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AWS to bare metal two years later: Answering your questions about leaving AWS

https://oneuptime.com/blog/post/2025-10-29-aws-to-bare-metal-two-years-later/view
101•ndhandala•1h ago•48 comments

Keep Android Open

http://keepandroidopen.org/
1191•LorenDB•8h ago•325 comments

What we talk about when we talk about sideloading

https://f-droid.org/2025/10/28/sideloading.html
1254•rom1v•18h ago•505 comments

Who needs Graphviz when you can build it yourself?

https://spidermonkey.dev/blog/2025/10/28/iongraph-web.html
236•pdubroy•7h ago•37 comments

Tips for stroke-surviving software engineers

https://blog.j11y.io/2025-10-29_stroke_tips_for_engineers/
276•padolsey•8h ago•78 comments

ChatGPT's Atlas: The Browser That's Anti-Web

https://www.anildash.com//2025/10/22/atlas-anti-web-browser/
440•AndrewDucker•4d ago•186 comments

uBlock Origin Lite Apple App Store

https://apps.apple.com/in/app/ublock-origin-lite/id6745342698
213•mumber_typhoon•8h ago•91 comments

EuroLLM: LLM made in Europe built to support all 24 official EU languages

https://eurollm.io/
694•NotInOurNames•21h ago•520 comments

SpiderMonkey Garbage Collector

https://firefox-source-docs.mozilla.org/js/gc.html
26•sebg•3h ago•0 comments

Continuous Nvidia CUDA Profiling in Production

https://www.polarsignals.com/blog/posts/2025/10/22/gpu-profiling
25•brancz•6d ago•0 comments

Tinkering is a way to acquire good taste

https://seated.ro/blog/tinkering-a-lost-art
328•jxmorris12•14h ago•248 comments

UIs Are Not Pure Functions of the Model – React.js and Cocoa Side by Side (2018)

https://blog.metaobject.com/2018/12/uis-are-not-pure-functions-of-model.html
37•PKop•3d ago•9 comments

Boring is what we wanted

https://512pixels.net/2025/10/boring-is-what-we-wanted/
362•Amorymeltzer•16h ago•204 comments

YouTube is taking down videos on performing nonstandard Windows 11 installs

https://old.reddit.com/r/DataHoarder/comments/1oiz0v0/youtube_is_taking_down_videos_on_performing/
217•jjbinx007•3h ago•178 comments

Wacl – A Tcl Distribution for WebAssembly

https://github.com/ecky-l/wacl
54•shakna•8h ago•2 comments

Generative AI Image Editing Showdown

https://genai-showdown.specr.net/image-editing
269•gaws•15h ago•50 comments

Powerful and precise multi-color lasers now fit on a single chip

https://phys.org/news/2025-10-powerful-precise-multi-lasers-chip.html
42•PaulHoule•4d ago•14 comments

Apple will phase out Rosetta 2 in macOS 28

https://developer.apple.com/documentation/apple-silicon/about-the-rosetta-translation-environment
190•summarity•5d ago•213 comments

Keeping the Internet fast and secure: introducing Merkle Tree Certificates

https://blog.cloudflare.com/bootstrap-mtc/
161•tatersolid•13h ago•45 comments

Aggressive bots ruined my weekend

https://herman.bearblog.dev/agressive-bots/
8•shaunpud•1h ago•0 comments

The AirPods Pro 3 flight problem

https://basicappleguy.com/basicappleblog/the-airpods-pro-3-flight-problem
442•andrem•22h ago•238 comments

HTTPS by default

https://security.googleblog.com/2025/10/https-by-default.html
230•jhalderm•18h ago•208 comments

Project Shadowglass

https://shadowglassgame.com
98•layer8•11h ago•34 comments

Fil-C: A memory-safe C implementation

https://lwn.net/SubscriberLink/1042938/658ade3768dd4758/
233•chmaynard•19h ago•78 comments

Nvidia takes $1B stake in Nokia

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/10/28/nvidia-nokia-ai.html
245•kjhughes•20h ago•159 comments

Gluing and framing a 9000-piece jigsaw

https://river.me/blog/puzzle-glue-9000/
59•busymom0•3d ago•28 comments

Wheeled Inverted Pendulum Model

https://scaron.info/robotics/wheeled-inverted-pendulum-model.html
6•pillars•4d ago•1 comments

