←back to thread

1725 points taubek | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
Show context
PrimeMcFly ◴[] No.35323525[source]
I don't want anything, any type of news being pushed by my OS. It simply isn't it's job. Maybe, as an option or optional add-on, but not the way MS does it.

I use 10 now, as locked down and 'fixed' as I was able to make it (custom ISO via NTLite with a bunch of crap removed and some fixes steamrolled in), but really I look forward to ditching it altogether - which is a shame. For all the MS hate in the OSS community, I always thought Windows did a lot of stuff well (when it was good at least).

The telemetry, changing things for the sake of changing things and forced crap constantly being added is enough. I'm so in love with awesomewm at this point, and the fact that I can customize and program every part of my UI, allowing me to have something absolutely perfect and tailor made.

replies(16): >>35324087 #>>35324818 #>>35325430 #>>35325765 #>>35326431 #>>35326762 #>>35326805 #>>35326810 #>>35327156 #>>35327165 #>>35328629 #>>35329259 #>>35331531 #>>35331556 #>>35332516 #>>35333868 #
jgaa ◴[] No.35324818[source]
> I don't want anything, any type of news being pushed by my OS.

Then, how is Microsoft supposed to properly track your interests and sell that information to their "partners"?

It's been a long time since Microsoft made an operating system. What they make today is basically a spyware-platform where you can run applications if you are really disciplined and persistent. I don't understand how people keep up with it.

I've used Linux on my desktops and laptops for decades now.

replies(11): >>35325002 #>>35325044 #>>35325173 #>>35325246 #>>35325744 #>>35326652 #>>35326676 #>>35328196 #>>35329073 #>>35342285 #>>35351138 #
ftl64 ◴[] No.35325246[source]
It's just more stable, at least this has been my experience. I've tried hard to become a full-time workstation Linux user for years, daily driving Ubuntu, Mint, and Fedora for months at a time, but I always had to come back to Windows. Nvidia and Intel driver issues, package manager bugs, reduced laptop battery life, general UI clunkiness, and times when GRUB suddenly decided not to boot have taken so many hours of troubleshooting that could've been spent doing something actually productive.

Windows has many issues, but it never decided to break on me in the middle of the day. For me, an OS is not a religious affiliation but a tool, and Windows performs much better as one.

replies(27): >>35325320 #>>35325355 #>>35325432 #>>35325665 #>>35325756 #>>35326076 #>>35326135 #>>35326251 #>>35326365 #>>35326409 #>>35326645 #>>35326992 #>>35327071 #>>35327430 #>>35327534 #>>35327618 #>>35327724 #>>35327768 #>>35327928 #>>35328739 #>>35329543 #>>35329903 #>>35329930 #>>35329987 #>>35332388 #>>35335160 #>>35348994 #
alpaca128 ◴[] No.35326251[source]
> It's just more stable, at least this has been my experience.

It was more stable, that's why I used it. Then starting with a certain Windows 10 update I had to reinstall the system multiple times because automatic updates kept breaking it overnight, it started crashing the USB driver, suddenly it kept randomly switching keyboard layouts by itself, and somewhere around the third ruined weekend due to an unbootable system I had enough. Switched to an Arch-based distro for 3 years in which I only had one update-related issue and it took me a whole 5 minutes and one reboot to fix. Now I partially use Mac OS and while I'm disappointed by some of its aspects I can at least be certain it will boot tomorrow and it won't install a system update without my confirmation.

Oh, how the turntables.

replies(1): >>35327380 #
tracker1 ◴[] No.35327380[source]
I had similar issues... especially after Win11. Admittedly, I was running Insiders builds, because I wanted new WSLg features, etc. Then one day I was on Windows 11... okay, got the app bar pinned back on the left... a month later, oh, you don't have secure boot enabled, you'll need to reinstall... enabled secure boot, still had to reinstall... a few months later, the nvidia drivers kept borking out and blanking my screen. The Windows release kept overriding the newer NVidia drivers for w11. Figured out how to pin them... another couple months, start seeing adverts in the damned start menu search. That's it, I'm out. I reinstalled Win10 in case I needed it, disabled secure boot and tpm... and haven't booted back to my windows drive since. I've had two small issues in Ubuntu, both relatively easily fixed.

I don't think I'm going back. I use Win10 at work, and fortunately most of my actual day is in VS Code under WSL. And that's about all I can stand.

replies(1): >>35327581 #
1. JohnFen ◴[] No.35327581{3}[source]
> I was running Insiders builds

In fairness, you can't take your experience with insider builds as an indicator of the stability of the OS. Insider builds are expected to be unstable.

replies(1): >>35328193 #
2. tracker1 ◴[] No.35328193[source]
When I reinstalled after the insiders build first nuked itself, I switched to stable/mainline. Still had issues after that. I had run insiders on Win10 about 3 years without issue before that.