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  • 19 Comments
Joined 13 days ago
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Cake day: March 9th, 2025

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  • Well, at least for me…

    Yeah, I do like me some file extensions.

    I want a GUI for some things, but I’m perfectly comfortable with SSH into a machine as well. My general purpose server has a DE on it. My second server has a specific use and has no DE, nor do my IOT devices. All of them are headless.

    I have an older laptop with Arch (btw) on it. It runs well for what I use it for. I understand I’m not watching YouTube in 4K though. The CPU and GPU have their limits.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    21 hours ago

    I am not going to troubleshoot this via Lemmy, but it does sound interesting. The fact that you specifically mention the combination of your GPU plus the 128GB of RAM still suggests to me that it’s a hardware or driver issue.

    Windows has supported 128GB of RAM since Windows XP x64 Edition.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    21 hours ago

    It shouldn’t require editing config files, except maybe in an Nvidia Optimus or AMD Switchable Graphics configuration. The fast/efficient GPU support was a dumpster fire the last time I had Linux on a laptop with it.

    I know what Proton is.

    No, it does not make perfect sense that a Linux native version of a game is more difficult to use than the Windows version on Proton. That may be how it is, but it does not make sense. Whatever method WINE or Proton uses to connect the Windows game to a supported graphics API in Linux must be entirely possible to do in a native Linux version of a game as well. For whatever reason, the game developers either chose not to or were incapable of developing that code.

    At the third party application level, Windows applications are a black box. That has nothing to do with Windows, though. Complain to third party developers

    It reads like you lack experience troubleshooting on Windows. If you’re praying to some higher power to make your software issues go away, you may also want to revaluate your troubleshooting methodology. Nearly everything you said can also apply to troubleshooting issues with Linux. Except for the whole skipping of “Windows 9”, which no one truly cares about.

    You clearly feel a lot of hate towards Microsoft, and they certainly deserve a lot of it. However, it serves no purpose to resort to exaggeration and hyperbole.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    22 hours ago

    Event Manager.

    You do know I made that very point about how Microsoft’s support knowledgebase is garbage these days, don’t you?

    Linux Community support can help you fix your issue. Once greybeards become jaded in a given community though, you see more and more “read the man pages”… which would be helpful if not for the fact that some of them are as concise as a freight train.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    22 hours ago

    So you can afford 128GB of ram, a motherboard that can support that, a processor that can address that… and you’re running a 2080ti?

    It’s such an odd configuration I wouldn’t be surprised if the Nvidia driver were causing the issue. Contrary to the concept of a “unified driver,” the code for your GPU probably hasn’t been touched by nvidia in a while. Either that, or maybe you’ve got all that hardware, but you’re running Windows 8 or something else odd.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    22 hours ago

    I’ve also spent my fair share of time in IT. I can’t recall any common issue with the reliability of Windows in the enterprise. Single user issues that originally appeared to be an OS problem later turned out to be caused by hardware. Usually hard disks, though I did find a bad stick of RAM once.

    The vast majority of issues I typically saw were application related, usually industry specific software. What I did come to hate was industry applications written to run on the Java Runtime environment. Especially when a user needed several different apps which were not all compatible with a common JRE version. There’s DLL hell, dependency hell, and then there’s JRE hell.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    2 days ago

    Name a real alternative to Adobe Acrobat. Especially Pro. Adobe has their crap on lockdown. And they know it, and they rape your wallet for it.

    GIMP is good enough for me, and it may be a good cheaper alternative for budget minded professionals. But GIMP’s UI and workflow design pale in comparison to Photoshop. I haven’t used GIMP 3 yet though, maybe it’s gotten better.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    2 days ago

    Looks fairly similar to what you would do on Linux. Change registry to config file (unless you’re using Gnome, then it’s both). You’re right though, on Windows, people don’t usually have paragraph long commands to paste into the terminal to fix some issue. Instead, on Windows you have Microsoft support posts where a “Microsoft Community Support” non-employee pastes non-helpful boilerplate tech support copypasta which are somewhat adjacent to the user’s issue.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    2 days ago

    Could that be because he’s had fewer issues with Windows and hasn’t had a need to troubleshoot it?

    Windows 11 is a shitty version of Windows, but it’s not Windows ME or Vista. It sucks because of the arbitrary CPU and TPM requirements, plus having AI forced into a user’s desktop. Not to mention Microsoft is dragging its feet fixing performance issues in Explorer.

    It’s still very stable on good hardware with stable drivers. Point out the actual shit parts of Windows, not lazy callbacks to the days of Windows 98.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    2 days ago

    Not like that, it doesn’t.

    I’ve never heard of someone using bcdedit to change a boot flag, so a Bluetooth adapter will behave.

    The lock screen problem I’ve seen myself a while back. At least in my case, I did not have permissions to the session manager config file, and the gui tool did not account for that. But I think I had to install the tool from the repo. It wasn’t part of the base install.

    The menu problem could be a Kubuntu or early plasma issue. Either way, not something I’ve ever seen in Windows.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldIt's that simple
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    2 days ago

    I’ve not played Factorio but I’ve seen a vidjeo about it. How is the Windows version on Proton better than a Linux native version?

    Wouldn’t the correct answer be to fix the graphics driver or configuration? And why doesn’t OpenGL just work? Or better yet, Vulkan?

    It’s this nonsense that keeps people locked in to Windows.




  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldMicrosoft: "My PC"
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    9 days ago

    MacOS just working certainly has a lot more to do with supporting an exponentially smaller array of hardware than either Windows or Linux does.

    If you’re truly concerned about Microsoft re-enabling that task, it’s puzzling that you would suggest an Apple product as an alternative.

    They are as anti-choice as it gets.


  • Ferus42@lemm.eetolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldMicrosoft: "My PC"
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    10 days ago

    ACPI enabled BIOSes and UEFI support wake timers.

    Windows uses this feature to wake the PC all spooky like so you don’t get to click the update button yourself.

    While Windows doesn’t have an Arch wiki, the instructions for turning the automatic wake feature off are a web search away. You’ll need another web search to disable automatic updates though.





  • While there is obviously a lot of military restricted airspace around Nellis, China Lake, and Irwin, the planned route takes the flight 100s of miles further south than necessary.

    They are following charted airway routes designated by the FAA. These routes exist to help manage air traffic, ensure accurate navigation, and avoid collisions. Few if any direct routes exist between airports.