Windows 11 and Windows 10 were recently updated with “Windows Backup”, which has now become a system app. While the feature initially appeared as “optional” or something that could be easily dismissed, Microsoft is slowly getting aggressive with its new OneDrive backup campaign on Windows 11.

Windows 11’s “Windows Backup” uses OneDrive to back up many of the things that are important to you. This may include your credentials, settings, pictures, documents, videos, files, themes, or even audio settings. Microsoft wants the Windows Backup app to become the ultimate backup tool, but there’s a catch.

Windows Backup does not support offline backups and requires a OneDrive plan. By default, OneDrive offers 5GB of free storage, which is why some users do not want to backup their PC. But is that going to stop Microsoft from pestering users? Probably not. In a new server-side update, Windows 11 has started nagging users to try the Backup tool.

  • athalean@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 months ago

    What drives me nuts about this is that it always uses the vague language of security and data protection without any consideration that, y’know, they have competition from other cloud providers and self-hosted solutions that do things that OneDrive can’t even do. I guess if you have your backups anywhere else it doesn’t count.

    • Bogasse@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      Yeah but they have one killer feature others don’t : shuting up these f**king notifications.

  • Zikeji@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    Man, they just keep burying their head further. I still have Windows 10 on my gaming PC, and that’s more because I plan on replacing it and will use that moment to transition to Linux, but up until a few months ago I could have been convinced to keep using Windows.

    That was until they popped up a full screen ad in the middle of gaming, telling me my PC doesn’t work with 11 but they have great financing options forn a 11 capable PC. Followed by my lock screen having ads of a similar nature. Fucking gross.

    • barsquid@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      That’s despicable. Popping a window up over everything enrages me even when it’s an application I intended to open. Popping up a fucking ad while I am in the middle of something is completely unacceptable. I can definitely see what that was the last straw.

  • Omgboom@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    We started seeing this pop-up recently, but here’s the thing, my organization already uses OneDrive (unfortunately) but the pop-up just says that they need to contact your administrator to set it up (OneDrive is already setup)

    • Khanzarate@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Just means the new backup service has permissions off by default.

      Since your company may not want that, enjoy the eternal Microsoft spam forever.

    • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 months ago

      Wish I could fully… one 20 year old half life mod I play with friends does not work with Linux AT ALL and it’s one of my favourite games.

        • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 months ago

          The Specialists HD. It’s a game where everyone is The Matrix. There’s bullet time, king-fu, sick flips, and tons of amazing weapons. I’ve been playing for like 15 years. It’s all-but-dead other than my amazing friend who hosts a server, our close friends, and some old-heads. It’s my favourite FPS.

  • Waveform@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I think Windows 10 will be the last version I use. As time goes on, Linux seems more and more like a viable option, and I’ll be glad to have control over my PC for once. And who knows, maybe I will no longer have the mysterious freezing issue that’s been plaguing me for years…

    • Zetta@mander.xyz
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      2 months ago

      I switched over ~3 ish years ago and have never been happier. I recommend Fedora if you want any distro suggestions.

    • kennebel@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I switched to Pop!_OS earlier this year and couldn’t be happier. All apps run way faster than they did with Windows on the same hardware. All but one of my Steam games run great (one day I’ll get that last game to work). My “life critical” things are web based, everything else is adjustable.

      • Waveform@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        That sounds promising. I’ve heard good things about Pop!_OS. Which game has issues, if I might ask?

        I try to avoid web-based apps when I can. For instance, there is a supposedly great photo editor that’s only available via web browser. I’d hate to become dependent on it and then lose access due to an internet outage, or something.

        • kennebel@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Sorry, when I said “life critical”, i mean things like email, banking, self-hosted NextCloud for files, etc. For me, everything else is flexible as I don’t have business things that have to run on Windows (that is my work provided laptop), so I don’t have to have the Adobe suite for photo editing, i can use one of several open source alternatives, and all of my hobbies have open source alternatives like Blender.

          The only game I cannot get to run is Space Engineers. Numerous other newer and older games work great. To be fair, I’m not an online/multiplayer gamer, so the challenges people run in to due to anti-cheating requirements don’t affect the games I play.

          What was really interesting to me, is that I tried Windows 11 Pro and 6 or 7 different Linux distros over several months before landing on Pop!_OS. I mention this because it was all the exact same hardware and so I was able to compare performance in an Apples to Apples situation. There is an obvious application loading improvement. Even comparing against something like Garuda that is supposedly all about performance tweaks.

  • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Microsoft and nagging? Naaahh, they would never! They would never “hey hello, please please send us feedback!” 5x per day while I’m trying to get work done on that awful offce365. They would never stuff popups all over their sites to continuously nag me about new updates and features and bullshit, they. Would. Never.

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Given ‘backup’ or ‘back-up’ is a noun, and ‘back up’ is the verb form, does the nag pop-up have the spelling mistake? It suggests the people writing (and reviewing) this code aren’t the star employees. Is it a make-work project from sales? Intern-chow?

    • IllNess@infosec.pub
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      2 months ago

      Your PC is not fully backed up

      Backup is not turned on for Credentials and Folders. Back up now to save them if something happens to your PC.

      This is the prompt from the screenshot in the article.

      Seems right to me.

  • 1984@lemmy.today
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    2 months ago

    Windows 7 was my last windows. Since then it’s been Linux on all machines. It was easy to see where Microsoft were going. And they will continue to go down this route.

    When you run windows, it’s not your computer.

      • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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        2 months ago

        Not OP but:

        Separate the system and home partition, first of all. The strategies are usually different.

        Many distros integrate Timeshift out of the box to create system partition snapshots before every update, and to be able to restore them from the boot menu. Using BTRFS for the system partition makes this even better.

        This is usually all that people need in regards to the system, but you can also take regular backups (see below) of things like /etc, the list of installed packages and things like that.

        For personal files I prefer Borg Backup because it is incremental, does compression, deduplication, encryption, checksums & recovery.

        Borg works with repositories, which can be on local disk, on a removable disk, or remote. If remote, they are tunneled over SSH. It can also export/import tarballs for more exotic scenarios like moving snapshots between different repositories or backing up data to optical discs.

        You can use Borg from the CLI and there are also UI apps that make it easier. Pika Backup is a simpler one, Vorta is a more advanced one. I’ve set up family members with Pika and after preparing it for them all they have to do is plug in the backup HDD, open Pika, and hit the big “backup now” button.

        There are also online services that support Borg repositories specifically, and for anything that doesn’t you can export tarballs and back them up as regular files, completely transparently from the service.

        rclone is a cli tool that supports a large number of online storage services. You can use it with borg snapshots or you can use it to back up your files directly — it resembles rsync somewhat and can also do encryption iirc.

        • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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          2 months ago

          Good writeup.

          But why separate /home?

          I get that it makes it easy to just grab the home partition in full, but grabbing just your own home folder isn’t any more difficult than grabbing a home partition.

          And it makes it really fucking annoying to manage storage between / and /home. You have to pick how much disk space you want for your own things and how much you want for installing things, and changing it later is a giant PIA. The one time I did it I kept running out of space on one or the other.

          • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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            2 months ago

            Separate root fs makes it easier for timeshift. Snapshots are a different beast from backups.

            Also makes it easy to install another distro and pick up where you left off with the old home.

            If you alocate 50-60 GB for system it should be ok. Things like Flatpak or Steam can put their files in home.

            • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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              2 months ago

              Separate root fs makes it easier for timeshift.

              How? I use timeshift. I don’t see what you mean.

              Also makes it easy to install another distro and pick up where you left off with the old home.

              Sure, but how often do you distrohop? Not worth the trouble to have to potentielly mess with partitions during everyday use.

              When I do reinstall, I’ve just copied my home folder over to a secondary drive, then back again.

              If you alocate 50-60 GB for system it should be ok.

              That’s the entire boot drive on some of my machines. Not to mention that I have gone well beyond that for root on some systems. You just can’t know the numbers in advance, and when you want to just use a system for something, it’s really annoying to have extra steps.

              Making home a separate partition makes it really hard to use the full capacity of the drive, should you need to. Which people do need to do sometimes, even if only temporarily.

              Doing this might make sense if you have terabytes of storage to throw around, enough to never fill any of your volumes. It has benefits, but not enough to make it good advice across the board, which is why I question it.

              • Nexz@feddit.nl
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                2 months ago

                I don’t see real advantages for partitioning this way that outweigh the negatives - for desktop usage. For servers having separate home (and/or other dirs) partitions is great, as user fluff won’t kill the ability tor ‘more important processes’ to store stuff. If everything is kept on a single partition, the user is essentially able to DoS the system by filling up space.

  • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    And you’re gonna need that backup as windows and it’s publishers work hard to kill your computer through automated updates.

    Install Linux already, dammit

  • Capricorn_Geriatric@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Didn’t read the article, but Windows 10 did the whole OneDrive backup nag message thing as well. Defender would always shiw a warning that you’re “not secure” if you don’t backup to OneDrive.