We need a clearer framework for AI-assisted contributions to open source

https://samsaffron.com/archive/2025/10/27/your-vibe-coded-slop-pr-is-not-welcome
265•keybits•1d ago•142 comments

Why do some radio towers blink?

https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2025/why-do-some-radio-towers-blink
161•warrenm•16h ago•104 comments

The decline of deviance

https://www.experimental-history.com/p/the-decline-of-deviance
219•zdw•20h ago•183 comments
Open in hackernews

YouTube is taking down videos on performing nonstandard Windows 11 installs

https://old.reddit.com/r/DataHoarder/comments/1oiz0v0/youtube_is_taking_down_videos_on_performing/
213•jjbinx007•3h ago

Comments

breve•2h ago
The solution is to run Linux. KDE is a good desktop environment: https://kde.org/

90% of Windows games run on Linux: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45736925

LibreOffice is an okay office suite (good enough for my purposes): https://www.libreoffice.org/

GIMP is a good image editor: https://www.gimp.org/

VLC is a good media player: https://www.videolan.org/vlc/

markwakeford•2h ago
Onlyoffice is also not a bad alternative. (docx,xlsx etc)
croes•2h ago
If you trust Russian developers
yehat•1h ago
Because there're no russian developers almost everywhere?
wiseowise•1h ago
There's a difference between having Russian devs and being made by a Russian company that supports war.

OnlyOffice is made by a Russian company that doesn't condemn war of aggression that Russia wages against Ukraine.

https://old.reddit.com/r/BuyFromEU/comments/1j7zlf2/onlyoffi...

antegamisou•1h ago
Thank God all other non-Russian companies not only condemn various atrocities around the globe but even support the affected countries being liberated by developing the high-tech armies of the good guys, right?!
wiseowise•56m ago
* Company is Russian

* Doesn't condemn war (understandable in their position)

* Has dev team in Russia

* Pays taxes to Russia, which directly fuel war

* Does not support UAF or donate to Ukraine (also understandable)

* Keeps selling their software in Russia, which might have links to military and administration

Am I missing something here?

antegamisou•35m ago
> Am I missing something here?

The fact that all of the above is being presented as an exclusively Russian strategy. When almost all companies mentioned on this website are proudly and directly tied to non-Russian war industries. The tendency to omit pointing out non-Russian examples almost always indicates endorsement of their actions.

And let me beat you to this that I condemn all offensive war industries no matter the country of origin. Unlike those who believe it is ok to side with one and not the other even if they do the exact same.

croes•46m ago
Do other Russian developers also work for a company sanctioned by the EU?
k8sToGo•1h ago
Should I trust American developers?
croes•49m ago
Isn’t that up to you?
arein3•2h ago
Austria armed forces use Libre Office: https://www.heise.de/en/news/Austria-s-armed-forces-switch-t...
kkan•2h ago
I think that is the main issue. 90% games is a lot, but is not nearly enough when the most popular multiplayer titles simply do not work due to usage of anti-cheat. For example you cannot play the new Battlefield 6.

As for GIMP, while I understand it can do many things as Photoshop, it is not close in terms of features and the UX is unfortunately terrible.

N-Krause•2h ago
While I can understand that it's frustrating. Kernel level Anticheat is a abomination in itself and should in no way be supported. It is a security flaw in itself!

Read this: https://gist.github.com/stdNullPtr/2998eacb71ae925515360410a...

tsimionescu•1h ago
It's also unfortunately impossible to have a good competitive multi-player online experience without kernel-level anti-cheat. It's simply too easy to cheat at many of these games in the absence of strict control measures, and even a single cheater can ruin a game session for every other gamer.

No one reached directly for kernel-level anti-cheat. It was the result of an escalation of the sophistication of cheating solutions.

AlienRobot•11m ago
That is completely irrelevant. Users want the game.
hdjfjkremmr•1h ago
GIMP can't compete even with the version of Photoshop from 2000.
baq•2h ago
> LibreOffice is an okay office suite

writer, perhaps. calc, not even close - google sheets is unfortunately better in almost every way, and google sheets aren't great either.

indigo945•2h ago
Writer is awful too. It will randomly mess up formatting, especially in tables. Also in tables, it will insist to try and parse cell values like Calc would (breaking numbers and dates), even though Writer doesn't even provide a way to run calculations on those numbers anyway.
buccal•1h ago
It does support calculation: https://help.libreoffice.org/latest/en-US/text/swriter/guide...
lousken•1h ago
Word is awful too, it messes up formatting, especially when pasting images. Good luck writing anything longer than couple pages. Hasn't been solved in 20 years. Have stopped using word 2 years ago but I am gonna assume it's still an issue
MrNeon•1h ago
Section breaks keep the formatting changes from affecting the previous/following content so you can place and format images as you wish.
distances•1h ago
> > LibreOffice is an okay office suite > > writer, perhaps. calc, not even close

This really depends on your needs. I'm sure it's not enough for someone who does Excel wizardry for living. But I use it for tracking personal finances and other simple tasks and graphs, and it is completely sufficient.

