu is apparently quite good, and if you’re into tinkering then I can highly recommend a lightweight Arch install – but you do have to contend with people who smugly proclaim their particular strain (like a virus) of Arch is the best whenever you’re out there seeking help.

                        He/Him. Opinions and views are solely my own unless specifically stated otherwise.
                        BE AN ADULT

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • MisterBoringM
                          MisterBoring @Pavel
                          last edited by

                          @Pavel said in The great escape (from Microsoft):

                          And because Microsoft is… well… Microsoft, you may have to check/update this setting every few updates or so. I’ve definitely had to chase up stupid settings changes that updates have made counter to my desires.

                          Yep. So far I haven’t had to re-enable that on my Windows machine. I’m guessing since it getting reactivated in an update would mess up a lot of business deals, they don’t touch that setting with update packages. Only time will tell though.

                          Proud Member of the Pro-Mummy Alliance

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                          • MisterBoringM
                            MisterBoring @Juniper
                            last edited by

                            @Juniper said in The great escape (from Microsoft):

                            Windows ran fine on it but I do wonder if it’s just so old that it needs something more lightweight. If you know any distributions that are particularly well suited to ancient shitboxes, I’d appreciate a recommendation.

                            Have you tried Bodhi Linux?

                            Proud Member of the Pro-Mummy Alliance

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