[HN Gopher] Windows 11 Officially Shuts Down Firefox's Default B...
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Windows 11 Officially Shuts Down Firefox's Default Browser
Workaround
 
Author : beezle
Score  : 440 points
Date   : 2021-12-16 16:29 UTC (6 hours ago)
 
web link (www.howtogeek.com)
w3m dump (www.howtogeek.com)
 
| phreack wrote:
| What would you people suggest is the most Windows-like Linux
| distro to switch over? I'm thinking in terms of visual
| similarity, UX, key bindings, and such for everyday usage.
 
  | twblalock wrote:
  | The desktop environment, not the distro, is what really
  | matters. I'd look into a distro that is easy to install and
  | comes packaged with KDE desktop environment. Most of the
  | popular distros fit that requirement.
 
| ohiovr wrote:
| Even in windows 10 in a virtual machine I cannot download chrome
| and install it. I have to use virtualbox to transfer the
| installer and run it that way. Poor Microsoft has to use such
| tactics because their software blows (they know windows sucks and
| they have no control over it anymore) and they can only barely
| hold on with these tactics. Wasn't there an antitrust lawsuit
| which they some how won because of violations lesser than this?
 
| seqizz wrote:
| What the hell is a "microsoft-edge:// link"? Pardon my ignorance
| since I didn't use Windows for years, but who even link something
| like that?
 
  | crvdgc wrote:
  | On Windows, apps can register URIs for them to handle. For
  | example, steam uses steam://. The actual behavior is determined
  | by the app.
  | 
  | According to Microsoft's documentation[0], the microsoft-
  | edge:// scheme opens the edge browser and navigates to the
  | specified URL.
  | 
  | If what is claimed in the article is implemented, it will
  | provide a way to bypass the default browser setting. The system
  | will launch edge even if you set another browser as your
  | default web browser, bringing the problem of leaking MS account
  | information that comes with the edge.
  | 
  | [0]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/uwp/launch-
  | resume/l...
 
| TedShiller wrote:
| Use Mac?
 
| kevin_thibedeau wrote:
| Where the F is the EU to slap them for this BS?
 
| mrweasel wrote:
| Does anyone know why Microsoft even care? Do they want to be the
| dominate browser maker again? Seems like a weird way of going
| about it.
| 
| What's their goal?
 
  | ByThyGrace wrote:
  | Pleasing the shareholders?
 
    | mrweasel wrote:
    | Why would they care if "internal" links are opened in one
    | browser or another?
 
| ashton314 wrote:
| MS is getting desperate. This shill [^1] had the audacity to
| reply to a tweet I made praising the very excellent FOSS Zotero
| bibliography manager with a suggestion to use Edge. Like, come
| on. Amusingly, Twitter initially hid his tweet with "Tweet may
| contain offensive material." Offensive to a FOSS-loving mind
| indeed.
| 
| [^1]: https://twitter.com/varadarajans
 
  | keawade wrote:
  | Pedantic musing:
  | 
  | > Shill
  | 
  | > One who poses as a satisfied customer or an enthusiastic
  | gambler to dupe bystanders into participating in a swindle.
  | 
  | Is it "shilling" if you're a project manager recommending your
  | product? He doesn't appear to be posing as anything other than
  | a Microsoft employee working on the Edge team.
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | akira2501 wrote:
    | If you're just injecting yourself and your product into other
    | peoples conversations without invitation, then you are
    | probably shilling.
 
    | beebeepka wrote:
    | Now I am interested to learn how would you describe it!
 
    | hn_version_0023 wrote:
    | You've missed the 2nd definition of shill:
    | 
    | shill verb: 2 : to act as a spokesperson or promoter "the
    | eminent Shakespearean producer ... is now shilling for a
    | brokerage house" -- Andy Rooney
    | 
    | shill noun: 1b : one who makes a sales pitch or serves as a
    | promoter
    | 
    | https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/shill
    | 
    | If you're going to choose to be pedantic, it helps to read
    | the _entire_ definition, and not just paste in the top result
    | from DDG 's "define shill"
 
      | lowbloodsugar wrote:
      | Pretty sure that to be a shill, your relationship to the
      | thing being promoted has to be hidden. We don't refer to
      | marketing folks as shills. Parasites maybe, badum-ching.
 
        | mediocregopher wrote:
        | I refer to anyone trying to get me to use a particular
        | product as "shilling", including marketing folks.
 
        | hn_version_0023 wrote:
        | https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/shill#note-1
        | 
        | "Someone who shills today may very well be employed to
        | simply extol the wonders of legitimate products."
        | 
        | Of course it does go on to say that originally its use
        | was in service of a con, so secrecy is most definitely
        | implied. Good stuff... I love little pedantic asides!
        | 
        | And... parasites, most definitely.
 
  | [deleted]
 
| Croftengea wrote:
| Wow. Some people even pay money for this OS..
 
| phendrenad2 wrote:
| > Basically, this means that "microsoft-edge:// links" can no
| longer be forced to open in your default browser of choice
| 
| So wait... Links that specifically REQUEST to be OPENED IN EDGE
| cannot be overridden to open with an arbitrary program? So just
| don't use those links. Problem solved.
| 
| The irony here is anyone who actually cares enough to be angered
| by Microsoft opening links in Edge rather than their preferred
| browse would never use "Start menu search" or other noob
| features.
 
| c7DJTLrn wrote:
| That's ok, Windows 10 works just fine.
| 
| I hope one day Microsoft realises that their user-hostile actions
| are dissuading engineers from looking for jobs there. I for one
| never will. Hell would freeze over sooner.
 
| anshumankmr wrote:
| As someone who used Firefox and has Windows 11, how is it going
| to affect me? My links open in Firefox only (and the only time I
| open links is either from WhatsApp or occasionally some link in a
| doc file or PDF I am reading). It works fine for me so far.
 
  | Liquid_Fire wrote:
  | I think it's only for 'microsoft-edge:' URLs, used by certain
  | Windows features (e.g. Bing search from the start menu, or
  | opening the online help via a link in the Settings). Most other
  | links will just be normal http:/https: links and will use your
  | actual default browser.
 
    | ghosty141 wrote:
    | I'm pretty sure there will be some community programs that
    | will fix this again. Just takes some time I guess. Currently
    | I'm still waiting until I get the feeling that win11 is
    | "finished".
 
    | josephcsible wrote:
    | But keep in mind the fact that any parts of Windows using
    | microsoft-edge: URLs for any reason whatsoever is itself
    | anticompetitive behavior.
 
      | matt_heimer wrote:
      | Is it really?
      | 
      | If I have an OS and I want to deeply integrate the browser
      | into the OS for use-cases other than general browsing of
      | the web, why can't there be browser specific URLs to
      | accomplish that?
      | 
      | Is there a complete list of microsoft-edge:// use cases? I
      | know there is a News integration to the taskbar.
      | 
      | I love standards but sometimes you have edge use cases that
      | the entire world doesn't need or can adopt. Why can't a
      | browser have proprietary features along with URLs that make
      | sure that a browser supporting those URLs be used?
      | 
      | How do you even QA or support a deep browser integration
      | into your OS when the browser can be switched to a 3rd
      | party one?
      | 
      | If those deep integrations (News, etc) also prompt you to
      | change your default browser for general web surfing then
      | yes, that would be anticompetitive behavior. Does it do
      | that?
 
        | pseudalopex wrote:
        | The microsoft-edge links just open normal web pages. Most
        | are just Bing searches. It isn't deep integration.
 
        | howinteresting wrote:
        | These are exactly the arguments Microsoft used in its
        | antitrust defense.
 
    | jptech wrote:
    | Can you block Edge's internet access? Then if the said URL
    | was something you needed, copy-paste to your default browser.
 
  | xdennis wrote:
  | I don't want to be mean, but saying "this doesn't affect me" is
  | how freedoms get lost.
 
    | mikestew wrote:
    | Parent didn't "say" that at all. It was a question, not a
    | statement, which explains why the question mark was used: _"
    | how is it going to affect me?"_ At the end, the user gives us
    | the courtesy of reporting what behavior they observed, which
    | is all too often lacking.
 
    | Kaze404 wrote:
    | I don't think that's what being said. They're asking how it
    | affects them.
 
| thesuperbigfrog wrote:
| Microsoft is showing that they are really the ones who are in
| control.
| 
| "Either the user controls the software, or the software controls
| the users":
| 
| https://youtu.be/Ag1AKIl_2GM?t=57
 
| drcongo wrote:
| Microsoft is the abusive spouse of tech.
 
  | pferde wrote:
  | And yet most people keep trusting them with their code on
  | Github. If people were smart, there would be Freenode-level
  | mass migration away from GH the day the Microsoft purchase was
  | confirmed. But no, everybody will only scream once Microsoft
  | does something shady, as they inevitably will.
 
    | tentacleuno wrote:
    | > And yet most people keep trusting them with their code on
    | Github.
    | 
    | Honestly, from what I've seen many people don't see the issue
    | with this. "The code is public anyway, so what difference
    | does it make?"
    | 
    | I'm starting to see the downsides of that viewpoint now,
    | though[0]. If GitHub, and by extension Microsoft, technically
    | 'own' the code (licensing, etc.) then they have free reign
    | over it, leading to things like Copilot and Intellicode.
    | 
    | [0]: https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/intellicode/issues/201
 
  | Tijdreiziger wrote:
  | And Google, and Apple, and Meta...
 
| jagger27 wrote:
| United States v. Microsoft was 20 years ago. Is there nobody left
| at Microsoft who remembers that?
 
  | NelsonMinar wrote:
  | They remember the actual outcome. They lost the case but the
  | Bush Administration chose to not really enforce any significant
  | penalties. End result was very little cost to Microsoft. They
  | did change their practices for awhile but have slowly crept
  | back to the same lockin.
  | 
  | When Apple does similar things everyone praises them for it.
 
  | seanalltogether wrote:
  | Microsoft probably knows that governments have turned their
  | attention to apple, google and facebook these days.
 
  | jareklupinski wrote:
  | avg tech turnover is 1.5 years, it's likely...
 
    | ComputerGuru wrote:
    | Microsoft has much lower turnover than that.
 
  | dragontamer wrote:
  | Apple's default web browser is Safari on iOS and no one ever
  | sued Apple over it.
  | 
  | At some point, you have to just recognize that the world is
  | different today. The general market has accepted walled garden
  | OSes with anti-competitive behavior towards common
  | applications.
 
    | vetinari wrote:
    | > Apple's default web browser is Safari on iOS and no one
    | ever sued Apple over it.
    | 
    | Apple doesn't have that kind of market share to warrant it.
    | Tangentially, Apple products are aspirational, so they never
    | won't have it, that would lose the appeal. Microsoft, on the
    | other hand, pushes their products every way imaginable, and
    | many of their users use them because they have to.
 
    | dorchadas wrote:
    | They've changed it. I have Brave set as my default, for
    | instance, and can change apps to tell them which one to open.
 
      | dragontamer wrote:
      | IIRC, all web browsers on iOS are using the Safari
      | rendering engine though.
      | 
      | So its still Safari underneath it all. Much like how
      | Internet Explorer / Edge on Windows is really just a Chrome
      | renderer / frontend these days.
      | 
      | EDIT: And since Google is in charge of the Chrome renderer,
      | Microsoft absolutely has less control over internet-APIs /
      | Javascript APIs / CSS details than say... Apple or Google
      | does. Which is the "monopoly" bit that we're really worried
      | about.
      | 
      | When you consider which company "controls the web", its
      | Google or Apple. Microsoft really doesn't have much control
      | of it.
 
        | jptech wrote:
        | With the new Edge they're giving themselves a boost. They
        | probably won't catch up to Chrome so easily but will have
        | more to say about the underlying engine in a few years
        | time.
 
      | JohnTHaller wrote:
      | Brave is your browser UI. The rendering engine underneath
      | is Safari, as it is with all browsers on iPhone/iPad. The
      | version of Safari is slightly hobbled from the main one,
      | though far less so than it used to be when Apple kept all
      | browsers using a severely hobbled rendering engine making
      | them much slower than Safari proper.
 
  | BiteCode_dev wrote:
  | They remember they still made banks after that and their
  | accountant laughed it out.
 
  | monocasa wrote:
  | I've heard a rumour that the Microsoft anti trust actions in
  | the states were more a proxy war to get Microsoft to play nice
  | with the federal government wrt 'lawful intercept'.
 
| cplusplusfellow wrote:
| What I want is iMessage on my Linux desktop so that I can still
| text via my computer while I'm working and barely break
| concentration.
| 
| Then I'd never use Mac or Windows again.
 
  | modeless wrote:
  | I'm using https://www.beeper.com/ for this and it is very much
  | a beta but it works.
 
  | happyllama wrote:
  | Check out beeper.com. If you have an old Mac lying around you
  | can self-host the iMessage bridge
 
| dorchadas wrote:
| I need a new computer, and I was going to switch to Windows so I
| could game with friends (while dual-booting into some linux
| distro for anything programming related), which would force me
| into 11. It's already a shame that I have to have a Microsoft
| account to even set up the damn thing, but now I can't even use
| whatever default browser I want? I'm seriously about the say
| screw it and pay for another Mac. I love mine, but wanted to game
| but at this point it might not be worth it.
 