This in my book easily earns it the "okay office suite" badge. To be honest all office suites in the last 20 years have been good enough for most small scale needs, including OpenOffice back in the early days.

theshrike79•43m ago
There's an old anecdote that everyone uses only 10% of Excel's features

...but everyone uses a different 10%.

Something that's useless to you might be a dealbreaker to someone else.

jncfhnb•24m ago
I doubt that holds up personally

I would guess reliance on excel is declining

131012•7m ago
Nah it just got promoted as the database for PowerBI. /s
cogman10•17m ago
Eh, I've seen the excel wizards at work.

Frankly, calc is just as full featured as excel is, it's just different. About the only issue calc has is correctly parsing excel docs is notoriously difficult.

This is a familiarity problem, not a calc problem.

boudin•1h ago
LibreOffice Calc works well and does the job for what most people needs, I don't see any issue recommending it.
drumhead•1h ago
If you're a finance professional then there's no alternative to Excel. But otherwise Libre office calc is perfectly fine.
lousken•1h ago
windows - if you need kernel anticheats, excel or CAD

mac - if you need battery

happymellon•19m ago
> If you're a finance professional then there's no alternative to Excel

Not sure what you mean by this exactly, but I work in banking with a lot of "financial professionals", and the general opinion is that Excel is not good because it screws with numbers, whether its scientific notation (Why? Its just as long as the original number), rounding of numbers (had that with a large list of account numbers just last week where half the account numbers lost the last 3 digits) and there is no easy way of saying "just treat these as entered".

Even setting fields to text doesn't stop Excel from fucking around and overriding them to be date formatted if it feels like the balance could be.

The main issue is that Excel comes with Office and you aren't allowed to install other software so it forces you to use it and get used to it. It really wouldn't take much to be better than Excel.

cogman10•10m ago
The problem, as I see it, isn't a feature problem but rather just the fact that everyone in banking and finance is already using excel. You aren't going to see `ods` files passed around.
happymellon•8m ago
I would agree with this.
cogman10•13m ago
The only reason this is true is because everyone in finance uses Excel which means that differences in parsing excel docs is consequential. And, in finance, excel docs get shared a lot.

It's not the case that calc is lacking any features which excel has in a finance situation.

dtj1123•1h ago
Any task that warrants a complex spreadsheet can be done better in a Python notebook using pandas or polars IMO
thyristan•1h ago
Calc is far better than Excel.

CSV import in Excel sucks. LibreOffice Calc is far better there.

Best feature of all in LibreOffice Calc: highlight current row/column, so you have a cross-like cursor.

Easier and better embedding of Python and other languages, not the "Python in the Cloud" crap that Excel does.

Less crappy conversions like "oh, that surely looks like a date, let's mess up your data"...

happymellon•33m ago
> CSV import in Excel sucks

I'm going through a project at the moment where all the data is held in spreadsheets, and every time anyone opens them Excel fucks the numbers to be "scientific notation" despite there being space to display the full number and no way to disable this anti-feature. The amount of times I've had to restore the spreadsheet from a backed up CSV because of data loss is frustrating. I wish I could stop using Excel.

smt88•20m ago
This is just a formatting/display issue. Excel isn't rounding the number internally.

It sounds like the problem in this case is that you don't know how to use basic Excel features.

happymellon•13m ago
Unfortunately you are wrong.

You just are mixing up two different problems I've listed as one problem and then made the arrogant assumption that I don't know how to use Excel.

Excel has definitely truncated numbers.

jdalgetty•32m ago
I've used calc every day for years. It works well.
lelanthran•10m ago
> > LibreOffice is an okay office suite

> writer, perhaps. calc, not even close

For what I see 99% of people do in excel (make a table, then sort it and draw some charts), calc would support all their uses just fine.

