this post was submitted on 03 Oct 2023
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You can’t get rid of it, you can only hide it: Microsoft imposes controversial Windows Backup on users::Like it or not, the Windows Backup app installed in Windows 10 and Windows 11 is here to stay, with Microsoft calling it a "system component" that can't be

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I've grown up with windows (started with windows 95 in elementary school) and have been a Linux user since 2009. Watching windows decline and the Linux desktop grow and mature has been quite the ride. I've been distro-hopping for years and have finally settled on Debian Testing. It does exactly what I tell it to do. It helps me accomplish whatever task I'm doing and then gets out of the way.

Windows on the other hand is the polar opposite of that. Constantly nagging you to use OneDrive. New panels and "experiences" popping up out of nowhere. Unskippable OOBEs after a major update that force you to navigate some dark pattern if you have the audacity to resist using a Microsoft account. The telemetry that you know is running under the hood 24/7. Hands and knees begging you to use Edge to open PDFs?!?! Using windows today is like using Clippy - the operating system.

Linux has come such a long way, and outside of some proprietary edge cases, I can no longer imagine using Windows as a daily driver

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Yep.

Windows 10 was the window into what was to come and how microsoft wanted to ruin windows in the future, Which was further ~~ruined~~ "refined" in 11.

I'm on linux to stay now, now that I've ironed out most of my problems, the only issues I have anymore are manufactured and artificial issues, like Amazon refusing to stream in anything higher than 360p because my system isnt "secure", or like AMDs stupid convoluted AMDRewards system not working.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago

Yes. When I first booted up Linux Mint -- the first distro I had tried since Red Hat came on a dozen or so 3.5" floppies -- I couldn't believe it. I was expecting something a LOT less developed and shiny, but no -- and Mint is one of the lighter ones. That's why I'm trying so many, including ones I already know I won't use as a daily driver, because they're all fully fledged, completely operable computing environments.

If it hadn't been for MS Office I'd have done this long before now, especially when I got into a mandatory-Windows-Upgrade-and-break loop a couple years ago. But I absolutely despise the newer Office versions; they seem to break more with each release. If I have to go back to older versions to run it on Linux, that's just one more favor the FOSS community will be doing for me.

Clippy - the operating system.

Jfc, lol. At least Clippy wasn't all up in my shorts and sending the data back to the mothership. Gotta ask, though, given your age: did you ever get to use Microsoft Bob? You probably don't remember all the commercials; it was Faith Ford hawking MS Bob every time you turned on the tv. But using it, omfg. You boot up into a "living room." I shit you not. MSBob was a . . . really fucking weird five minutes, lol.