  | maybeOneDay wrote:
  | Don't get me wrong, this is some absolute BS from MSoft, but no
  | it's not accurate to say you can't use whatever default browser
  | you want. It's that there are a very few select things that
  | force you into opening a link in edge - as far as I'm aware
  | this is functionality mostly limited to just websearch from the
  | start menu. So if you prefer to Google/DuckDuckGo your shit by
  | first opening a browser, this won't really affect you. It's
  | important philosophically and as an indicator of Msoft's
  | behaviour/strategy, but doesn't considerably affect users too
  | much.
  | 
  | Caveat - I haven't used Windows 11 so I'm unaware if they've
  | enhanced the number of places that these edge specific links
  | are used. In windows 10 I haven't even bothered to implement
  | some workaround because I never want to search the web from my
  | start menu
 
    | kroltan wrote:
    | Most "help"/"support" links on Windows 10 (and likely 11 too,
    | but I'm not curious to find out) in things like the control
    | panel or built-in applications also use this protocol and
    | force open Edge.
 
      | maybeOneDay wrote:
      | Ah, right you are.
 
  | literallyaduck wrote:
  | Just use linux. With proton and lutris, gaming is good.
  | Microsoft can keep it's draconian OS.
 
    | RosanaAnaDana wrote:
    | Second this. There is no real point in dual booting any
    | longer. Linux as a daily driver is fine. Pop_OS is plenty
    | good.
 
| thunderbong wrote:
| From the TFA -
| 
| This is not for http://, https://, file:// links. This is
| specifically for microsoft-edge:// links, which I've never seen.
| 
| I think this applies only for Progressive Web Apps (PWAs).
| 
| I'm wondering how many of the commentators here have actual read
| the article.
 
  | eli wrote:
  | No, microsoft-edge links are used through Windows itself when
  | it wants to show a webpage, e.g. from Cortana or a desktop
  | widget. They open in Edge even if you've told Windows you want
  | a different default browser
 
    | zuminator wrote:
    | FWIW seems to me that if you rename msedge.exe to
    | somethingelse.exe, that those microsoft-edge links don't work
    | any longer. I don't know if you can actually get it to open
    | another browser (I tried renaming firefox.exe to msedge.exe
    | without achieving the desired result) but at least you can
    | stop it from opening Edge, if that's what you want.
 
    | Maximus9000 wrote:
    | Even still, these are links that you're rarely (if ever)
    | using.
 
      | Mandatum wrote:
      | I didn't read the article. Glad I scrolled down this far,
      | my care for this is now 0.
 
  | [deleted]
 
| vernie wrote:
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Old_Man_and_the_Lisa
 
  | oceanghost wrote:
  | >In DVD commentary, the writers explained that while Mr. Burns
  | tried to change, he "couldn't help being himself"
  | 
  | Great reference, thank you.
 
| cosmotic wrote:
| As far as I know, the workaround is no longer needed
| 
| https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/microsoft/microsoft-re...
 
  | Someone1234 wrote:
  | You're conflating two different issues; Windows 11's
  | broken/anti-competitive default browser changing UI has been
  | improved (although annoying popups remain), but those defaults
  | are only used by _non-Microsoft software_.
  | 
  | Microsoft's other software uses "microsoft-edge://" links which
  | simply ignore the user's default browser choice and open in
  | Edge. When a workaround was found to fix this (i.e. to obey the
  | user's choice), Microsoft blocked it.
  | 
  | Plus Microsoft rushed out this Edge-link workaround patch to
  | retail, while sitting on the default browser UI improvements
  | until next year.
 
  | neogodless wrote:
  | It's two different things.
  | 
  | 1. This article is about Windows and Microsoft applications
  | forcing use of Edge, ignoring your default browser entirely.
  | 
  | 2. Your article is about setting your default browser.
 
  | majormunky wrote:
  | The fix from that article has to do with how one would go about
  | setting a different default browser. Earlier, they had to do
  | this by associating the browser with filetypes, so, someone
  | would have to make multiple changes to fully set their browser
  | default. Now, you can just set the browser like you would
  | think.
  | 
  | The issue at hand though has to do with other links within
  | windows that open web pages. Microsoft had used a different
  | protocol (not https, but, something like microsoft-edge://). I
  | think these links are like news items that show up in the start
  | menu, etc. There was no way to set Firefox to open these links
  | with what Windows provided, it only opened in Edge. A program
  | was written that listens for these protocols, and would let the
  | user customize what program opened with those links were
  | clicked. Microsoft has now shut that option down.
 
| arepublicadoceu wrote:
| Windows 11 was an absolute downgrade to my Windows 10 experience.
| To the point that I went back to windows 10 in less than a day of
| Windows 11.
| 
| 1. I can't ungroup the taskbar windows. So now I have to hoover
| the taskbar to see multiple instances of the same software;
| 
| 2. Who the hell thought it was a great idea to couple all the
| commands like WiFi, power energy, etc under the same menu? On
| Windows 11 I needed to click the WiFi icon, select WiFi menu,
| select a WiFi to connect to. Whereas on windows 10 I just click
| on the WiFi symbol and choose the WiFi. I don't like my computer
| auto connecting to the Internet so I manually connect whenever I
| want and use this menu multiple times a day.
| 
| 3. Speaking of great ideas, now all the right click useful stuff
| is behind a second menu... Pure genius move.
| 
| I know I can hack my way around these issues but I don't see the
| point of installing sketchy software or messing registry hacks to
| fix this mess. I will use Windows 10 until its end of life.
 
  | dsego wrote:
  | > Who the hell thought it was a great idea to couple all the
  | commands like WiFi, power energy, etc under the same menu?
  | 
  | ahem, gnome, ahem
 
  | GhettoComputers wrote:
  | Look up Windows LTSC, it's like Win10 that acts like Win7
 
    | throaway46546 wrote:
    | LTSC now
 
      | GhettoComputers wrote:
      | I went from Win7 to LTSB, then upgraded to LTSC (for gpu
      | passthrough) but still hated it for some reason, mainly
      | needing to undo windows changes and various issues that
      | should have been defaults. I went to KDE and use windows
      | only for some Win software that didn't work on VM or wine.
      | 
      | I miss Windows 2000 Pro, it wasn't bloated, pretty fast,
      | didn't crash and had the fewest problems.
 
  | medlazik wrote:
  | It's still Windows, we can tweak everything _exactly_ how we
  | want it.
  | 
  | https://github.com/valinet/ExplorerPatcher
  | 
  | https://ramensoftware.com/7-taskbar-tweaker-on-windows-11-wi...
  | 
  | I've been using 7taskbar for years, it's rock solid.
  | ExplorerPatcher is a new requirement, works great and adds tons
  | of features.
 
    | RealStickman_ wrote:
    | Maybe it's just me, but tweaking Windows extensively always
    | feels like you're fighting against the OS.
    | 
    | I don't have these issues with my Linux installs.
 
      | GhettoComputers wrote:
      | You don't uninstall snap if you use Ubuntu?
 
    | GhettoComputers wrote:
    | Don't forget classicshell!
 
| danjc wrote:
| Ok I'll take the contrarian view. Why is it a big deal that a
| specialized url scheme is specifically intended to launch a
| Microsoft browser? Only apps built by Microsoft will use that
| scheme.
 
  | kroltan wrote:
  | You go to your system settings, and set your "default Web
  | browser".
  | 
  | You use any feature of the OS that would open a Web page, like
  | Start menu searches, "help" links (that nowadays are just links
  | to Bing searches, another shitshow I won't get into), or
  | dynamic wallpaper info bites.
  | 
  | The system says "fuck you" and opens the browser that is more
  | convenient to their economic goals rather than your explicit
  | choice.
  | 
  | Is it illegal? Thank god no. Is it subversive and a complete
  | dick move? Definitely.
 
    | Thiez wrote:
    | Why shouldn't it be illegal?
 
  | [deleted]
 
  | 34679 wrote:
  | As far as privacy is concerned, there's not much difference
  | between using someone's browser and inviting them into you
  | home. Imagine two people show up at your door. One is your
  | trusted friend. The other is your landlord's friend, and you
  | don't trust them.
  | 
  | Would it be a big deal for your landlord to push his friend in
  | the door when you try to let your friend in? After all, he owns
  | the home (you just pay for a license to use it), and he trusts
  | his friend, so why should you care?
 
  | ivraatiems wrote:
  | Because Microsoft makes Windows, and therefore can force
  | anything Windows tries to open to use that scheme. This means
  | you can never view search results, weather, news, etc. that
  | Windows provides to you integrated into its experience in any
  | browser other than edge.
 
| ulzeraj wrote:
| Windows 10 and 11 retail "user experience" seems to be written
| with telemetry in mind. You as a home user don't even need to pay
| for windows anymore if you are ok with the watermark. However you
| shouldn't mess with their telemetry-exporter-disguised-as-a-
| chrome-reskin golden egg.
 
| jhoelzel wrote:
| I have a feeling that MS is playing with fire again....
| 
| That every request made through the edge browser for a non local
| user is associated to his/her live ID is pure coincidence ;)
| 
| Sometimes when I look into my dns logs, I cry a little bit inside
| too.
 
  | Datagenerator wrote:
  | That's the moment you fire up Firefox without prefetch nor
  | studies and enjoy the peaceful DNS logs without the constant
  | telemetry calls to LinkedIn and to all interested 3rd parties,
  | five eyes etc
 
    | jhoelzel wrote:
    | i thought that too!
    | 
    | but firefox has different dns requests going to their servers
    | as well.
 
      | no_time wrote:
      | On linux you can use IceCat. On windows, download
      | simplewall and block pingsender.exe there. Should get rid
      | of the queries if you combine it with userjs tweaking.
 
        | callamdelaney wrote:
        | Just setup pihole - you can run it on any server and use
        | it as a local dns server. Probably somebody else has done
        | the work to list these spammy domains.
 
        | paulryanrogers wrote:
        | What about DNS over HTTPS?
 
        | jhoelzel wrote:
        | thank you for the tip! I use an OpenWrt acces point that
        | is on my desk and uses dnsblocking through blacklists.
        | This way I have a wired and wifi network that block the
        | most annoying stuff by default. It also integrates nicely
        | with wireguard too.
 
| modeless wrote:
| Firefox should go all the way on this. Exploit bugs, modify
| binaries, whatever it takes. With user consent of course. If the
| user says they want Firefox to be their default browser, Firefox
| is justified in modifying the operating system to achieve that.
| Ultimately Microsoft is powerless to stop this except by using
| their antivirus to block installation of Firefox in the first
| place, and I'd like to see them try that because the blowback
| would be epic.
 
  | gentleman11 wrote:
  | Microsoft already warns you that Firefox might be malware and
  | that edge is more secure sometimes. It's only one step away
  | from a full ban. Decades ago, they got the monopoly treatment
  | for this stuff
 
    | outside1234 wrote:
    | But then Apple
 
    | prox wrote:
    | Isn't Microsoft gonna get slapped hard by the EU as anti
    | competitive practice? They are already got a fine for that
    | when IE6 was around.
 
  | lazulicurio wrote:
  | > Ultimately Microsoft is powerless to stop this except by
  | using their antivirus to block installation of Firefox in the
  | first place
  | 
  | They've already started down that road with s mode, which is
  | default for new installs and not a separate SKU (anymore) that
  | you can avoid.
 
  | drdaeman wrote:
  | This. Just like in the ol' good days, install an API hook (e.g.
  | with Microsoft Detours[1]) that would patch relevant functions
  | in-memory. Microsoft cannot block this because they'll be
  | breaking lots of existing things (automation tools, gaming
  | overlays, AV software even).
  | 
  | And if MS would want to play it rough and start blocking hook
  | DLLs with permission barriers, make this API patcher a kernel
  | module.
  | 
  | [1]: https://github.com/microsoft/detours
 
  | gchamonlive wrote:
  | I mean, people already install what are basically kernel level
  | rootkits so they are able to play competitive multiplayer
  | games. It is no stretch from what is accepted for Firefox to
  | dig into the OS and stand its ground
 
| cronix wrote:
| So far in the last year or so, I've heard 0 reasons why I'd even
| need, want or benefit from Win11 over Win10. Tons of reasons in
| the negative column though. There isn't even anything to salivate
| over that might make you think it might be worth it to deal with
| the other tradeoffs. Hard pass.
 
  | rbreaves wrote:
  | I have 1 reason. ConPTY - it simply works better on Windows 11.
  | VSCode actually respects mouse support under 11 w/ POSIX
  | compliant terminals - but not under 10. That is it, and for RDP
  | but 10 did equally well with RDP, except for the ConPTY support
  | being broken.
  | 
  | So all in all the main reason I use 11 is for better mouse
  | support in terminals that finally puts Windows on the same
  | playing level as macOS or Linux for me. I still hate the OS,
  | but at least it is usable after countless hours of doing other
  | fixes.
 
  | zionic wrote:
  | If you're a gamer autoHDR and direct storage support are both
  | wins. Also, if you have alder lake you want the new scheduler.
 
    | mehlmao wrote:
    | My understanding is that Windows 11 doesn't have Direct
    | Storage yet, and they've announced that it will come to
    | Windows 10 as well.
 