For those using it for actual accounting/financial stuff with equations in the cells, and custom macros, etc ... then no, calc won't be sufficient.

LogicHound•2h ago
The 90% of games running on Linux does not say how well and what games. Sure I can play the Batman: Arkham Knight perfectly on Linux. However the game is a decade old now. Try playing some titles that came out this year and it going to be very variable, multiplayer titles are often a no go at all due to anti-cheat. You can argue to you are blue in the face about kernel level anti-cheat but at the end of the day if all your mates are playing X, you are just going to suck it up and play X.

There is enough issues running games on Linux that there are specific distros created for running games because everything from the kernel version, X/Wayland, Compositor and the pipewire version can affect immensely how well the game runs.

mikkupikku•1h ago
The overwhelming majority of games that came out this year are from smaller studios and will work perfectly on Linux. It's only the big budget "AAA" games with corporate publishers pandering to shareholders/investment firms which insist on custom DRM and anticheat which are a problem.
LogicHound•1h ago
The big budget games are often the ones that people are playing. Sure there have been a few big flops as of late, but a huge number of people are playing that require kernel level anti-cheat and DRM that does not work on Linux.

There are also other issues around how well those games work. Some games will work perfectly fine. I am not disputing that. It is a bit of a lottery though e.g. I had annoying sound issues with Hell Divers 2 that was only fixed with an update to pipewire. Performance issues were solved by upgrading to Kernel 6.16.

On Windows I had to do literally nothing for the game to work perfectly (also don't believe some of YouTubers that are complaining HD2, their PCs were actually broken!).

Generally on Windows I have to do very little to get a game to work, outside of extremely old games from the late 90s/early 2000s.

0points•1h ago
This situation only exist because Microsoft would allow kernel level anti-cheat in the first place, which is a moronic feat wrt security.
mikkupikku•1h ago
On Linux, the really old games just work, as do virtually all new games with the exception of those very few big budget new releases. If those are the games you really want to play then Windows is the answer, have fun ponying up your drivers license to Microsoft for the privilege of getting root kitted by those games. Literally everything else just works on Linux, one click install and play through steam, no bullshit fiddling around.
LogicHound•6m ago
> On Linux, the really old games just work, as do virtually all new games with the exception of those very few big budget new releases.

It really seems like you aren't reading what I said. I accept that old games will often work fine, provided they are on a store like GoG or Steam. Big budget releases are often what people want to play.

> If those are the games you really want to play then Windows is the answer, have fun ponying up your drivers license to Microsoft for the privilege of getting root kitted by those games.

It isn't about what I want. It is about what is the reality for the vast majority of people. I would rather everyone play games that work on Linux. Unfortunately many of the people I play games like playing new titles, often they only work well on Windows. There is a social aspect of this that many people on here ignore.

> Literally everything else just works on Linux, one click install and play through steam, no bullshit fiddling around.

They don't though. There are always odd issues with games e.g. borderless window doesn't work in a lot of games, because the mouse will get lost. Having that happen mid-match sucks, having fullscreen window has it own draw backs. I won't get into performance and sound issues as I've already explained the issues there.

vintermann•10m ago
The publishers almost certainly prefer that you play these "AAA" titles on console, but if you insist, they'll settle for making your Windows as console-like as possible.

I live fine without a console, so I live fine without a Windows gaming PC too. I don't think the AAA chasers have more fun than me when it comes down to it, dealing with these companies seems to be an aggravating affair even if you do everything the way they want.

theshrike79•41m ago
Online competitive games with anti-cheat are the problematic ones in general.

If you play single player games with no or limited online features you'll be fine in 99% of the cases (number pulled from my ass).

sylens•36m ago
Expedition 33 is a GOTY contender this year and it’s been working great for me on Linux
ahoka•2h ago
I would recommend Krita over GIMP.
ncake•1h ago
or https://photopea.com
constantcrying•1h ago
Why would anybody think it is a real alternative to upload your photos to website which is running proprietary garbage. Just use Adobe if you are going to do that.
Lalabadie•1h ago
The first feature paragraph on the Photopea landing page:

> There are no uploads. Photopea runs on your device, using your CPU and your GPU. All files open instantly, and never leave your device.

martin-•1h ago
I strongly prefer local software, but as someone coming from Photoshop who now only does the occasional edit (and therefore can't justify the price), I find Photopea to be a good alternative, especially since it closely mimics Photoshop's interface so I don't have to learn a new UI. Also, your images stay local on your computer and aren't uploaded to their servers.

