The entire article is based on a false premise:
With ESU, you can still get security updates and minor fixes or improvements, but the catch is that extended support ends on October 13, 2026.
Not true, there are three years of ESU updates available.
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
The entire article is based on a false premise:
With ESU, you can still get security updates and minor fixes or improvements, but the catch is that extended support ends on October 13, 2026.
Not true, there are three years of ESU updates available.
Thats some actually great news!
I'm migrate my notebook to Linix Mint, perform way better than Windows 10.
I'm trying to figure out a way to transport my modlists from MO2 in Fallout New Vegas and Skyrim to run on Linux, once this is done, i goodbye windows forever on my personal devices
Use Linux, get freedom
Get off American monopoly tech. The desktop is the easiest.
A GNU/Linux desktop has endless advantages and doesn't include the anti-features.
Linux, in some form, runs a lot of your life already, even if you don't know it.
If your a tech, you really should deeply know Linux/UNIX anyway.
Eight months to learn Linux is a LONG time. You’ll be fine.
Mac is going to shit too, which is so sad since that transition to ARM was a huge success. Their OS is ridiculously janky dogshit now. It’s not Microsoft level bad but it’s heading in the same direction.
I’m glad I finally started switching. The Linux stuff is more annoying in some ways but in predictable and therefore manageable ways. Mac=there is no war in bag sing sei. Windows=I have altered the deal, pray I do not alter it further.
There was a period when "ergonomics" became something users assumed to have been achieved for all eternity. Late 90s, early 00s, when developers generally made UIs following strict guidelines and looking natively with no designer bullshit.
Before that period (and before popularization of computers) "ergonomics" was something absolutely paramount, half of any mechanism a human uses. Another half would be the actual functionality, which differed between domain areas, but ergonomics didn't. And once a factory would start issuing those mechanisms with some kind of control panel, it wouldn't just release an update a few days earlier, no Star Trek transporters, no Harry Potter transfiguration, Carl!
So, somehow making ergonomic UIs is now irrelevant for profitability of making a product.
It's not really about AI. It's not really about ads. It's not really about telemetry. And it's not even really about something being slow.
It's just about ergonomics of old concepts implemented being by inertia not totally awful, but gradually worsening, and ergonomics of new concepts implemented being non-existent. That's all.
After spitting left and right for a few years even I would generally be fine with agentic AI or whatever else. If those things had ergonomic controls. They don't.
Never went with Win 11. Tried jump to Linux, played with it for a week I believe, quite recently. Tinkering aside (mostly due to learning so not so bad, last distro change I got it all up to where I wanted it within an hour after install, because I finally knew what I was doin xD) my main problem is that Linux doesn't really use my specs well.
I have an older system and on Windows, I can punch above my league with running shit like Hogwarts Legacy or Fallout 76 on my i5-4460 and GTX 750, while on Mint, CachyOS and Nobara Fallout 76 struggled hard to run fluidly, liked to flicker and freeze, and Hogwarts Legacy couldn't even get into menu. And I am not really willing to give up on these two for now.
But other than that I found that no matter the distro, shit just...works. The worst part I think was that drivers for my old GPU are shitty on linux, but if you have in hardware from the last decade, I'd say just try it. All apps and shit you need is mostly handled by package repositories (something like app stores) and if your software isn't there, check it's website, maybe they have .deb or .rpm packages which are pretty much Linux .exe files. Or a simple command to download it via terminal.
I have old Brother printer and even tho Linux community labels it papwerweight, Brother actually has full drivers for linux installed via copy-paste commands they give you on their website. With full instructions how to do it step by step. So really, if you didn't try it yet, consider.
If you haven't tried it, give Bazzite a shot. Been running it for a year or so at this point, minimal complaints and it runs like a champ with minimal issues and the GPU drivers are built into the image. Might be worth a shot to see if it helps your rig run better
My hardware (GPU) is literally too old and unsupported according to Bazzite itself xD
My experience has been the same. As a software engineer who used Linux throughout university, I just can't enjoy having a lousy experience with poor performance, constant tinkering, limited software and constant bugs. I can't even adjust the DPI scale of an external monitor on Ubuntu without the entire windowing system going haywire.
I guess I'm just too old to have the patience to try to fix that kind of stuff by hand, and I thought I'd never say it, but I just like Windows 11. It works. Sue me.
Most people haven't heard of zorin OS. People used to Mac and windows should try it. It has its own app store with all the apps needed by a regular Joe.
Time to switch to linux, then.
Dude. American here. FUCK Windows 11 and fuck Microsoft for being what they are. Damn unethical pushy creepy bastards.
Been daily-driving Linux for several months now. There are literally zero critical workflows that I can't do just because I'm not on Windows.
40% of things I use my PC for are browser-based. 40% have an equivalent FOSS app. 10% are Windows apps that run fine using Wine. The other 10% I can live without.
I just installed Linux Mint last weekend. Working great so far!
Im on the WIndows 10 Extended support. I'm either going to risk staying on 10, or move to linux. The big problems for me are 1 ) Visual studio doesn't run on linux so I'd either have to learn a new editor or do a VM... I suppose 2) Gaming. A lot can happen in 8 months for improvements. But this might be the thing that holds me on Windows for a while. Saw a video of native Dota2 on linux runs like shit. 3) A solid remote desktop replacement. One that's as good or better than what I'm using.
I've usedJetBrains on Linux for years, it's a dream.
Linux-native Dota is a bit worse than Windows Dota, to the point that I tried to run it in Proton instead (doesn't work). With the right start config (-dx11) it runs fine though. Same for Deadlock, it was almost unplayable without -dx11.
For coding, you could use VSCode, which is not the same as VS but it has enough extensions to probably support your use-case?
There's also KATE and some other project written in Rust, if you want a proper application and not just a glorified website running locally.