• @keyez
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    18 hours ago

    Funny I just bought a 2021 Lenovo X1 Carbon to replace my Thinkpad from 2016, both running Linux immediately.

  • cheee
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    61 day ago

    “Need” to upgrade?

    need is a strong word, lmao

    • thermal_shock
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      21 day ago

      I NEED to order another nvme to install Linux and move on. still need to have windows for a few things but will be an afterthought.

  • @Freefall
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    112 days ago

    “update to win 11”? Welp, guess my next PC is a Steamdeck.

  • @[email protected]
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    132 days ago

    AI is being driven by LLMs hosted on the cloud, so why would anyone in their right mind buy a Laptop with “AI” “inside” it?

    Even the most technophobic consumer understands this - you can Google something today with a PC from 2014 and it’ll spit out AI slop for you to slurp on. AI chatbots are embedded into every website you can think of – you already have AI shit in your device, it’s just being outsourced to data centers.

    AI accelerators should’ve always been an add-on card like GPUs, or at least embedded into GPUs (like some are) but this whole embedded-into-every-chip-imaginable AI bollocks is a waste of silicon and largely a marketing gimmick to uplift CPU prices.

    CPU vendors are struggling to keep justifying new generations and they’re getting desperate. For 90% of people (conservative guess) a CPU needs no more raw processing power than something from 2010-2014 and 4-6 cores; The kicker is, that this requirement hasn’t been touched for years - the host OS has just artificially bloated itself to push sales.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 day ago

      Yeah my gaming pc is from 2014 and runs modern shit fine. Well did, my GPU seems to have packed it in over the weekend. So I’m on the verge of buying a entire new machine. Ten years is pretty good

  • @FilthyShrooms
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    313 days ago

    I’m switching to Linux before I ever touch win11

    • @[email protected]
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      3 days ago

      Just got a W11 laptop new from work, (replacing a dead W10 machine). It is such a mess. It is trying hard to be a modern desktop like KDE Plasma or GNOME, but without a cohesive setup. And bluescreened twice already, had a WebApp failure error, and locked up completely another time at login. This is brand-new Out of the Box.

      • @daellat
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        32 days ago

        That sounds like a faulty install or machine. Win11 has issues but that’s not a regular experience that you’re describing

        • @keyez
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          08 hours ago

          Happened a lot for my win11 laptop my company refreshed for me. 16GB dell laptop and WSL running plus zoom, firefox and obsidian and it kept getting blue screens for running out of memory.

        • @[email protected]
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          62 days ago

          I would have thought so too but a few colleagues had a few bluescreens, and the machines are not all the same make or model.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 days ago

        Hmmm. I don’t really like Windows myself and haven’t setup a machine without for me in one a decade. But neither my work “development” laptop (in quotation marks because I’m not a developer) nor a mini PC I installed for my dad ever had bluescreens. They can still happen, of course… but it almost seems to require effort with really bad drivers or broken hardware.

        The obvious Windows issues nowadays are a different category from 20 years ago in my opinion.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 days ago

          They still happen even on W10, but we support a lot of customers, that have a lot of users, so I probably encounter them more than a person with one or two PCs ( just statistically)

          Often it were would be network or monitor connection.

          HP workstations laptops I could blue screen consistently by plugging in my phone set to USB network tether. Immediate NDIS bluescreen. I don’t blame windows 100% for that, it just didn’t like seeing a new network device in the Kernel

    • @[email protected]
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      333 days ago

      These rich scumbags have artificially created a demand for themselves, but they hoped for more with pushing the AI scam. You know, sales must only go up etc.

      Linux is the way.

  • @mrfriki
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    3 days ago

    I don’t think that the people still on windows 10 are in a hurry to upgrade. I suspect that either they don’t want to or are not aware of the risk of outdated security updates. So in the end it probably will come down to whether those people need an actual hardware upgrade or not.

    • Dark Arc
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      73 days ago

      Yeah this is captured by the “need” with a bunch of up votes in this thread… The average person just doesn’t “get it.”

  • @[email protected]
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    223 days ago

    local AI is cool and all, but neither the hardware nor the models are really ready for your average consumer

    • @[email protected]
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      12 days ago

      Who actually uses “local AI” beyond developers and a handful of end users? These NPUs are wasted silicon - akin to sticking a gaming GPU in your CPU that only works for games that are either in development or 99% of people don’t give a shit about

      • @[email protected]
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        32 days ago

        The only real advantage of local AI is privacy and that it’s much cheaper if you use it a lot.

        The only consumer use case I see in the wild with some real momentum behind it is role play.

        All the local AI communities I browse are 50% people trying to find usecases for it at their job (like me; unsuccessfully I might add) and 50% people interested in role play.

        People will apparently spend thousands to jerk off to a soulless machine demon simulacrum shell of a human.

        To be fair, I can see the appeal of local AI for video games, like RPGs. There is this really fun game called “Suck Up”, where you are a vampire trying to convince AI to let you inside their house. That is the one real “killer” application I see atm.

        I personally see a lot of other useful usecases for local AI, but from my experience at work, I would estimste it will take another 5 years until any of it is anywhere near consumer ready.