It's developed by a single guy, which I think is very impressive given how much of Photoshop's functionality it has. I just really wish it were open source (and not a web app).

strathos•1h ago
or https://pixieditor.net/
lvncelot•48m ago
Honourable mention: https://jspaint.app
lvncelot•49m ago
Aren't they're used for slightly different things though? GIMP for image manipulation and Krita for digital drawing?

(Krita is pretty awesome though, it's up there with Blender for me)

baobun•25m ago
Inkscape is also great and sits closer to Krita.
AlienRobot•12m ago
What do you want to do in GIMP that Krita can't do with a better UI?
lelanthran•3m ago
> What do you want to do in GIMP that Krita can't do with a better UI?

Adjust levels in photos.

ethin•2h ago
If only. Accessibility on Linux isn't as good as it is on Windows. It's getting better, but there are so few people actually working on it that it will take quite a while to get there. Which results in anyone who uses Linux who needs accessibility to suffer very weird problems like not even being able to install it because the installer is inaccessible in some way, or it flat out breaking depending on hardware or because the distro isn't setting obscure env vars that are documented nowhere except for mailing lists that nobody reads anymore, or weird things like that. It's been improving, but really really slowly, and Wayland didn't help things when they for the longest time refused to even consider the possibility of allowing global keyboard access because "security".
4gotunameagain•2h ago
Let's be realistic, accessibility — whether you like it or not — is an edge case. This is also why as you said, the amount of people working on it is low.

It is really not the limiting factor in Linux desktop adoption. The inherent fragmentation and HW compatibility issues are much more pertinent.

Buy the wrong laptop, and you have to fight with X, wayland and Nvidia graphics like a terminally inclined caveman in danger

jacquesm•1h ago
> Let's be realistic, accessibility — whether you like it or not — is an edge case.

Spoken like a true techbro. This attitude is so incredibly destructive. Technology is how we mediate our lives, cutting a very large number of citizens out of that is simply wrong, even if 'the numbers just aren't there' (and they are!).

4gotunameagain•16m ago
I have nothing to do with tech bros.

Did I advocate for lack of accessibility features ? I just pointed out that in this context there are things far higher in the priority list. Especially given the fact that there are accessibility features, just not on par with windows.

Do you seriously believe that improving accessibility would have a higher impact in Linux adoption than improving robustness and hardware compatibility ?

amelius•13m ago
AI will soon fill this gap, hopefully.

Anyway, I think the CLI approach of Linux is way more accessible than the more GUI oriented approach of Windows/MacOS.

pessimizer•7m ago
Not only is accessibility important in and of itself, but starting with a clean, accessible base implies standardization and interop, and makes things a lot easier to automate and extend.

Things that challenge accessibility plugins challenge any plugins. Steps away from accessibility are always steps towards lock-in.

> The inherent fragmentation and HW compatibility issues are much more pertinent.

But you seem to desire this. Don't buy the wrong laptop if you like lock-in; Apple and MS aren't making their OS compatible with your every hardware whim. Or learn how to reverse-engineer and write drivers.

jasode•1h ago
>The solution is to run Linux.

The Linux answer is often repeated but unfortunately, some users depend on various Windows software that only runs properly on Windows. E.g. CAD/CAM, Quicken finance, sewing embroidery, etc can't run in a Linux WINE emulator nor QEMU/KVM virtual machine. And avoiding the WINE/KVM incompatibilities by switching to "Linux-native" software such as Gimp often means having less features and/or not having ability to open old files because they use different formats.

Sure, there's the idea that "90% of users just use email and surf the web so they can just get by with a Chromebook" ... true, but there's still a lot of users who can't because they use other productivity software.

For me, there's always some unexpected situation that requires a working Windows computer. Last year, I had to do an unplanned firmware update on a digital audio interface via a USB cable. There was no Linux updater. They had a firmware updater for macOS but it didn't work. Based on the tech support forums, I had to download the firmware updater for Windows platform and that finally worked.

reply to: >What software do you have that doesn't work in a VM?

