• raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        It’s the usual problem: if your employer IT refuses to budge, you get locked into a Windows (or Apple) ecosystem. I had the same. My solution was to remove myself from corporate IT, and use my own device.

        I use workarounds for the interfaces with corporate:

        • MS Teams Linux client (sadly discontinued as of 2022) still works out of a jail, but the browser solution is also tested and ready as backup should I be forced
        • Webmail instead of a proper mail proram - that’s a big trade-off, but I can work with it, as much as it sucks
        • Webex for conferencing (as it works properly with Firefox, contrary to many other solutions)
        • Web portals continue to work - even though sometimes I need a user agent switcher to pretend I am using chrome (fuck you @MS Teams)
      • CubitOom@infosec.pub
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        5 months ago

        I’m using kde5 on X. To my knowledge, the only issues you might have with Nvidia on Linux is if you want to use Wayland instead of X. Unless you are someone who refuses to use non-free drivers for philosophical reasons, but then you wouldn’t be using Windows.

        I’ve been running an Nvidia GPU for over 6 years now on Linux without issues.

        I even am using a fairly recent 4070ti and was able to use it with proprietary drivers soon after launch and was running cyberpunk 2077 at 4k with high settings and ray tracing with an average 60fps with dsr.

        I also use the cuda cores for running open source llms locally and have no issues there either.

      • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        It’s always funny to me when people defend something by saying that it’s “not that bad”, because that still acknowledges that it is bad.

        • r_se_random@sh.itjust.works
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          5 months ago

          I mean I can take up issues with Linux as well. The driver support can be iffy at times, especially with Nvidia, gaming can be a challenge, depending on what game you’re playing.

          “Not that bad” is a phrase, which acknowledges issues but still contests something to be bad beyond acceptance.

          • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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            5 months ago

            Oh please, half the time on most computers after installing stock Windows you’ll need to install the NIC drivers from a USB stick because you can’t download drivers locally without a NIC. With Linux, it pretty works out the gate. Significant driver issues haven’t been a real issue with Linux in about a decade.

            Nvidia drivers are especially weird to use as an example. Since the advent of AI, Nvidia Linux support has vastly improved since most AI use cases require Linux. It’s enterprise-ready at this point.

            As for the games that don’t work well - the binaries were only built for Windows, so Linux has to jump through hoops to run them. That’s not Linux’s fault, it’s the fault of the game developers. Thanks to the FOSS community those hoops are only getting easier to jump through. Most of the games that don’t work at all depend on some sort of horrific anti-cheat rootkit that any tech literate person should consider a dealbreaker even if they use Windows as a daily driver.

            And the games that do work, which is most of the games on Steam at this point, perform better on Linux than Windows on the same hardware because they don’t have to deal with the bloat of a Windows OS.

            I guess if you can accept ads crammed into every nook and cranny of the OS, constantly fighting with Edge over your choice of browser, reduced battery life and system performace due to OS bloat, having every single aspect of your computing experience built around corporate profits rather than user experience, and buying a computer every few years because of planned obsolescence you could settle with a bad OS like Windows.

      • raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        It actually is worse than “that bad”. Windows 2000 wasn’t “that bad” - everything after that has gone downhill.

        Objective reasons why Windows is extremely shitty:

        1. with every new Windows version, the same settings are shuffled around and users have to re-learn the interfaces to find stuff they had been able to easily find before
        2. bloatware
        3. tons of software is shoved down your throat with opt-out options either not available, or you have to jump through literal hoops to get there
  • azenyr@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Picture this: you buy a car. You buy a new set of wheels/rims and a new radio system with Android and whatever. You also put some new carpets on the floor of the car. Now you need to take it for a simple routine maintenance and checkup at the car brand official shop. After a few hours you go back there to pick you car up and it has the stock wheels, stock radio, stock carpets and everything and you ask where the hell is your stuff and ALL of them on the shop look at you confused like if they never seen any different accessory on that car before other than the stock ones, or don’t know what you are talking about. All they know is that the car is now “according to spec”.

    This is what it feels like after updating Windows with Linux in dual-boot on the same drive.

  • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    That’s why we need two ssds for dual boot

    And one day, we will have updates that will tell us “Windows have fixed a drive with partition table issues.”

  • Kerb@discuss.tchncs.de
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    4 months ago

    i use a different drive for my windows installation because that happened to often,
    and i swear it once managed to wipe the bootloader on the linux drive.

    i have no idea how it did that,
    but i avoided starting windows using the grub entry since then.

    • kadu@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Having two drives is sometimes not enough, either. I have no idea why, but anytime Windows installs for the first time or goes through a major update (not the small security patches, but the periodic feature releases) there’s a random D20 dice throw to determine if it will randomly decide to create the bootloader and recovery partitions in another drive, even though your main installation isn’t there.

      I kid you not, Windows 10 once decided that my external SSD enclosure was the best place to put the bootloader.

  • Jorgelino@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Ugh, that’s so annoying. Every time windows updates i have to open the BIOS and put ubuntu first on the boot order so it doesn’t skip grub.

    I Also have a drive that i can access on both linux and Windows and every so often Windows will make it inaccessible on Linux because it didn’t fully unmount the drive.

  • EmpeRohr@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Finally another beeing experiencing this issue…i wiped windows after this incident and never looked back

  • HouseWolf@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    I haven’t used my Windows drive in almost a year now, Thinking about throwing another distro on there right now.

  • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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    5 months ago

    I have an old, spinning rust WinBlows, easily inserted in the ex-cdrom slot of my bathtub movie lenovo t440p, because once a year or so I need to upgrade the firmware of some crap that has no other option. Wastes about 24 hrs of (annoying but small) power updating each time. May this pass, in time. (like tears in rain :)

    I should get around to imaging it onto a SSD, but I don’t, due to distaste, and then I need it again. :(.

  • joe_archer@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Remember kids, if you’re gonna dual boot, stay safe, use 2 drives, and pray you’re fast enough to mash the boot menu button when you power on.

  • Jordan_U@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    It’s at least gotten a bit better.

    There was a time when Photoshop and other programs used a copy-protection scheme that overwrote parts of grub, causing the user not to be able to boot Linux or Windows.

    They knew about it, and just DGAF. I don’t remember their exact FAQ response, but it was something along the lines of “Photoshop is incompatible with GRUB. Don’t dual boot if you use Photoshop.”

    Grub still has code for BIOS based installs that uses reed-solomon error correction at boot time to allow grub to continue to function even if parts of its core.img were clobbered by shitty copy protection schemes for Windows software.

  • CubitOom@infosec.pub
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    5 months ago

    Windows actually works better in a vm on Linux than on bare metal. And it’s got a much smaller chance of breaking my PC that way too.

  • mholiv@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    With UEFI it’s waaayyyy less bad than it used to be. There is no more MBR in the traditional sense for windows to clobber. Windows and Linux can share an UEFI boot partition both dropping in their appropriate boot binaries.

    Even if you install Linux and Windows on separate devices, unless you do something strange they will share the same UEFI boot partition.