  | ocdtrekkie wrote:
  | Yeah, I'm sure over the next few years there will be things
  | that come out worth having, but especially while both are
  | supported it is mostly a new coat of paint with a higher
  | minimum system requirement.
  | 
  | Eventually we'll be there, but there's no incentive to get
  | there right now.
 
  | PostThisTooFast wrote:
  | Windows has become a disgraceful pile of defects, in both
  | design and function.
  | 
  | Combine that fact with the lack of fundamental applications
  | (Windows doesn't even ship with a functional E-mail program),
  | and you get a shitty, useless computing experience.
  | 
  | Mac or Linux. Windows is dead.
 
  | Bluecobra wrote:
  | Indeed, I'm going to try holding out on Windows 10 until the
  | next version. Win11 seems like another Vista or Windows 8 to me
  | so far. I can't even run Win11 with my current hardware anyways
  | for silly arbitrary reasons. I have an Intel Skylake CPU + need
  | to boot over legacy BIOS due to a on-board RAID. Both work
  | completely fine and my PC is still performant enough, but don't
  | meet the requirements.
 
  | sydney6 wrote:
  | The most common reason i've heard has been: "Yeah, but it's so
  | much more biutiful than Windows 10." But then again, this
  | appears to work quite well for Microsoft.
 
  | tyingq wrote:
  | The "wslg" version of WSL, which comes with a Wayland display
  | server built-in, is perhaps a driver.
  | 
  | The github page still says it requires Windows 11:
  | https://github.com/microsoft/wslg
  | 
  | Though I suppose it's possible they've also pushed it to the
  | insider builds for Windows 10.
 
    | cma wrote:
    | Apparently they are only going to allow gpu compute on wsl2
    | on windows 10 and not allow the full graphics integration.
 
      | tyingq wrote:
      | Ah that's dumb. One of the best things about wslg is pretty
      | pedestrian, but very helpful. You can make Windows
      | shortcuts to launch applications in a very easy way now.
      | 
      | Within the "Target:" setting, for a shortcut, just
      | "wslg.exe /some/program -args". No wrappers, no setting
      | DISPLAY, no calling /bin/sh -c "whatever", etc.
 
  | krautsourced wrote:
  | Whether these are reasons for you I can't say, for me it's: -
  | proper support of dual monitor setups (particularly via
  | Displayport) and remembering window positions - WSL2
  | integration (it really does work great) - eventual drop of Win
  | 10 support
  | 
  | Not great: - new taskbar is meh - preferences are still all
  | over the place
 
  | josephcsible wrote:
  | Unfortunately, there's one very big reason you'll need Windows
  | 11: that Windows 10 won't get security updates forever. After
  | October 14th, 2025, you'll need to "upgrade" to it to stay
  | secure.
 
    | cronix wrote:
    | Considering the state of security in modern computing devices
    | and the various OS's that power them, security updates mean
    | less and less to me over time. Nothing is secure and likely
    | won't ever be. I'd argue we're collectively less secure in
    | 2021 than in 1995 despite massive advances in all other areas
    | of the field.
 
      | willis936 wrote:
      | The flashlight is just on. 1995 computers were trivial to
      | compromise and still are.
      | 
      | If perfection is unattainable does that mean we should snap
      | to the other extreme and set all of our passwords to
      | "password"?
 
        | BrS96bVxXBLzf5B wrote:
        | We would only be coming full circle.
        | https://donhopkins.medium.com/mit-ai-lab-tourist-
        | policy-f73b...
 
        | tentacleuno wrote:
        | There's a saying for this: "don't let perfect be the
        | enemy of good"[0].
        | 
        | [0]: https://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/don%27t+let+per
        | fect+be+...
 
      | tomsmeding wrote:
      | Adding features probably increases the number of bugs, but
      | security updates generally reduce the number of
      | (exploitable) bugs. So I think that not taking security
      | updates is throwing the baby away with the bathwater; stay
      | on Win10 as long as you like, but apply the security
      | updates.
 
        | tentacleuno wrote:
        | You can actually block feature updates and still allow
        | security updates on Windows 10 through GPO (Win + R,
        | gpedit.msc). Pretty cool and somewhat little-known
        | feature.
 
    | jimnotgym wrote:
    | I got XP, skipped Vista, got 7, skipped 8, got 10...I think I
    | will skip 11
 
      | hdjjhhvvhga wrote:
      | What makes you think that, say, the Edge link issue will be
      | solved in Windows 12? It looks like Microsoft has run out
      | of ideas and does not have enough innovation to genuinely
      | offer anything interesting in an operating system. Besides,
      | an OS has become a commodity, something you expect to just
      | work, not to be excited about like in the old days of
      | Windows 95 when people literally queued to buy their copy.
 
        | behnamoh wrote:
        | I mean, they _could_ get rid of legacy designs (e.g.,
        | control panel and screen saver windows), but instead,
        | they 've focused on offering yet another design layer on
        | top of the previous ones, which has much overlap in
        | functionality with the previous design (e.g., you could
        | control your bluetooth both in Control Panel and in the
        | new settings app). You'd think MS would be able to unify
        | all this mess and consolidate Windows settings, but no.
 
        | tjalfi wrote:
        | > You'd think MS would be able to unify all this mess and
        | consolidate Windows settings, but no.
        | 
        | Removing or redesigning the Control Panel would break
        | third-party apps that rely on the existing structure;
        | Raymond Chen's blog[0] has mentioned apps doing this.
        | 
        | [0] https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/
 
        | FridayoLeary wrote:
        | Do you think that the OS is dead, or almost dead? That
        | would lead to decades of stagnation, followed by a race
        | to the bottom. If that's true Windows should become a
        | dumpster fire. And the linux desktop will solve
        | everything, just decades too late.
 
        | hdjjhhvvhga wrote:
        | I'm far from saying the OS is dead: it is a necessary
        | component of all modern devices. The point is, it's a
        | commodity now. Apple doesn't charge for it. Linux
        | distributors don't charge for it. Google doesn't charge
        | users for it. And Microsoft not only charges for it, but
        | introduces a ton of adware, telemetry and so forth. For
        | technically-conscious users, it's suboptimal.
        | 
        | I don't believe in a sudden revolutionary change. Linux
        | and macOS do increase their presence on the desktop, but
        | the curve is almost flat, so it will take decades to even
        | break even. Nevertheless, the trend exists, and Microsoft
        | would have to do something very unusual to reverse it.
        | 
        | For me personally this is very important because the PC
        | is one of the last open computing platforms.
 
    | causality0 wrote:
    | Good news, in four years I run out of reasons not to go back
    | to Windows 7, an OS that doesn't treat me with naked
    | contempt.
 
      | NullPrefix wrote:
      | they pushed updates for windowns 7 to nag windows 10
      | upgrade
 
        | cheschire wrote:
        | If you setup a VM with WSUS, you can use that to setup an
        | ideal install that is missing the annoying updates. If
        | you capture an image right after doing that, you'll never
        | need to install again.
 
        | NullPrefix wrote:
        | You need to know which updates are bad and which are
        | OKish. I assume there's a list somewhere, right?
 
        | StillBored wrote:
        | Just block that update, something i'm not sure you can
        | even do with 10..
 
    | soco wrote:
    | That's 4 good years to wait and see.
 
      | xgbi wrote:
      | > That's 4 good years to see if the grass is greener on the
      | Unix side
      | 
      | There, I fixed it
 
        | lowbloodsugar wrote:
        | 2025: The year of the linux desktop! For sure this time!
 
        | lostmsu wrote:
        | If only Linux implemented GPU scheduling in that time...
 
      | aceazzameen wrote:
      | Yeah, that gives me 4 more years to investigate Linux.
 
      | ByThyGrace wrote:
      | I left Windows desktop for Linux two years ago, and what I
      | realize now that took a while to happen was a shift in
      | mentality:
      | 
      | - When you use Windows, you consume the OS. Everything
      | about it is given, all you do is take.
      | 
      | - When you use Linux, you take part in a give-and-take
      | relationship with the OS, because the OS is attached to a
      | community that works on it, around it.
      | 
      | Using Linux means that you're not going to have everything
      | given to you on a silver plate. But you also get to make
      | your own silver plate and pass it around.
 
        | soco wrote:
        | Probably we have very different use cases. I use my
        | laptop to browse, edit documents, develop programs and
        | transfer/view media files. In all these I'd very much
        | like to not even know I have an operating system. So the
        | major difference is I'm not using the laptop to have
        | relationships, with it or with some community, and the
        | less I need to fiddle outside the above use cases, the
        | more I appreciate the experience.
 
    | InitialLastName wrote:
    | That gives me four years for the tools that lock me to
    | Windows to decide to port to literally any other OS.
 
      | ArnoVW wrote:
      | After 30 years on Windows I switched this month to Linux,
      | for pretty much the same reason. It's great. And it feels
      | so _fast_. All my software exists natively on Linux
      | (minecraft and game emulators for the kids, KNIME,
      | Intellij, and Blender is a lot faster on Linux). No Word or
      | PowerPoint, but there 's Libre Office and it's good enough.
      | 
      | Who'd have thought that 2021 would be the year of Linux on
      | the desktop. Not because it has gradually improved (it
      | has), but because the alternative has declined so much.
 
        | AnIdiotOnTheNet wrote:
        | I've been saying something to that effect for years,
        | actually. Here's an example:
        | 
        | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18150284
        | 
        | > As a vocal critic of the Linux Desktop, even I feel
        | that soon Microsoft will have succeeded in making Windows
        | so horrifically awful and user-hostile that the Linux
        | Desktop will start to look good by comparison.
 
        | zibzab wrote:
        | I use multiple platforms at work and that's really the
        | biggest difference to me.
        | 
        | Linux is much faster, like a lot! Specially on older
        | hardware. And not only the filesystem and that stuff.
        | With recent gnome versions the interface is much more
        | fluid too.
 
        | franczesko wrote:
        | With Google Docs, Microsoft Office (maybe besides Excel)
        | is pretty much redundant.
 
        | zibzab wrote:
        | Only if you never work with other people, who use office
        | for whatever reason.
        | 
        | Also, not everyone wants their files in the cloud.
        | Although that's getting harder and harder with Office
        | too.
 
        | FourthProtocol wrote:
        | I will stick with MS Office. I can use it when
        | disconnected from everything, and (note hyperbole, but
        | the cynicism is real) I avoid the creepy feeling that
        | Google is logging every mouse movement and keystoke I
        | make for teh ads.
        | 
        | In fact I welcome my evil Microsoft overlord any day
        | before I use something from Google. I see MS as the
        | lesser of two evils.
 
        | a5aAqU wrote:
        | > I avoid the creepy feeling that Google is logging every
        | mouse movement and keystoke I make for teh ads.
        | 
        | Microsoft is doing it too:
        | 
        | https://www.pcworld.com/article/423165/how-to-turn-off-
        | windo...
        | 
        | There's still Linux.
 
        | AstroDogCatcher wrote:
        | At this point I think if you desperately need MS Office,
        | MacOS is the way to go. I will never buy a Windows
        | machine again, and being forced to use it in a work
        | setting would be a deal-breaker. Fortunately at this
        | point even MS isn't stupid enough to make that a
        | requirement as far as I'm aware.
 
        | api wrote:
        | ... unless you want to own your own data and not be data
        | mined.
 
        | PretzelSweat wrote:
        | What distro did you choose to run?
 
      | canadaduane wrote:
      | That has been my thinking as well. I officially migrated
      | from my Windows PC and my MacBook Pro to Linux (Pop!_OS on
      | a Framework laptop) this year. Both companies have been
      | slowly showing signs that their values are drifting away
      | from things I care about (ownership, control, privacy). I'm
      | willing to budge a little to accommodate alternate
      | viewpoints, but it's been clear that they've picked a
      | direction and their tanks will just keep crushing each of
      | the lines in the sand.
 
        | scblock wrote:
        | I have Pop!_OS on a Framework laptop as well and if it
        | wasn't a project laptop meant entirely for the purpose of
        | being a project laptop and test bed for a few things I
        | would chuck it out the window. In the reality of actually
        | using the computer every single thing about my 5 year old
        | MacBook Pro (the one everyone loves to hate) is better
        | except maybe the keyboard, and that's not as cut and dry
        | as the internet would pretend.
        | 
        | Everything works except everything that doesn't work
        | well. Fractional scaling is a mess, integer scaling is
        | not much better. YouTube on Firefox can barely play 1080p
        | videos. Scrolling is anything but smooth, and the system
        | doesn't appear to be doing much drawing on the GPU at
        | all. When connected to an external 4k monitor running at
        | 1.5x scale (how I use it with Windows and macOS) the
        | system gets really slow.
        | 
        | Wayland is better performance wise, but at 1.5x scale
        | (the best overall balance for the screen size and
        | resolution) all electron based apps, which rely on
        | xwayland, are blurry, and these days that's a lot of apps
        | (including Slack, VS Code, and Zettlr which I run on all
        | my systems). Kernel and driver support is mostly there
        | except for the frequent regressions, so some features
        | will in one version will break on the next kernel
        | version, but it's fixed in the next next version, and
        | that is not good enough. Power consumption on use is
        | decent, but battery drain on sleep is atrocious even if
        | you enable "deep sleep" which makes the machine take 5+
        | seconds to wake up.
        | 
        | Meanwhile Gnome insists on hiding as many settings from
        | you as possible, so to set up CalDav contact syncing,
        | which is managed by Gnome, I had to install an additional
        | email app I won't use because the Gnome account manager
        | doesn't bother to expose a UI to manage the account
        | directly. And if I screw up the settings in the mail
        | client Geary, which otherwise works well and is what I
        | use, I have to delete the account and start over because
        | there's no UI I can find to view and edit the server
        | settings. It's completely ridiculous.
        | 
        | So the Pop!_OS team has built a really nice looking UI
        | and a pretty good overall user experience (best I've had
        | on Linux over the years), but it's all on top of a big
        | pile of half working garbage. So it's simultaneously a
        | really nice UI compared to my Windows 10 machine while
        | being entirely frustrating to use.
 