Example would be software that use hardware USB dongles for DRM. E.g. embroidery software for sewing machines. The passthrough USB emulation to the vm is not invisible enough to fool the software searching for hardware dongles. Another example was Trimble software for LIDAR that depended on DirectX which crashed in a vm.

reply to: >A good-enough compromise is a dual boot with a tiny Windows partition for the rare cases

That is a very techie solution that's not practical for "normies". Dual-boot creates the "2 os file systems" issue instead of having a single unified disk mount. Windows doesn't have a built-in way to read Linux ext4 file system. Linux doesn't have a bulletproof reliable way to read/Write NTFS partition (various tech forums mention data corruption). Unless one goes external with external NAS hardware and store all documents on an SMB mount -- but that also layers on more technical issues and doesn't work for laptops on-the-go being disconnected from the NAS.

Y_Y•1h ago
What software do you have that doesn't work in a VM? Without going to extra effort the environment should be indistinguishable for the application.
juancroldan•1h ago
A good-enough compromise is a dual boot with a tiny Windows partition for the rare cases
DaSHacka•52m ago
Rufis can make windows on-the-go installs too for this purpose.
thispbowden•1h ago
Have you tried PCI passthrough of a USB bus? Worked for me with a device that didn't work with regular USB passthrough.
Lendal•40m ago
Manufacturing and automation is another big one. Think about a water plant that is air-gapped but needs computer automation software to run. These things are everywhere, in every town that has indoor plumbing and sewer. The specialized software that automates these plants only runs on Windows. It relies on industrial hardware and touchscreens that are designed for use in harsh outdoor environments. All of these types of plants rely on high school educated operators that need to understand what's going on at a simple level. Having an OS that in any way relies on Internet access is a non starter. A Linux based system would be removed within a year of operation. You could get it approved maybe if you really worked at it but it would not be accepted in the long run, after the initial startup. There are physical constraints, technical constraints, and human/political constraints that are all working against Linux.
Paianni•1h ago
LibreOffice is ok for reading and making minor changes to existing files but I haven't used Writer or Calc for anything new in years. LaTeX and Gnumeric are my tools of choice.
chongli•1h ago
Anyone have a good suggestion for Linux dictation software? My friend wants to switch to Linux but he does all his writing with Dragon NaturallySpeaking.
itsn0tm3•1h ago
How about OpenAIs whisper[0]? My social science friends tell me it‘s been great for them. Not sure whether data privacy et all would be an issue of course, but I guess you can just run it locally :)

[0]https://github.com/openai/whisper

vorticalbox•1h ago
you can run whisper locally on your machine.
bmn__•1h ago
Dragon in Wine. A lot of the Talon users do it that way.
naikrovek•1h ago
> The solution is to run Linux.

that is never the solution. that is the workaround. workarounds are not solutions.

lousken•1h ago
correct, the solution is to fully switch and use the native software there not wine
haritha-j•1h ago
VLC is a GREAT media player
lousken•1h ago
Outdated ffmpeg, good for dated formats, not good for new stuff

Players like mpv are way better unless you want to use nightly build of v4

mikkupikku•1h ago
mpv is my choice by a wide margin, but I still recommend VLC to most people because it has the sort of GUI more people are comfortable with.
taneq•26m ago
Haven’t tried mpv but VLC is my go to for weird formats and streaming from random rtsp cameras. Maybe it’s outdated but a couple of years ago when I switched over from libffmpeg to libvlc it was because some cameras on site had weird auth problems with libffmpeg but worked when streamed through VLC. I swapped over and now those cameras work.
BrandoElFollito•1h ago
Outlook is what is keeping me away from Linux Desktop.
lousken•1h ago
Outlook on the desktop is pretty much in maintenance mode only and Microsoft is already breaking it[0]. As for web version runs on linux just fine so you are in luck.

In general, unless you need advanced Excel features, you can switch to linux.

[0] e.g. https://www.neowin.net/news/microsoft-cant-help-break-window... and couple others

BrandoElFollito•33m ago
We use Exchange on-premises, and the web client is really bad.

While email is asynchronous and I can live with not seeing it all the time (I check it occasionally anyway), the calendar feature is a must, and specifically the reminders. This is why I cannot live without Outlook launched, and it reminds me of meetings I would miss otherwise.

etothepii•1h ago
And the crazy thing is that while outlook is my life it's also unbelievably bad. Why can't I have the calendar and email client open at the same time? Why don't newly received email addresses appear in the valid auto complete for sending out calendar invites? Why is search practically useless?
PeterStuer•32m ago
Outlook in its recent versions is (barely) functionally just the repackaged web version.