  • Lucy :3
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    133 days ago

    Every person I know either already has a Windows 11 ready device, or doesn’t know what an OS is. In the later case, I doubt they would trust themselves to buy a new laptop, rightfully tho. Luckily we have a bunch of old laptops from work, Win 11 compatible. Nobody will buy a new Laptop in my village!

    • @[email protected]
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      2 days ago

      And for those tech-savvy, or with tech-savvy family members, you can put Win11 on basically any PC. It may run like shit, but all the requirements can be disabled.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 days ago

          Wouldn’t it be possible to emulate these new instructions? It would definitely hinder the performance, tho.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 days ago

            From my understanding, what you’re suggesting requires emulation, so you’d probably need another operating system underneath; there are translation layers for other architectures, like Apple has with Rosetta and what WINE did for Arm, but it sounds very challenging to implement something like this for executables of the actual operating system which can operate at a very low level. So I guess this is in the theoretical realm. Maybe someone is mad enough to do this, but I wouldn’t expect it.

      • @[email protected]
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        23 days ago

        This is my plan since I couldn’t make my lan (vpn) work in linux for the emulators and games I use

    • JackbyDev
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      43 days ago

      Hi there. Nice to meet you. I am a person. My desktop computer’s motherboard is from 2009ish and only has BIOS, no UEFI. I cannot upgrade it to Windows 11 because of this. I know what an OS is.

      • Diplomjodler
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        153 days ago

        Anyone who is just starting out with Linux and doesn’t want to put in a lot of effort should definitely choose Mint over Arch. If you really want to learn the ins and outs, Arch is great. If you just want a usable computer, Mint is your daddy.

        • @[email protected]
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          143 days ago

          Anyone who suggests Arch as the starter Linux distro is absolutely delusional and has probably never spoken to or interacted with the average person.

          • Diplomjodler
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            123 days ago

            They’re the kind of people who write “Git gud, n00b!” in Linux forums.

        • @[email protected]
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          93 days ago

          I also won’t recommend someone to use Arch as their first Distros. You will not have a great time. You need to learn how to use the terminal first.

      • @[email protected]
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        43 days ago

        Even Ubuntu is fine as a gateway drug. Or Pop Os! Don’t be afraid to recommend easy solutions to Linux beginners who otherwise might not be interested in learning the internals.

        • @keyez
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          8 hours ago

          I use Antergos myself but second this easier install method!

          Edit meant EndeavourOS

      • @[email protected]
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        23 days ago

        Thats fair, i also did it for the memes.

        On Lemmy it does feel like preaching to the choir but thats no excuse to not have included both.

    • JackbyDev
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      133 days ago

      You can’t seriously be suggesting Arch for new Linux users.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 days ago

        I wasn’t really. Read the rest of the comments.

        But on another note i went straight from windows to Arch as a complete linux noob and never looked back.

        • @Fecundpossum
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          33 days ago

          I did the same with Endeavour and ended up on fedora. I can monitor and merge pacnew files…… but why the hell should I when fedora runs like a champ with software almost as fresh off the presses as arch and basically zero maintenance.

          An arch based system was an excellent learning tool but it isn’t viable for the majority of users.

          This concludes my sectarian rant. Btw.

          • @keyez
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            28 hours ago

            Just my two cents I could only get my Ryzen 5 5600X and RTX 3080 to run games reliability on EndeavourOS. Tried PopOS, Kubuntu and Fedora KDE spin and all those had issues after a while or failed to run games out of the box and following wikis/guides

            • @Fecundpossum
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              25 hours ago

              Believe it or not, when I had my old 2060 laptop I used EndeavourOS for the same reason. But now I’m on a full AMD system, and the quirks of nvidia are no longer an issue for me. So yeah, good two cents. Everyone’s Linux journey involves some trial and error and finding what works for you.

          • @[email protected]
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            23 days ago

            Do you use Fedora Workstation or Silverblue? Is the KDE version fine to use? I’m pretty tempted to switch, I just want a reasonably up to date system that doesn’t get in my way.

            • @Fecundpossum
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              13 days ago

              I run workstation with Gnome. KDE is fine, and fedora implements it in vanilla fashion without any tweaks, which is good. I personally stopped using KDE because it doesn’t always work the way I want it to, and Gnome does. Games can easily be swapped between monitors if it opens on the wrong one initially. Gnome took some getting used to but it’s fantastic. Give it a shot.

              • @[email protected]
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                22 days ago

                I’m really happy with KDE, I love how customizable it is and I also mostly prefer KDE software. Gnome is cool, but it’s not for me.

                But I’ll give Fedora Workstation a shot, thanks!

                • @ziggurat
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                  21 day ago

                  Use fedora KDE then, they are working on making it the same status as fedora workstation.

                  You will not lose out on anything by using the KDE iso. Well except gnome and gnome related packages, of which you can install any one of if you want them later

            • Nik282000
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              12 days ago

              Debian > Ubuntu. Less extra stuff shoveled in and while not bleeding edge it’s not a dinosaur.

            • @Fecundpossum
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              13 days ago

              lol no.

              Canonical has left a bad taste in my mouth far too many times. Snaps are generally awful, collecting analytics without user knowledge at one point. If I was going to use something Ubuntu based it would be mint, but I prefer a native vanilla gnome experience.