        | ChuckNorris89 wrote:
        | I beg you to give OpenSUSE Tumbleweed with KDE, in the
        | form of Gecko Linux Rolling, a try for a much more
        | polished experience.
        | 
        | Tumbleweed, like Arch, is a rolling release so unlike the
        | Debian based distros you'll always have the latest
        | drivers and updates (development progress on Linux moves
        | fast so why be stuck on outdated packages? I really can't
        | in good conscience recommend PC users Debian/Ubuntu
        | distros for a great experience), but unlike Arch, it's
        | without sacrificing stability since its packages are
        | tested so it's much less likely that an update will break
        | something.
        | 
        | The developer of Gecko Linux Rolling, takes Tumbleweed
        | and makes it desktop friendly by including non-OSS repos,
        | non-OSS fonts, and non-OSS codecs plus other tweaks and
        | creature comforts that turn make it easier to have a
        | pleasant experience after the installation.
        | 
        | Trackpad is still not as polished as Windows or Mac but
        | that's universal on Linux except Elementary OS.
 
      | iso1631 wrote:
      | Saw people say the same with XP into Vista. The
      | relationship people seem to have with windows is like
      | someone trapped in an abusive relationship.
      | 
      | On the other hand from what I read,
      | 
      | XP - good
      | 
      | Vista - Bad
      | 
      | 7 - good
      | 
      | 8 - bad
      | 
      | 10 - good
      | 
      | 11 - bad
      | 
      | I don't have any experience in any of those so I'm not how
      | true it is, but if it is, I guess hope that 12 will be out
      | by EOL of 10?
 
        | Levitz wrote:
        | Calling 10 "good" is a stretch. I'd still be using 7 if
        | it wasn't for security updates. The snip tool and
        | multiple desktops are the only things I use, and in
        | exchange I have a truckload of stuff I have to disable to
        | even make my OS usable, a useless search function and
        | obscured menus, absolutely not worth it.
        | 
        | I have no hope of win12 being anywhere near good and will
        | probably switch to about anything else.
 
        | PeterisP wrote:
        | Well, it's clearly better than Windows 8.
 
        | cedricd wrote:
        | I've run all of them over the years (progressively
        | upgrading like a good computer user). It's not even
        | subtle. The good / bad dynamic is drastic.
        | 
        | And each 'bad' always brings to it a horrible UI change.
        | Vista brought the window manager and those weird
        | transparent windows and was generally ugly and buggy. Win
        | 7 cleaned up the UI and made it flatter and simpler.
        | 
        | 8 brought a full-screen start menu (!!). 10 went back to
        | a 7-esque vibe (mostly).
        | 
        | 11 is where we are.
 
        | StillBored wrote:
        | Can you name what made the "good" releases good? Because
        | when I look at the list, I can name bad things for every
        | single "good" release that I disliked. Much of what makes
        | a "good" release though, isn't that MS fixes anything
        | from the "bad" release they just reskin a later service
        | pack from the "bad" release and try not to break to many
        | things. If you skip the "bad" releases it makes the
        | "good" ones bad.
        | 
        | 2000->XP, forced online activation, if you moved from
        | ME->XP they finally broke a lot of dos era apps. That
        | isn't to say that XP is that far from 2000 which IMHO
        | remains the best windows MS ever released (particularly
        | after SP3). The only significant thing of value MS has
        | added since XP, is 64-bit support, and that is
        | questionable if you consider there was a 64-bit XP.
        | 
        | vista->7, this one is harder, maybe the biggest ding is,
        | that this is where they started to remove all the classic
        | mode UI paradigms that were in place for 15+ years. So,
        | while vista was such a mess that going from XP->7 was a
        | shock, even on a PC 2x+ faster the UI still lags because
        | much of the win32 graphics stack and sound system is now
        | emulated on the processor rather than handed off to the
        | graphics card driver.
        | 
        | Win8->win 10, even more ad's, forced updates, can't
        | permanently disable the virus scanner that eats 50%+ of
        | the disk IOP rate, the list here is endless.
        | 
        | In the case of 10-11, I don't think anyone would really
        | have cared if they hadn't decided to screw with the start
        | menu/task bar again. That is the one thing that raises
        | the ire of windows users, yet they seem to always screw
        | with it. I think secure boot/etc is less of an issue for
        | people than it was 15 years ago (and IIRC someone already
        | has a workaround).
 
        | handrous wrote:
        | 10 is also quite bad. It adds _very_ little useful over
        | Win7, while making several built-in programs worse and
        | infecting the whole thing with spying and ads.
        | 
        | They're on a bad streak.
 
      | willis936 wrote:
      | I'm not old and I have lived to see this sentiment come and
      | go at least twice before. We're still on Windows.
 
        | Lorkki wrote:
        | On the other hand, some of it sticks. For one thing,
        | gaming on Linux has improved by leaps and bounds
        | approximately since the announcement of Windows 10.
 
        | thrower123 wrote:
        | Gaming on Linux gave up on trying to build native ports
        | and Valve put some real effort into making their Windows
        | compatibility layer that sits on Linux good.
 
        | AnthonyMouse wrote:
        | > I'm not old and I have lived to see this sentiment come
        | and go at least twice before. We're still on Windows.
        | 
        | In that time we've seen Microsoft concede the mobile
        | market to iOS and Android and the server market to Linux
        | and Google Docs manage to take a major chunk out of MS
        | Office.
        | 
        | Microsoft is still extremely profitable, but it's not
        | because of Windows anymore. Which is why they're now
        | comfortable risking defection by screwing over the
        | Windows customer more than ever. But that's what happens
        | at the end, not the middle.
 
        | smoldesu wrote:
        | Then why wait? Programs like Photoshop and Ableton Live
        | work just fine through WINE. I have a hard time imagining
        | what kind of software you can't replace on modern
        | Linux...
 
        | neltnerb wrote:
        | Even LabView runs natively on Linux now, so my reason for
        | the last fifteen years may draw to a close soon.
        | Microsoft decided to put Office in the cloud, so don't
        | need Windows for that anymore... VMware is also quite
        | good if WINE isn't good enough for some reason.
        | 
        | There's some rare expensive equipment that doesn't have
        | Linux support (I'm talking $100k mechanical testing
        | equipment and CNC machines) but those only need one
        | computer each. Of course those probably won't support
        | Windows 11 either, they barely supported Windows 10.
 
        | serf wrote:
        | while these can be made to work ..
        | Fusion360/SolidWorks/CATIA/Siemens NX are notoriously
        | hard to make work, and when they do the fixes usually
        | only last a single patch; and these softwares (aside from
        | SolidWorks) are all always-connected and auto-updating.
        | 
        | and unfortunately a lot of that software is simply
        | career-making.
        | 
        | It's simply an arms-race that can't be won from the
        | consumer perspective without applying adequate pressure
        | to the companies to try and facilitate a legitimate
        | release.
        | 
        | it's hard to run any kind of business software to run any
        | kind of business when it's in the back of your mind
        | whether or not Autodesk has pushed an update to break
        | everything by the time you need to use the software and
        | have actual clients and money waiting for the work.
        | 
        | I'd drop all my windows machines in a heart beat if those
        | companies would consider the GNU/Linux market, but i'm
        | not really holding my breath -- they make a ton of money
        | on their captive audience.
 
        | chris_wot wrote:
        | Fusion 360 has a webassembly version, runs remarkably
        | well!
 
        | hobos_delight wrote:
        | I remember there being a browser beta version, but I
        | thought this was pulled.
        | 
        | Has it come back? Because that would be wonderful!
 
        | chabad360 wrote:
        | At least for fusion360, check out this project:
        | https://github.com/cryinkfly/Autodesk-Fusion-360-for-
        | Linux
        | 
        | It makes using fusion on wine really easy, and it runs
        | surprisingly well too.
 
        | smoldesu wrote:
        | You're not necessarily wrong, but the vast majority of
        | recent WINE developments have been going into making it a
        | much more stable experience. The past decade of WINE
        | development has pretty much been about throwing the
        | kitchen sink at your program and praying that it works,
        | but companies like Valve have made some pretty wild
        | overhauls to the system that allow for both leaner _and_
        | more predictable prefixes. It 's still not perfect (and
        | as you've suggested, will likely never be), but the gap
        | is definitely closing. We've gotten to the point where
        | people are confident shipping Linux consoles because the
        | Windows compatibility layer is just _that good_. Game
        | studios are able to support Linux-based platforms without
        | targeting a build for the OS in the first place. As the
        | technology continues to be refined, I can definitely see
        | some CAD and studio software developers experimenting
        | with the tech.
        | 
        | Much like you, I'm pretty pessimistic about the whole
        | thing. It's safe to assume that nobody cares about it,
        | but it's also still too early to say for sure. In 5
        | years, WINE could well be a stable development platform
        | for third-party developers who want to focus on a Windows
        | build but also offer compatibility with other operating
        | systems. Stranger things have happened.
 
        | InitialLastName wrote:
        | It would take a lot of progress for me to bet my
        | livelihood on WINE functionality for niche software
        | (whose customer support I pay for, and whose support
        | agents would hang up on me the moment it became clear I
        | was having trouble while not running on Windows).
 
        | InitialLastName wrote:
        | These are my problem. Situations where "maybe the export
        | is a little wrong because an update mucked with the
        | optimal Wine configuration" don't fly when I'm about to
        | bet the business (or a less extreme version, drop
        | multiple yearly salaries) on a production run of some
        | hardware.
 
        | ahnick wrote:
        | Fortnite
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | tentacleuno wrote:
        | > Programs like Photoshop and Ableton Live work just fine
        | through WINE.
        | 
        | Could you expand on this, please? What was your
        | experience working with Photoshop in WINE? What version /
        | CC of Photoshop did you use? Did you use PlayOnLinux,
        | which supports this IIRC?
 
        | smoldesu wrote:
        | Photoshop CS6 works pretty reliably on the majority of
        | setups, I remember having an... ahem, perfectly legal
        | copy installed without needing to use any install helpers
        | whatsoever. WINE just downloaded all of the dependencies
        | before launching the installer and it worked like a
        | charm. According to WineHQ[0], the only features it seems
        | to be missing is the updater that came with it. Creative
        | Cloud seems to be a bit more hit-or-miss, but I genuinely
        | don't know many people running CC these days. It might be
        | worth doing your own research there.
        | 
        | Ableton Live 10 works fine though, I played around with
        | it for a while before switching to Bitwig (which has a
        | native Linux build), and I really didn't have any
        | complaints besides the CPU usage being marginally higher
        | than native Windows. I haven't tried it recently either,
        | so the situation may well have improved.
        | 
        | EDIT: just reinstalled my copy of Live 11, it works out-
        | of-the-box with WINE installed and no configuration.
        | 
        | I can't go around making claims that it's perfect, but
        | it's pretty damn close. You may as well see for yourself,
        | all the software (WINE, Linux, etc) is free.
        | 
        | [0] https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=ver
        | sion&iI...
 
        | xxpor wrote:
        | Does low latency audio work through WINE? I don't care
        | about the specific tech used, as long as midi->hearing
        | audio works well enough to actually play a piano.
 
        | smoldesu wrote:
        | Depends on what you consider low, Live reported that it
        | was around 45ms of latency using the default settings on
        | the DirectAudio driver, I didn't bother to install
        | ASIO4ALL and try it that way though. You could also bring
        | it down by reducing the buffer size, but I didn't really
        | mess with that either. Native DAWs can hit 5-10ms of
        | latency though, I'd bet with a minimal amount of
        | tinkering you could get it to hover around 15ms through
        | WINE.
 
        | DashAnimal wrote:
        | What about VSTs using iLok? Ive only shallowly looked at
        | it in the past but haven't heard good things
 
        | smoldesu wrote:
        | VSTs using iLok barely work on Windows/MacOS, I'd imagine
        | their chances of working on Linux to be fairly slim,
        | courtesy of the fact that the DRM is often larger than
        | the plugin itself. Some manufacturers like U-HE have
        | taken it upon themselves to start releasing Linux builds
        | of their VSTs (albeit without support) and they seem to
        | work really well from what I've tried.
        | 
        | So yeah, DRM is still an issue but the tides may be
        | turning, especially now that the audio subsystem on Linux
        | just got a massive rework.
 