It is the poster child for enshittification.

baobun•20m ago
Have you tried Thunderbird recently? It's had quite a lift.
mzajc•1h ago
Another great media player for those who prefer minimalist UI: https://mpv.io/. Includes yt-dlp integration and a much nicer terminal interface.
zenoprax•5m ago
And much better keyboard control. It can also do interesting things such as run in 1:1 scaling mode (for example, 4K on a 1080p monitor) and then you can use your mouse to zoom in and out (wheel) and Ctrl+drag to pan around.

VLC walked so MPV could run.

chaz6•1h ago
I use Softmaker Office on Fedora/KDE but Excel is the one Microsoft application I would pay for a Linux version. Even the Office Web version doesn't come close (though it is still a vast improvement).
rzerowan•1h ago
I think the main issue for most casual users is the office suite and browser. LibreOffice/OpenOffice.org unfortunately do not cut it for quirky functionality/aesthetics etc. The most polished alternatives Corel and WPS Office only WPSOffice have a ready deb/rpm installer while also having a collaboration feature inbuilt. Corel seems to have decided to concentrate on a windows only Law vertical , whererthey are admittedly not doing too bad. Browsers should do most of whats neeed for the rest of the saas apps even the video collab apps like Teams/Zoom have a browser mode.
ta12653421•1h ago
cant Office be run in a VM?
rzerowan•1h ago
Latest Office or Microsoft365 is being turned almost into a Saas wrapper for the online app , while having an always on siphon for your data to the MScloud and ADs, so many intrusive ads all overthe place. If its an older version that works i guess can be usable in a VM , but again this is for your casul office worker/parents etc.The least amount of friction will usually be best for adoption (see how zoom came out on top in the videochat space)

[0] https://itsfoss.gitlab.io/post/microsoft-office-365-declared...

Tor3•1h ago
Japanese Windows software mostly don't run, or does it badly, with Wine on Linux. Unfortunately. I've been a full-time Linux user since 1992 and this frustrates me. Some of the software won't even pass the install stage. I'm forced to run this on wife's Windows 10 PC, which has its own set of nightmarish problems. Japanese software houses develop for one target: Windows. As a rule. They don't really know about anything else, except for the occasional support of Mac from some of them.
DaSHacka•54m ago
If it's a one-off program, have you tried Winboat or running it in a Windows VM?
fallenhitokiri•47m ago
Have you tried Bottles? I helped a friend a few weeks ago getting his game library to work after he migrated to Bazzite and there are a few games from Japanese studios / indie devs. It was mostly setting the locale for a separate bottle configuration and from there they installed and worked.
worble•44m ago
I've not really had a problem with Japanese software, but I mostly stick to old games and the like. You do need to make sure you install cjk fonts, and if your system locale isn't Japanese you need to make sure jp locale is enabled then set it before running with `LANG="ja_JP.UTF8"` (or possibly LC_ALL if that fails) but other than that I've not had any major problems.

What kind of software isn't working?

sylens•37m ago
Just made the jump to CachyOS on my gaming PC this week. It’s been great so far.
TiredOfLife•5m ago
> VLC is a good media player

VLC is a broken mess and has always been a broken mess.

mikkupikku•2h ago
The writing has been on the wall for years. Die hard windows users have been telling me that the increasingly esoteric incantations needed to install Windows without submitting to giving Microsoft your identity are a deliberate and officially supported feature which they can rely on even as the common proles are herded onto Microsoft's plantation. I wonder if any still really believe it. The best time to jump ship is now.
gverrilla•2h ago
How viable is it to stay in Win10?
breve•2h ago
You can buy extended security updates for Windows 10:

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/whats-new/extended...

mschuster91•2h ago
In Europe it's free although you have to log in with a Microsoft account for... reasons.
N-Krause•2h ago
While you're at it, you might as well downgrade to Win7. No jokes aside, if all the software you want runs on it, it is fine. Just no security update etc.

I would suggest just switching to Linux and using a VM for things that NEED to be Windows. Games that run kernel level Anti-Cheat won't run, but tbh nothing I would suggest installing anyway.

netsharc•2h ago
I stayed on Win7 until December 2023, until there was some exploit that was attackable by just viewing an image, so just browsing the web would've made it vulnerable (I believe in the WebP format).

Although it seems there are people still Frankensteining Win7, and even patching DLLs to make the newest browsers/apps still run on it.