        | scruple wrote:
        | Thankfully we have options. I'm planning on moving my
        | main desktop to Arch over my Christmas break from work.
        | It's been a while since I ran Linux as my main desktop,
        | my only complaints have been around gaming performance. I
        | have a friend who plays the same games as I do and he's
        | got everything working on his Arch install. That's really
        | the only thing that holds me on Windows and if it's as
        | smooth of a transition as I believe it currently is then
        | I just have no reason to not give it another fair shake.
 
        | BrandoElFollito wrote:
        | I try to move to Linux desktop one or twice a year for
        | the last, what, 20 years.
        | 
        | I have Linux on all my servers, was an early (very minor)
        | dev on pre-1 kernel and generally love it.
        | 
        | The desktop is a walking nightmare. Something
        | continuously does not work: multiple screens, waking up
        | from sleep etc.
        | 
        | I really would like to move (we use Outlook but I am even
        | ready to go for OWA) but Windows is considerably better
        | on laptops.
        | 
        | Again, I love Linux and have managed literally thousands
        | of them since 1994.
 
        | viraptor wrote:
        | > Something continuously does not work: multiple screens,
        | waking up from sleep etc.
        | 
        | That's my experience with Windows as well though. On Dell
        | xps on windows my external monitor goes blank sometimes
        | and sleep randomly causes overheating and fast battery
        | drain. On the other hand Linux handles it just fine. Win
        | is not consistently better anymore.
 
        | rapind wrote:
        | I'll add that m1 macs have been a shit show for external
        | monitor support (ymmv but google it and you'll find
        | thousand page long support issues).
        | 
        | It's either rocket science to get monitors to work
        | flawlessly or it's the B team working on it. Probably the
        | former given that it's also a problem on Linux and
        | windoze.
 
        | aquir wrote:
        | The same, I always try but go back to Windows because on
        | desktop it's unusable due to silly issues like what
        | you've mentioned
 
        | tombert wrote:
        | Haven't you heard? It's the year of the Linux desktop :)
        | 
        | In all seriousness, until about a year ago when I got a
        | discount on a Macbook and changed to that, I had been
        | running Linux for about a decade across different
        | laptops, and feel that since ~2017 the desktop experience
        | has improved _substantially_. I bought a new laptop in
        | 2017, installed Ubuntu on it...and that was it. I spent
        | exactly zero minutes installing drivers or mucking with
        | configurations, multiple monitors with HDMI audio worked
        | out of the box, and  "going to sleep upon the lid
        | closing" just worked. Granted, I'm a bit of a Linux
        | veteran at this so maybe there were a lot of things I was
        | tweaking that I just don't remember since I do them so
        | often, but I do not think that was the case, since I got
        | my wife (who is not a software engineer) using Ubuntu as
        | well for awhile.
        | 
        | I think part of what made it better was using AMD
        | hardware for everything. The drivers are just included
        | with the kernel, and they work great out of the box, at
        | least for me.
        | 
        | I realize that telling everyone to shop for a computer
        | based on the drivers that will be available isn't exactly
        | a great sales pitch for Linux for the average consumer,
        | but I suspect if you frequent HN you probably have a
        | reasonable ability to differentiate video cards and
        | whatnot.
 
        | Decade wrote:
        | I'm using an AMD system as an OBS Studio streaming
        | system, and Linux was not great.
        | 
        | I first set it up with a Ryzen 5 3600 and Radeon HD 6750,
        | running Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, because I thought I didn't
        | really need that much processing power. After un-
        | blacklisting the driver for such an old GPU, I discovered
        | I was using upwards of 80% CPU and dropping frames while
        | streaming at 1440p, so I decided to upgrade.
        | 
        | Then, I tried a Ryzen 7 5700g with integrated Vega 8.
        | First, I needed to upgrade to Ubuntu 21.10 for such a new
        | GPU, and then OBS Studio was randomly crashing while
        | switching between scenes. Also, hardware video encoding
        | wasn't working well, so it was still taking upwards of
        | 80% CPU while streaming at 1440p. And the video outputs
        | were finicky, sending windows to the wrong screen on
        | power up. Random crashing is unusable, so I switched to
        | Windows.
        | 
        | With Windows 11 on the Ryzen 7 5700g, the hardware video
        | encoding works well, so the same scenes are taking less
        | than 50% CPU while streaming at 4K (2160p) and not
        | dropping any frames. Now I can do other things on the
        | stream.
 
        | tombert wrote:
        | I'm sorry you went through all that. I'm not going to ask
        | you to switch back to Linux, but it might be worth filing
        | a bug report with Ubuntu about this, since I doubt you
        | are the only person who wants to use a Linux computer to
        | stream video.
        | 
        | I used OBS when I was on Linux and it worked exactly as I
        | wanted it to, but I'll concede that I 1) wasn't gaming
        | and b) was using software encoding.
 
        | bee_rider wrote:
        | I'll typically do a minimal starting distro and lots of
        | tuning, which works decently I think in the desktop
        | world. But whenever I tried to apply this to a Laptop it
        | would fail miserably, I think because my various static
        | configurations don't work great for typical laptop use
        | cases.
        | 
        | Boring old Ubuntu with some DE customization works
        | totally fine on a laptop, though. I don't know why I
        | tried to do this hard-mode for years.
 
        | tombert wrote:
        | Yeah, I used to run a vanilla Arch install on my laptop,
        | and I did manage to get it working _almost_ as well as
        | Windows or macOS after about a week of tinkering, but
        | after a certain point I realized that I want to work on
        | cooler problems than mucking with systemd or dkms, so I
        | just installed Ubuntu and never looked back until I
        | bought a Macbook last year.
        | 
        | I think the newest versions of Ubuntu are great. They've
        | started to give me everything I like about macOS [1]
        | while being FOSS(ish) and portable to any computer I
        | want.
        | 
        | [1] Not comparing Ubuntu to macOS directly, but more of a
        | macOS "feel" in the sense of how I use it.
 
        | stonemetal12 wrote:
        | >Haven't you heard? It's the year of the Linux desktop :)
        | 
        | Nah, Steam deck got delayed to next year. I plan on going
        | Linux then. :)
 
        | tentacleuno wrote:
        | > and "going to sleep upon the lid closing" just worked.
        | 
        | And "not going to sleep upon the lid closing" just works,
        | too! I tried this when I hooked my laptop up to the TV.
        | Closing the lid did nothing. It only went to sleep when
        | you closed it _and_ unplugged the HDMI. I really really
        | liked that, despite it being a tiny detail.
 
        | tombert wrote:
        | Oh yeah! I had forgotten to mention that.
        | 
        | I can't really blame people for thinking that the Linux
        | desktop experience sucks, to be fair. As someone who used
        | it in 2012 and went through the pain of getting an
        | Optimus graphics card working correctly, and dealt with
        | the weird rendering issues of Gnome 3, and had to write a
        | bootup script to disable "tap to click" on my mousepad,
        | it's a reasonable complaint to say that the Linux desktop
        | is unfriendly.
        | 
        | I think a lot of people would genuinely like the 2021
        | Linux desktop experience if they tried it, but I fear
        | that it will be quite difficult to shake the (well
        | earned) stigma.
 
        | tentacleuno wrote:
        | > I can't really blame people for thinking that the Linux
        | desktop experience sucks, to be fair.
        | 
        | Nor me. A lot of it has been small things in my
        | experience though, like this trackpad being terrible, or
        | GNOME crashing once in a blue moon. I've definitely not
        | experienced the level of pain you had with Optimus, or
        | the rendering issues, which seems like a good thing.
        | Although... on the subject of rendering issues, Firefox
        | doesn't like it when the system is woken from sleep and
        | has a really weird glitching effect until you maximise
        | and restore the window.
        | 
        | On this laptop Linux hasn't been _that_ bad, honestly the
        | worst thing for me is this genuinely bad trackpad driver
        | that has massive jutter and is hilariously broken. I
        | might learn C so I can look into making my own.
        | 
        | I do agree on your last point(s). It's got substantially
        | better, but as always there are little things that
        | majorly hold it back (trackpad!) when the rest of the
        | system isn't actually that bad. I'd much prefer it to
        | Windows, despite its flaws.
 
        | tombert wrote:
        | Actually, outside of having trouble disabling tap to
        | click, I haven't had a ton of issues with the trackpad.
        | 
        | I also haven't had the Firefox rendering problems, but I
        | think that might be because for the last Linux laptop I
        | had, I specifically sought out a graphics card that was
        | likely to not have any issues.
        | 
        | > I might learn C so I can look into making my own.
        | 
        | I've thought about that too. If I weren't on Apple now I
        | probably would have already started on that, but the
        | closest thing I've done to any kind of "driver" has been
        | to make custom FUSE mount.
 
        | tentacleuno wrote:
        | > but Windows is considerably better on laptops.
        | 
        | I'll concede that if you're talking about the trackpad,
        | Linux is disappointingly bad compared to Windows. It's
        | really really shaky, scrolls up and down with a
        | _shockingly_ massive jitter. You start to wonder if the
        | trackpad itself is malfunctioning. Sadly, the same
        | trackpad works so much better on Windows.
        | 
        | This is mainly about the pointer / trackpad drivers to be
        | fair, but it's still a freestanding issue that has the
        | potential to really bug someone using Linux on a laptop.
        | It gets so bad I have to carry around a mouse.
 
        | stjohnswarts wrote:
        | Yeah some drivers are still garbage. My asus laptop works
        | great with trackpad but my dell not so much (it's an
        | older laptop)
 
        | tentacleuno wrote:
        | No shit! My laptop is a nearly 9 year old Dell Latitude.
        | Haven't tried the ASUS trackpads, but IIRC it was quite
        | smooth on an old Windows 8 netbook I had. Really miss
        | that thing.
 
        | scruple wrote:
        | I've been running Arch on my 8th (or maybe 7th?)
        | Generation ThinkPad X1C since I bought it in 2018. I've
        | had no issues with multiple monitors, hibernate, etc. I
        | never got the fingerprint reader working but I don't care
        | to use it regardless, so... Otherwise, though, it's been
        | completely solid the entire time I've had it and it's my
        | daily driver for personal project work.
 
        | anthk wrote:
        | Odd, I run Slackware-current, with Fluxbox.
        | 
        | To suspend, I just run "xlock & loginctl suspend" from a
        | script being called from a Fluxbox submenu. Dumb easy.
 
        | mattkevan wrote:
        | Good satire!
 
        | matkoniecz wrote:
        | Well, it is not like Windows is free from annoyances.
        | 
        | That at least for me were worse than inability to
        | hibernate.
 
        | westpfelia wrote:
        | Check out https://www.protondb.com
        | 
        | The only games that I really ever struggle with are ones
        | that have anticheat. And EasyAntiCheat is going linux
        | friendly so something like 95 of the top 100 games on
        | steam will either work natively or via proton.
        | 
        | And with Valve pushing the SteamDeck is see that number
        | going to 100 soon.
 
        | mediocregopher wrote:
        | Steam on linux will automatically pull in protondb
        | profiles for your games, so you probably don't even need
        | to explicitly "check out" protondb at this point. Most
        | games will "just work", with the exception of big AAA
        | games with picky anti-cheat engines.
 
        | r00fus wrote:
        | Yeah you may need to use Glorious Eggroll [1] for some
        | games.
        | 
        | [1] https://github.com/GloriousEggroll/proton-ge-
        | custom/releases
 
        | Bluecobra wrote:
        | This is great! Games are what is holding me back the
        | most... I am hoping that the Steam Deck really takes off
        | and more and more games are supported.
 
        | scruple wrote:
        | Thanks for that!
 
        | johnny22 wrote:
        | the proton side supports various anticheats, but the game
        | dev folks still have to enable support on their side.
 
        | matkoniecz wrote:
        | Dozens of people switched :)
        | 
        | At least I upgraded Windows 7 to Lubuntu
 
        | cdumler wrote:
        | Realize the people who complain how hard it is are the
        | people who are stuck. The people who don't made it out
        | aren't complaining. Get out takes effort, but also it
        | depends on how you approach it. If you look at trying to
        | leave as in "how to run what I have now without Windows
        | OS," you're going to have a bad time. Instead, I would
        | suggest a few approaches that make a transition a lot
        | easier:
        | 
        | _Look at it as opportunity_ Other platforms have other
        | ideas about how things should work. Instead of trying to
        | replace Windows, take the time to realize that it's not
        | the only way to solve problems. The Unix world has a
        | pretty different idea about what's the way to work, which
        | is often foreign until you realize there is a method to
        | the madness. If you want opinionated and guided, MacOS is
        | designed to have very strong "you won't have to worry
        | about that" goal. Linux is the opposite and very
        | flexible. So, you'll want to look at a lot of different
        | distributions, as they all have particular goals in mind.
        | 
        | _Reconsider your current software_ Look at your current
        | software and see if you can find replacements that are
        | cross platform. This can mean software that runs on
        | multiple platforms (Windows, MacOS, Linux, Android, iOS,
        | etc). This can also mean switching to cloud/self-hosted
        | software. The software I use I choose through the lens of
        | "if I have to give up my current platform of choice, does
        | this go with me?"
        | 
        | _Sync your environment_ It can be daunting to jump ship
        | to another OS if all your stuff is stuck on a different
        | machine. I highly suggest SyncThing. It is a multi-
        | platform, self-hosted synchronizer. Get a new machine
        | (Linux, Mac) and sync your important files from your
        | other machine. Now, you try out working on the new
        | machine without loosing your work. Install some tools.
        | Try getting stuff done. When you feel you've been held up
        | for too long and need to get some stuff done again in
        | Windows, all your stuff is magically sync'ed. Eventually,
        | you'll find you're doing most of your work on the new
        | machine, and you'll decide what to decommission from the
        | old one.
        | 
        | _VM/Wine/Proton_ Windows support under Mac and Linux has
        | come a long way. Maybe you still need a very specific
        | piece of software. That's fine, just plan on taking time
        | to figure out if you can still get it to work on your new
        | platform.
        | 
        | About 12 years go I jumped from Windows to Mac and about
        | 4 years ago I started working with Linux, as well. And,
        | so can you. Today is your first day to start making
        | changes.
 
        | roody15 wrote:
        | I'm not. Linux been main driver for years ... even for
        | gaming now (although wine and proton have a big part
        | here).
 
    | peakaboo wrote:
    | Or you can use another operating system you actually like.
    | That way you are contributing to the solution and not the
    | problem.
 
      | josephcsible wrote:
      | It sounds to me like GP wants to stay on Windows 10. I
      | agree Linux is better, but if you want that, you can move
      | to it whenever you want completely independent of Windows
      | 11.
 
        | peakaboo wrote:
        | Pelle wants all kinds of stuff that is bad for them.
        | Sometimes the right thing to do is to push them to change
        | for the better.
        | 
        | Microsoft treats their users with contempt. And I
        | understand it because no matter the privacy or software
        | abuse, they keep using it.
        | 
        | Same reason people continue to use Facebook - they just
        | don't have the spine to change their behavior and become
        | better people who don't use shitty products.
 
    | sva_ wrote:
    | I wonder if people could sue Microsoft into offering security
    | updates past that date, on the basis that MS did some big
    | marketing about calling Win10 the "last" windows version.
 
  | dragontamer wrote:
  | Alder Lake needed a new scheduler.
  | 
  | So any 12th generation Intel build will greatly benefit from
  | Win11 scheduler over Win10.
 
    | cronix wrote:
    | This is my first PC build, out of about 15-20 or so in the
    | last 30 years going back to the 386sx16, that does not have
    | an intel processor. I'm very happy with the price/performance
    | of the 5950x.
 
      | dragontamer wrote:
      | Eventually, AMD's architecture is going to change and the
      | OS will need a shift with it.
      | 
      | Intel just had a major change between gen11 and gen12, so
      | its the most obvious technical reason that warrants an
      | update. But AMD Zen4 (or whatever happens for Zen5) could
      | also need a similar scheduler update... or if not, maybe
      | some other I/O change.
      | 
      | -----------
      | 
      | If your hardware never changes, you can keep using the OS
      | from years and years ago.
      | 
      | But as hardware details change, it only makes sense to
      | update the OS with the hardware. Just as Linux 5.x has all
      | sorts of updates over Linux 4 or Linux 3, so too does
      | Windows need to change to keep up with the pace of hardware
      | changes.
 
    | grishka wrote:
    | Can you use the kernel from win11 with win10 (or even 7)
    | userspace, or are NT kernels not interchangeable like this?
 
      | pradn wrote:
      | I'm surprised you're asking this because it's quite
      | optimistic. No, it's not possible. The best you can do is
      | probably patching Win11 to somehow use Win10-ish UI
      | features.
 
    | josephcsible wrote:
    | Microsoft could have given us the new scheduler without all
    | the antifeatures, but they didn't.
 
      | jaywalk wrote:
      | You can say that about the vast majority of upgrades that
      | come with a new OS version if you isolate them. But at the
      | end of the day, they are going to end up bundling a bunch
      | of upgrades together to form a new OS version for a variety
      | of reasons that usually aren't strictly technical.
 
      | viraptor wrote:
      | That was the original plan with win10 being the rolling
      | "last version". It's a shame they reverted.
 
  | jjcm wrote:
  | I've been using Win11 now for about a week (so take this with a
  | grain of salt) and one positive I've noticed has been a far
  | better UX. OSX has made a ton of leaps and bounds for
  | optimizing controls for how you use your computer, and it felt
  | like windows 10 was lagging behind quite a bit in the last
  | year. Windows 11 addressed a lot of these grievances.
  | 
  | Browser overrides like this are definitely in the negative UX
  | column, but better bluetooth controls, a new consolidated
  | settings panel, and smoother window management are all
  | positives for me. FWIW I haven't hit a situation where I've
  | been forced into edge (yet).
 
    | AnIdiotOnTheNet wrote:
    | Would you mind outlining specifics? All I see are the current
    | tends of tabletization continuing.
 
      | zamadatix wrote:
      | UX Things I've liked about this upgrade cycle on my desktop
      | setup:
      | 
      | - More snap zones and ways to trigger snap
      | 
      | - Snap zones can be pulled up or switched to as a group
      | 
      | - More things moved in the Settings app
      | 
      | - Settings app is now uses a more traditional left pane
      | navigation instead of a list of large boxes for touch
      | 
      | - Window layouts better remember and adapt to monitor
      | changes (such as unplugging from an TV)
      | 
      | - AutoHDR
      | 
      | - Separate wallpapers to different virtual desktops (makes
      | remembering where you are easier)
      | 
      | - Defaults to the new Windows Terminal
      | 
      | Some of the other changes (mica, new start menu, new
      | context menu, rounded window look, new themes, taskbar tray
      | area changes, variable Segoe UI, new Store, widgets) I'd
      | call a wash. They are there and changed but overall I can't
      | say any have been particularly noticeable or helpful like
      | the above items.
 
        | NickNameNick wrote:
        | Does the win11 settings app still have ads for 'bing
        | points'?
 
        | zamadatix wrote:
        | It's not plastered in the default view anymore but I
        | still see the "rewards" button if I navigate to the
        | account section: https://i.imgur.com/IWBkaEJ.png
 
        | tentacleuno wrote:
        | > Settings app is now uses a more traditional left pane
        | navigation instead of a list of large boxes for touch
        | 
        | Serious question: why didn't they just do this in the
        | first place? It can't be hard to check if the user has a
        | touch input and dynamically resize buttons / list items,
        | then size them back down when the user is done. They do
        | exactly this for "Tablet mode"[0] in Windows 10.
        | 
        | This, and the pitch black dark mode that honestly looks
        | dreadful on non-OLED, makes me think they don't really
        | take customisation into much consideration.
        | 
        | [0]: https://www.howtogeek.com/221973/what-is-tablet-
        | mode-in-wind...
 
        | zamadatix wrote:
        | I can see minimizing changes to the interface across
        | devices as being good but as to why they didn't do this
        | compromise of larger navigation entries instead of full
        | touch first I'm not sure but it would have saved so much
        | grief. It might have had to do with Windows Phone still
        | being a thing at the time.
        | 
        | Regarding dark theme the dark app background is 12.5%
        | gray and the lighter offset backgrounds are 17.5% gray.
        | If it appears pitch black it's not because the theme is
        | made for OLEDs rather your displays are miscalibrated and
        | completely crushing blacks. If you enable transparency
        | effects the color of your background will blend with
        | these and raise/lower them accordingly.
 
        | judge2020 wrote:
        | The new context menu should improve things over time
        | since it forces IExplorerCommand usage, which only allows
        | in-process command logic so there should be no more UI
        | hangs when someone has 20+ context menu entries (even if
        | the command options end up lazy-loading in).
        | 
        | https://blogs.windows.com/windowsdeveloper/2021/07/19/ext
        | end...
        | 
        | https://docs.microsoft.com/en-
        | us/windows/win32/shell/shortcu...
        | 
        | https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/127365#issueco
        | mme...
 
    | Guillaume86 wrote:
    | The new taskbar UX is a huge downgrade compared to my "always
    | ungrouped" taskbar in Windows 10, hope the add it back before
    | I'm forced to upgrade.
 
      | soco wrote:
      | StartIsBack gives you back the left-side placement,
      | drag&drop and grouping.
 
        | tyingq wrote:
        | You can do the left-side placement with just Windows 11.
        | There's a "taskbar alignment" setting that can be "left"
        | or "center".
 
        | soco wrote:
        | It's not "a setting" but an obscure registry entry. And
        | have you actually tried it? I did and it's a joke - you
        | get the taskbar there but no icons on it lol. And how
        | about drag and drop? Or grouping?
 
  | josefresco wrote:
  | I've ignored the prompt to update to Windows 11 for a couple
  | weeks now. This morning it gave me just two options "no" or
  | "now". There was no clear option to "remind me later". Maybe
  | they just continue to nag you, but it wasn't clear to me as a
  | user.
 
  | GhettoComputers wrote:
  | Free update. Better Linux subsystem support, an android
  | emulator better than anything on Linux, good performance, easy
  | to bypass TPM, lots of software support (since it's emulating
  | Linux lol).
  | 
  | I say this as a Linux user who doesn't use windows except for
  | some Win only programs that VM and wine can't run.
 
  | aaomidi wrote:
  | Mainly wslg, which has vgpu support for consumer gpus.
  | 
  | That's about it.
 
  | gentleman11 wrote:
  | It will be the same reason you updated windows years ago: some
  | driver or piece of software will only work in windows 11, and
  | you will be forced to switch.
  | 
  | I have two machines: windows for gaming and work, Linux for
  | everything else. My Linux machine is wonderful, sometimes even
  | for gaming, but my windows machine won't stop doing web
  | searches via bing when I try to use the search bar, and won't
  | stop trying to swap my browser, and keeps reverting my privacy
  | settings
 
  | jccalhoun wrote:
  | I updated to 11 on my laptop but kept 10 on my main machine. I
  | see zero reason to update my main computer to 11. I was willing
  | to give centered start button a try but the fact that you can't
  | turn off grouping of applications in the taskbar is a deal
  | breaker. If I have two firefox windows open I want to know it
  | and to be able to pick which one I want without having to hover
  | my mouse over the icon for a second while the picture of the
  | windows pops up.
  | 
  | So I installed Explorer patcher to get the old taskbar back
  | https://github.com/valinet/ExplorerPatcher
  | 
  | Other than that the only feature of 11 that I have used is the
  | snap zones. And I guess if I want that I can install the power
  | toy it is based on.
 
    | delecti wrote:
    | If you use the Windows+# shortcuts it's pretty easy to
    | navigate multiple instances of an application. I don't know
    | how the ordering works with the centered start button, but
    | traditionally, the left-most application can be switched to
    | by pushing Win+1. The second instance of the first can be
    | switched to by holding Win and then pushing 1 twice. That's
    | been available since Vista.
    | 
    | I don't want to excuse taking options away from users, but
    | there are workarounds.
 
      | frosted-flakes wrote:
      | It still works this way, but I find having to figure out
      | which number to press is too slow. There's a utility that
      | adds numbers to the taskbar buttons when the start key is
      | held down, called 7+ Taskbar Numberer, but it doesn't work
      | on Windows 11.
      | 
      | https://ramensoftware.com/7-taskbar-numberer
 
        | delecti wrote:
        | If you lock programs to the taskbar in a consistent order
        | you can build some muscle memory. For me, 1 is always my
        | browser, 2 is file explorer, 3 is notepad++, and 4+
        | depends on whether I'm on a work or personal machine
        | (discord at home, outlook at work, etc). The result is
        | that no matter what machine I'm using, I can always
        | alternate between my browsers with Win+1.
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | aufhebung wrote:
    | The centered start menu is terrible UX. In 10 you just move
    | your mouse to the bottom corner, where in 11 the position
    | changes. Of course, everyone except your grandma knows you
    | can just press the windows key on your keyboard to open the
    | menu. But grandma is also the person least likely to have the
    | dexterity to hit the tiny button in the middle left of the
    | screen.
 
    | greggman3 wrote:
    | It could be worse. You could be on MacOS where Cmd-Tab
    | switches between apps not windows. I currently have 13
    | browser windows open (each with 3 to 15 tabs) and another 9
    | windows of other things (terminal, vscode, etc....) and IMO
    | The Cmd-Tab vs Ctrl-Tab vs Ctrl-Up vs Ctrl-Down suck compared
    | to Windows. I really want to easily switch to the previous
    | window, not the previous app. Command + backtick doesn't work
    | either. It doesn't switch to the previous window. It switches
    | to the previous window "in the same app" which is not
    | actually the previous window as that could be from another
    | app.
 
      | ggfgg wrote:
      | Honestly that sounds like you aren't garbage collecting
      | enough. I have perhaps 3-5 tabs open in one browser and 3-5
      | apps open at any time. Also working in VSCode, terminals
      | and browser mostly.
      | 
      | I coworker runs his windows box with about 100 tabs iOS.
      | Sometimes. Just close some shit.
 
      | mitemte wrote:
      | Maybe you'd like this: https://github.com/lwouis/alt-tab-
      | macos
 
      | blacksmith_tb wrote:
      | Hmm, I find it pretty practical, cmd-tab from one app to
      | another, cmd-backtick to toggle between windows, I mean,
      | it's a different paradigm, sure, but you can still move
      | around from the keyboard? I do find it a little annoying
      | that there aren't consistent shortcuts for moving between
      | tabs in everything that uses them, could be cntrl-tab,
      | could be alt-arrows...
 
        | gunapologist99 wrote:
        | I have alt-backtick mapped to my favorite terminal app in
        | Linux, and control-backtick mapped to a new browser
        | window. I'd be buggered if I ever switched to Mac!
 
      | jltsiren wrote:
      | This was the feature that convinced me to buy a Mac ~15
      | years ago. When I'm working, I keep jumping between a few
      | apps (e.g. browser, emails, terminal, IDE, text editor, PDF
      | viewer, reference manager), and the additional level of
      | hierarchy makes switching to a specific application easy.
      | Before macOS, I was using both Windows and Linux. Alt-tab
      | was often useless in both, because it was flooded with
      | redundant windows.
 
    | GordonS wrote:
    | > the fact that you can't turn off grouping of applications
    | in the taskbar is a deal breaker
    | 
    | Ach, that's a deal breaker for me too - it's one of the first
    | things I disable on a new Win10 install.
    | 
    | I didn't know about this, so thanks for giving me another
    | reason to stick with 10!
 
    | milkytron wrote:
    | I wonder if something like Cairo is compatible or will be
    | with 11. It has good support for grouping in the taskbar.
    | 
    | On my 10 machine I use it and find it so much more pleasing
    | than the default desktop.
    | 
    | https://cairoshell.com/
 
    | efraim wrote:
    | On windows 10, holding down the ctrl-button while clicking on
    | the icon will switch to the recently used instance and if you
    | keep clicking it will cycle through the open instances. If
    | you want this behaviour as standard, you can enable it by
    | editing the register. https://www.maketecheasier.com/enable-
    | last-active-click-wind...
 
      | zibzab wrote:
      | Thanks man, TIL!
      | 
      | Too bad ctrl-click means new instance on gnome, I'm bound
      | to confuse the two now...
 
  | cptskippy wrote:
  | Windows 11 is just another Microsoft operating system setting
  | the groundwork for a generational leap just like Windows ME,
  | Windows Vista, and Windows 8. IMO it is designed to not be
  | widely adopted.
  | 
  | When Windows ME was released, it was little more than a reskin
  | of Windows 98 that removed or disabled much of the 16 bit
  | capabilities and support for the ISA architecture in favor of
  | 32 bit and PCI. It couldn't be installed on most existing
  | machines and was highly unstable on those that it would run on.
  | 
  | Windows Vista wasn't much different. It was a crappy skin and a
  | new desktop composition paradigm requiring better underlying
  | graphics hardware than Intel was providing at the time. Many
  | systems couldn't upgrade to it and those that did had stability
  | issues due to immature graphics drivers.
  | 
  | Windows 8 was similar, it introduced a newer kernel design that
  | fully extracted Win32 out to userland. It also introduced Metro
  | and other modern elements that weren't bound to IA32/IA64. It
  | was primarily targeted at modern single screen touch enabled
  | devices and didn't work well as an upgrade or on desktop PCs.
  | They eventually shipped Windows 8.1 which was largely a
  | refinement of 8 that was arguably the test bed for extending
  | Windows 8 concepts to the desktop.
 
    | thrower123 wrote:
    | I still don't understand how the hell they shipped the Metro
    | Start screen on Windows Server 2012 and 2016. I hope somebody
    | got fired for okaying that decision.
 
    | einr wrote:
    | _When Windows ME was released, it was little more than a
    | reskin of Windows 98 that removed or disabled much of the 16
    | bit capabilities and support for the ISA architecture in
    | favor of 32 bit and PCI. It couldn 't be installed on most
    | existing machines and was highly unstable on those that it
    | would run on._
    | 
    | Very little of this is true. Windows ME runs all the 16-bit
    | code you can throw at it and supports all ISA devices
    | identically to 95 and 98. Windows 9x were just as 32-bit as
    | ME and supported PCI just fine.
    | 
    | The _only_ thing they removed support for was booting into
    | real-mode DOS, and started ignoring your autoexec.bat and
    | config.sys files for the most part. You can hack that back
    | into the OS pretty trivially, it 's purely cosmetic and has
    | nothing to do with the underlying architecture. They probably
    | did this in an attempt to hide its creaky MS-DOS roots, and
    | to get customers more used to not being able to run pure DOS
    | before the inevitable shift to NT.
    | 
    | Windows ME was a product even Microsoft seemingly didn't
    | really want to make -- nothing but a last-minute stopgap
    | measure until they got XP ready. No one liked it at the time
    | as it was basically Windows 98 but worse. There are some good
    | parts, though -- improved USB support, for instance -- and
    | therefore there are now projects that "backport" features
    | from Windows ME to Windows 98 so you can get the best of both
    | worlds.
 
  | bastardoperator wrote:
  | Bruh, they have new UI on top of the other 12 UI kits and
  | gaming performance is worse. What more could you want?
 
| sm4rk0 wrote:
| If you happen to have a PC with OEM-installed Windows, you can
| switch to Linux and use the Windows license (stored in firmware)
| to legally install Windows in a Virtual Machine (so the license
| is not wasted):
| 
| https://archived.forum.manjaro.org/t/howto-legally-use-windo...
 
| beebmam wrote:
| We need antitrust action, now
 
| g8oz wrote:
| Sounds like its about time for an antitrust investigation.
 
| roschdal wrote:
| Windows 11 made me install Linux again. OpenSUSE this time.
 
  | sm4rk0 wrote:
  | That's the spirit! It's amazing how much crap people are able
  | to tolerate.
 
| FpUser wrote:
| I put Win 11 on one of my laptops so I can test. But for the rest
| of my windows machines - I usually wait till the dust settles and
| it proves not to be yet another Vista or Win 8.
 
| quasarj wrote:
| What in the love of God is a "microsoft-edge://" link, and why
| would someone willingly click it? This sounds like non-news.
 
  | josephcsible wrote:
  | You wouldn't. Windows uses it on your behalf for a lot of
  | things.
 
  | mattowen_uk wrote:
  | it's a link buried inside a lot of the bundled utilities in
  | Windows. It forces URLs to use Edge as the browser instead of
  | your chosen default one.
  | 
  | Windows 11 has a news & weather popup widget that sits down by
  | the clock, in which you can click on the live tiles shown to
  | take you to more info on the web. This widget uses microsoft-
  | edge:// URI scheme so Edge is ALWAYS invoked.
  | 
  | Mozilla tried to hack their way around it, and it's been a few
  | weeks of cat and mouse on it. At the moment, MS are winning.
  | 
  | It's like they've totally forgotten the events of the IE anti-
  | trust stuff.
 
    | barranger wrote:
    | Or have watched Apple's behaviour with browsers on iOS (yes I
    | know about the Chrome, that's just a facade on top of
    | safari's render and js engine).
 
| [deleted]
 
| otikik wrote:
| Windows 7 still the best Windows.
 
  | rwaksmunski wrote:
  | I was in this boat but then I've discovered Windows 10
  | Enterprise LTSC. It's got all the crap stripped out, 10 years
  | of security patches.
 
    | otikik wrote:
    | Hm. Interesting. Thanks for commenting, it might prove worth
    | trying at least.
 
| no_circuit wrote:
| Forcing the use of edge for features that should be browser-
| neutral like Bing web search from the start menu seems very wrong
| in terms of user choice. However, if this is Microsoft's version
| of "Electron" in order to implement parts of the OS, then
| blocking other browsers seems pretty reasonable. It makes
| technical sense because they can also directly provide a Windows
| Login cookie for linking to their apps on the web to make them
| PWAs for which the user would then already be authenticated.
| 
| Maybe all that needs to be done is change things like Bing Search
| to normal https URL, and maybe remove browser controls like the
| address bar or bookmarks so they can't be used as a "browser"?
 
  | 2Gkashmiri wrote:
  | why do you need to ALWAYS stay signed in? for the past decade i
  | have a habit of doing CTRL+SHIFT+P on my firefox and using
  | that. i did a "privatebrowsing.autostart=true" in the past but
  | for a few years, a simple private window is enough.
  | 
  | it takes me 2 seconds to click on sign in to anything and when
  | i close the window, everything is washed away. no more youtube
  | building my profile.
  | 
  | i'm not saying this is for everyone, i have gotten used to no
  | history so i have to "remember" the url or bookmark it.
  | 
  | still, this is too creepy. wittill they remove private browsing
  | mode from chrome/chromium to protect users. smh
 
    | [deleted]
 
| amatecha wrote:
| Was there not a huge lawsuit around this kind of crap in the
| 90's?
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Microsoft_Cor....
| 
| How did this anticompetitive BS ever get the greenlight from
| legal?
 
  | downWidOutaFite wrote:
  | A good thing about monopolies is that it gives the government
  | the power to step in and stop anti-consumer abuses. In
  | duopolies, such as Windows/MacOS or iPhone/Android, the
  | government doesnt have as much power.
 
| BrandoElFollito wrote:
| I am an amateur developper and honestly pity the MS browser team.
| It must not be that obvious to think they you develop a browser
| which usual usage is to download another browser.
 
| 3ace wrote:
| If next year someone make a browser usage chart and Edge usage
| percentage is increasing compared to previously, I would assume
| this is the reason :)
 
| recursive wrote:
| Firefox, if it makes you feel any better, you can just make your
| own firefox: (or mozilla:?) protocol handler, and probably no one
| will mess with it.
 
  | josephcsible wrote:
  | There's no problem with microsoft-edge: existing. The problem
  | is that it's extensively used by things built in to Windows,
  | which isn't fixed whatsoever by creating a firefox: protocol
  | too.
 
  | amoshi wrote:
  | You're completely missing the point, it's about Windows
  | ignoring users browser choice and opening stuff in Edge anyway.
 
  | 0xC0ncord wrote:
  | The problem is that the microsoft-edge:// protocol is used
  | throughout the Windows UI and menus and will always open in
  | Edge regardless of the user's preferences. If you click on a
  | link in say, the Settings UI, it will ignore your default
  | browser preference and open in Edge with no way to change it.
 
    | criddell wrote:
    | I wonder if they plan on using that protocol to do non-
    | standard stuff that third party browsers won't support?
    | That's the only technical reason I can think of for Microsoft
    | to create a new protocol.
 
      | PascLeRasc wrote:
      | That would go well with their embedded buy-now-pay-later
      | collaboration.
 
    | Strilanc wrote:
    | _Even if you uninstall edge_ , you can't make windows stop
    | trying to open `microsoft-edge://` links with edge. The
    | default-program-settings page lists it but it's a cruel joke
    | because it doesn't let you actually pick anything except
    | edge; you can't pick a custom program like you can for every
    | other protocol. There are corresponding entries in the
    | registry, and those you _can_ edit to point at firefox... but
    | they are simply ignored. It 's quite frustrating.
 
| tester756 wrote:
| on the other hand it's shitty
| 
| on the other im curious how web would look like if Google lost
| its browser market share
 
| rubyist5eva wrote:
| They never learn do they?
 
| kunagi7 wrote:
| Brave also used this workaround. When workarounds are used by a
| few (EdgeDeflector), this methods usually pass under the radar...
| When a lot of users start using them they're quickly patched.
| Sadly, this fix shows that you can't bully the bullies in their
| own turf. But Microsoft should never forget the Antitrust lawsuit
| back in 2001.
 
  | dontblink wrote:
  | Perhaps its time to consider a serious look at another one?
 
    | LaGrange wrote:
    | Because this time around, MS can point at the entire FAANG
    | and say "why aren't you doing anything about _them_?" Which
    | would be deflection, of course ("whatever, we aren't talking
    | about FAANG right now") but politically strong enough, IMO,
    | to make it scary to sue any of the big tech unless you're
    | willing to go against all of them.
 
      | zamalek wrote:
      | This behavior is tolerated, and even defended, so far as
      | the others go ( _" it's their platform"_).
      | 
      | There needs to be a serious reality check before any form
      | of litigation could work.
 
| nsxwolf wrote:
| Didn't they lose a pretty big antitrust lawsuit over this a
| couple decades ago? Has the regulatory landscape changed to the
| point that they think they can just start this right up again? Or
| is it more, there's no way anyone could believe a Microsoft
| browser could dominate anymore?
 
  | tssva wrote:
  | They did not. Even when they were under the settlement
  | agreement and had to prompt for installation of another default
  | browser at first boot IE was still included in the OS and
  | certain items opened in IE no matter what your default browser
  | was set to. This is the same situation. They are not blocking
  | setting of the browser for general urls but for edge links.
  | Edge links are used by particular software in Windows. For
  | instance the help system always opens pages in Edge.
  | 
  | Whether this is the correct thing for them to do is debatable,
  | but it is not the behavior which got them in trouble during the
  | early browser wars.
 
  | bachmeier wrote:
  | Microsoft is no longer a monopolist. The world has changed
  | dramatically since 1995-1997.
 
    | Dylan16807 wrote:
    | They have 75% of desktop/laptop OS market share. That's
    | plenty.
 
      | bachmeier wrote:
      | The first step in antitrust is to define the market. It
      | seems unlikely that desktop/laptop would be considered a
      | separate market - mobile is just too capable (how do you
      | even draw the line between an iPad Pro and a laptop?) But
      | even within desktop/laptop you have Apple plus Chromebooks
      | and to some extent Linux as substitutes. There were no
      | serious substitutes in the 1995-1997 time period that led
      | to the antitrust proceedings.
 
        | Dylan16807 wrote:
        | Phones are not capable in the same way. And I think this
        | number already counts chromebooks. Let me know what your
        | revised number is for ipad pros.
        | 
        | > There were no serious substitutes in the 1995-1997 time
        | period that led to the antitrust proceedings.
        | 
        | Macs were just fine then, and they're just fine now. They
        | couldn't run all important business software then, and
        | they can't run all important business software now.
        | 
        | The situation has not changed much.
 
| DrTung wrote:
| My escape plan is to use Wine for the apps that exist on Windows
| only. Wine can be a bit lacking though :-(
| 
| But there's hope on the horizon: Valve's SteamDeck is aiming to
| make available all Valve's games, even the Windows-only ones, on
| their custom Arch Linux. using Proton (which is a fork of Wine).
| As far as I know, this might be the first commercial product
| that's based on (a fork of) Wine.
| 
| If they can make all tripleA Windows games with DRM work on their
| SteamDeck, this will make a serious dent in Windows' monopoly on
| gaming. And in the process hopefully Wine will get a boost as
| well...
 
| justin66 wrote:
| The microsoft-edge:// application handler is hard-wired to open
| Microsoft Edge? My God, the pure, unexpected evil of it.
 
| pjfin123 wrote:
| Linux Desktop feeling extra good today, my sound often doesn't
| work but I don't have to deal with Microsoft nonsense.
 
  | acidburnNSA wrote:
  | Linux desktop is amazing these days. Heck, even my mom runs
  | Ubuntu as of 4 months ago and is loving it. Now is time to
  | recommend it. Zoom, teams, webex, Firefox, chrome, Thunderbird,
  | darktable, Gimp, inkscape, blender, kdenlive, openvpn, signal,
  | OBS, stellarium, vim, Python, libreoffice, etc all work
  | perfectly on it. My USB logitec wireless headset was plug and
  | play. Cameras all work fine. Audio is good. Plus lots of power
  | feature capabilities to boot. Whats not to like?
 
  | kaba0 wrote:
  | Frankly, sound has not been a problem for a long time now I
  | think. Hell, the number of time windows killed the sound driver
  | under usage for whatever reason it deemed useful, I actually
  | would say nowadays Windows has the worst audio stack out of the
  | 3 main OSs.
 
    | aroundtown wrote:
    | I always seem to have hardware that hits an edge case for
    | Linux support.
    | 
    | Take my gpu's sound support. If I run sound through
    | DisplayPort it runs 40% slower and an octave an a half lower
    | pitch. Over HDMI it runs fine. Oddly, if I have an HDMI
    | device attached sound over DisplayPort runs fine, until the
    | HDMI connection or computer goes to sleep.
    | 
    | My solution ended up being to get a cheap usb sound adapter
    | and skip the gpu audio. As the HDMI would only do 4k at 30hz
    | and DP does 4k at 60hz.
 
    | smoldesu wrote:
    | Yep. Bluetooth audio is probably best on Linux of the main 3
    | now that PipeWire exists (literally rock solid, I've never
    | had a connection drop _ever_ ), but it's a toss-up when
    | directly comparing CoreAudio to PipeWire. Once PW irons out
    | it's latency issues, Linux may once again become the AV king!
    | (well, maybe not the video portion with the state of Wayland
    | these days...)
 
    | jrwr wrote:
    | Tell that to my poor Legion 7i - Has on going onboard audio
    | issues and very wonky iGPU/dGPU support.
 
    | formerly_proven wrote:
    | ^ The only sound issues I've been having these days is
    | Windows 10 randomly deciding to not recognize my USB audio
    | interface after waking from standby and acting as-if I don't
    | have audio output, requiring me to physically plug it out and
    | back in again :)
 
  | aroundtown wrote:
  | My solution for audio on Linux was to buy a cheap USB sound
  | adapter. They can often be found for under $10 and they just
  | work.
 
  | freeqaz wrote:
  | Pipewire has made all of my audio issues on Linux go away, at
  | this point. Maybe it's my hardware (a high-end Dell Latitude
  | that is Ubuntu certified) but it just f*cking works!
  | 
  | I'm on Arch, so I find I tend to have fewer issues than with
  | Ubuntu (due to the latter always being on some ancient
  | version). Seriously though when I switched from Pulse to
  | Pipewire... I rebooted and I've never had any issues since!
  | 
  | Now, my biggest complaints are around i3 and X11. I get some
  | flickering, and display management is a little painful. But
  | those are largely self-imposed because of i3. I haven't tried
  | switching to Wayland yet because it's good enough for me.
  | 
  | At this point, it's been years since I've used a Windows PC for
  | work and... I'm so damn happy about it!
 
    | sm4rk0 wrote:
    | If you're tired of waiting for next Ubuntu release and like
    | living on the edge, you can switch to "Ubuntu+1", or always
    | using the next release while it's being polished. Just
    | replace "groovy" with the codename of your current Ubuntu
    | release:                   sudo sed -i 's/groovy/devel/g'
    | /etc/apt/sources.list
    | 
    | Then as usual:                   sudo apt update && sudo apt
    | dist-upgrade
 
    | smallerfish wrote:
    | Switched to wayland today because nvidia drivers were killing
    | performance when I plugged my 4k monitor into my laptop.
    | Barely usable under X, fixed under wayland. Also wayland was
    | able to independently scale the 4k monitor and the laptop
    | monitor, which was nice. Found a couple niggles but so far
    | what I need is working. (Using KDE.)
    | 
    | Worth a try.
 
    | demetrius wrote:
    | > Now, my biggest complaints are around i3 and X11. I get
    | some flickering
    | 
    | I've started experiencing flickering in non-compositing
    | window managers on Arch a few months ago (I mainly use
    | Openbox, although I've tried dwm too) after some update. My
    | solution was just to run `xcompmgr &` at the session startup.
 
    | pojntfx wrote:
    | If you like i3 but want to try Wayland pain-free - Sway uses
    | i3's config file syntax, so you shouldn't have to change
    | anything to try it out :)
 
      | dijit wrote:
      | Caveat emptor: your normal apps might struggle still.
      | 
      | Some common things have wayland native replacements but it
      | might be jarring.
      | 
      | Redshift (automatic Color temperature change) -> gammastep
      | 
      | Dunst (notifications) -> mako
      | 
      | Rofi (launcher) -> idk I just used kitty+fzf with some
      | special options.
 
        | helmholtz wrote:
        | wlsunset was a lot simpler for me to get to work compared
        | to gammastep, which I thought had too steep a learning
        | curve. I only need it for the yellow light, thought.
 
        | extr wrote:
        | there is a wayland replacement for rofi called wofi. i
        | didn't use rofi for anything particularly intensive so it
        | was a drop in replacement for me
 
        | btdmaster wrote:
        | Dunst is native wayland since early 2021[1]. Instead of
        | rofi, bemenu[2] is nice too.
        | 
        | [1] https://github.com/dunst-project/dunst/issues/264
        | 
        | [2] https://github.com/Cloudef/bemenu
 
      | nicce wrote:
      | I can't do else but praise sway. Long lost perfect WM.
 
| teddyh wrote:
| Tell me again how Microsoft has changed and it isn't the same
| company anymore, and how EEE is ancient history.
 
  | AnIdiotOnTheNet wrote:
  | I feel like Microsoft really has changed. Not the EEE portion
  | though, it's just that quality and support of their products is
  | no longer a serious consideration. We had to engage software
  | assurance support recently and it is horrifically useless
  | compared to the last time we did.
 
  | 2pEXgD0fZ5cF wrote:
  | Microsoft, like many other big modern tech companies, just
  | treat goodwill like a currency. Now the time has come to spend
  | it again.
  | 
  | I don't believe for a second that EEE is gone from Microsofts
  | culture and strategy.
 
  | jasonhansel wrote:
  | Literally true of Edge's relationship with Chrome. I believe
  | we're now on the "extinguish" phase.
 
| beebeepka wrote:
| It's a good thing because surely some of those who are still
| putting up with MS may decide enough is enough.
| 
| Whoever you are, that the wonderful, fully gaming capable world
| of Linux is there. We have some cookies but Valve is bringing a
| massive cake early next year.
 
| gunapologist99 wrote:
| Why do people still run Windows? Linux is almost universally
| easier to use now (except for a few things like scanner and
| printer setup), and gaming has almost caught up as well (with
| things like Steam, and that's if you're not already using a
| dedicated console, SteamDeck, or mobile device.)
| 
| At work, I can understand it a bit more, but I can't understand
| why anyone would still choose Windows as a desktop at home.
 
| FridayoLeary wrote:
| Is this something that could have been forced on the desktop team
| by the management of the Edge team? I'm sure the people actually
| making the OS care about their users, or at least the product
| itself. Meanwhile, the Edge team don't care. Anyway everybody
| uses Chrome, (and if they don't they are still using Chrome).
 
| GhettoComputers wrote:
| Is this really an issue? I clicked the help files in windows and
| it always opened in IE6. It wasn't more than an annoyance. Can
| you uninstall edge? I think it's a sensationalist topic, it's
| closing a potential security hole if FF or other browsers aren't
| updated.
| 
| Do I agree with it? No, I use Linux but it's really not an issue
| that hasn't been around and isn't easily ignored, and many people
| may never encounter it.
 
| gkoberger wrote:
| I always thought the antitrust ruling against Microsoft was a bit
| heavy-handed (and I say this as a former Mozilla employee). Like,
| it was the 90s... most people wouldn't know how to download and
| install a browser in the first place, so bundling (much like how
| iOS comes with Safari) seems fair.
| 
| But then they do shitty stuff like this, and it's a reminder of
| how overly anti-competitive Microsoft really can be. It's one
| thing to bundle, and it's another to make it so hard to switch
| that people finally just give in.
 
| bovermyer wrote:
| Microsoft is making me seriously reconsider using Windows for my
| Alienware gaming PC.
| 
| Does anyone know if there's a version of the Alienware,
| Steelseries, and Razer control software for Linux?
 
  | zamalek wrote:
  | Be prepared to have a VM and pass through devices to it in
  | order to configure them. "Gamer device" manufacturers easily
  | the worst of the worst when it comes to Linux support.
  | 
  | OpenRGB may provide some relief.
 
    | Isthatablackgsd wrote:
    | > "Gamer device" manufacturers easily the worst of the worst
    | when it comes to Linux support.
    | 
    | And Windows too. Logitech software is an example of that,
    | their capture software refused to recognize an older
    | functional generation of webcam like C910. It is capable of
    | recording 1080p60 5 years ago. Their older version software
    | (Logitech Webcam Software) no longer works in Windows 10.
    | Tried to use OBS to get it to 60 FPS, nope! Somehow LWS have
    | a secret sauce to get my C910 to record in 1080p60 setting.
    | 
    | And their Logitech G Hub suck balls for my G600.
    | Unfortunately, I couldn't get Logitech Gaming Software
    | (predecessor for G Hub) working in my main computer. Kept
    | throwing up error when I tried to install it. LGS works
    | better for my G600 than G Hub.
 
    | kroltan wrote:
    | And Windows support, too! "Gamer device" configuration
    | software is 98% a shitshow, the other 2% is just about
    | tolerable.
 
  | mrtranscendence wrote:
  | Razer devices work well on Linux, I understand. Can't speak to
  | the other two.
 
    | lambic wrote:
    | Yep, I have a Razer mouse and it works fine on Ubuntu/i3,
    | just had to adjust the sensitivity down so it wasn't flinging
    | the pointer around the screen at the slightest touch.
 
  | gjs278 wrote:
  | https://github.com/dneto/senseictl
  | 
  | google from there for your specific product. this one worked
  | for mine but I only needed basic things like turning off the
  | LED
 
  | commoner wrote:
  | You may be interested in these FOSS alternatives for Alienware,
  | Steelseries, and Razer control software on Linux:
  | 
  | - AlienFX (https://github.com/trackmastersteve/alienfx):
  | Control Alienware lighting effects on Linux
  | 
  | - rivalcfg (https://github.com/flozz/rivalcfg): CLI tool and
  | Python library to configure Steelseries mice on Linux
  | 
  | - RazerGenie (https://github.com/z3ntu/RazerGenie): Configure
  | Razer devices on Linux, uses OpenRazer
  | 
  | - OpenRazer (https://openrazer.github.io): FOSS driver and
  | userspace daemon for Razer devices on Linux
 
  | sleibrock wrote:
  | I can't say I've used it personally but I know of OpenRGB[1],
  | which should help with lighting on those types of computer
  | devices. Maybe that might do the trick?
  | 
  | [1] - https://openrgb.org/
 
    | xtracto wrote:
    | I've tried to used and it failed to recognize my mouse no
    | matter all the console copy/paste crap I tried.
 
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