Famously MS Teams was really screwed up, but I had to use it for work..

engeljohnb•1h ago
> VM for things that NEED to be windows.

The big two that spring to mind are online games and Adobe softwares. I don't think a VM can usually meet the performance needed for either.

I do wish more artists would take a chance on open source softwares, but most of the ones I know are still insistent that nothing can ever come close to Adobe. But that's a rant for another time.

Borealid•1h ago
Games run pretty great on Linux, but if you do want a VM, passing through a graphics card to that VM via vfio provides 95%+ the performance of native.

Virtual reality headsets with dual 4K screens running at 75Hz+ perform well on a Windows VM done that way. A normal flatscreen game is going to be just fine.

abcd_f•1h ago
Browsers are the problem.

Firefox outright refuses to install on older Windows versions for a couple of years now. Very lazy and negligent move on Mozilla's part.

ivanmontillam•1h ago
If you were as resource-constrained as Mozilla is, you'd drop support for unsupported platforms anyway.
teekert•2h ago
If you are in the EU (or European economic area or something), you get another year. Not for free: You need to register an account, or pay ~31 eur.
gambiting•1h ago
Presumably even if you pay you still need to log in with an account so they can verify the update licence is actually bound to your account?
haunter•2h ago
IoT LTSC is updated until 2032 https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/lifecycle/products/windows...

I use it since 2021 on my gaming PC. Zero problems, it’s a trimmed down Win 10 with most of the bloatware removed

Win 11 has a similar trimmed down LTSC version

Just install it, MS doesn’t care about piracy

chithanh•41m ago
Win10 IoT LTSC does not cover all use cases though.

When it comes to gaming, for example Windows Mixed Reality is not included and cannot be installed afterwards (but then again, Microsoft dropped it from Windows 11 too, so no loss there).

Only way to keep it is staying with consumer Windows 10 or use 3rd party software like Oasis.

aquir•2h ago
The best time to buy a MacBook Air (or Pro) or a Mac mini! Much less BS and you take it out of the box and use it within 5 minutes.
jinwood•2h ago
The problem with this is Tahoe.
yehat•1h ago
Exactly, with the caveat I'm buying very cheap pre-M1 Mac to put Linux on it. Works well.
chithanh•1h ago
The later Intel Macs with T1/T2 chip also come with a number of caveats on Linux. Don't expect those to work out of the box with standard Linux distros.
hu3•1h ago
it might work well today for m1/m2 but the writting is on the wall for linux in newer macs.

asahi development slowed down and is getting further away as apple releases new malcs yearly.

i don't think this is a good bet for those who want to use linux.

jacquesm•1h ago
The better solution is to buy an x86 laptop and install Linux instead. All of these empires are just milking us.
elsjaako•43m ago
The videos being taken down here are about how to avoid: Windows requiring a Microsoft account to install, and Windows only being installable on compatable hardware.

AFAIK an apple account isn't strictly required, but a lot of MacOS won't be functional without one.

How is a Macbook better than Windows in these senses?

Aleklart•16m ago
You can use mac, ipad and iphone without apple account at all. You can use app store without logging to icloud. You can install apps without app store. There is no nagging to use icloud after initial setup. There is no spyware and adware integrated into standard apps or OS itself. Apple does not sell user data.
api•2h ago
Why bother? Run Linux or get a Mac.
eadmund•2h ago
Some motherboards only support firmware updates applied from Windows. In 2025, which is just crazy to me.
LogicHound•2h ago
I am a die-hard Linux guy and I have to use Windows for certain things. One of those is multiplayer games. I am never buying a Mac. I've owned 4 macs over the last 20 years and I've regretted every purchase.
mentos•1h ago
I've only ever used windows. Recently got a mac mini so I could compile for iOS. I'm debating embracing the entire Apple ecosystem given I use iPhone. Not a huge fan of iCloud's pricing though. Curious what issues you ran into with your macs/Apple experience?
le-mark•50m ago
For me it was the keyboard shortcuts and mouse behavior differences. That plus the homebrew weirdness trying to emulate Linux package management. I decided to just use Linux.

Ultimately, Linux is a development environment for Linux, and by extension the most developer friendly OS imo.

Esophagus4•24m ago
I’ve gotten used to the mouse behavior and keyboard shortcuts.

One thing that drives me nuts about Linux is that application support generally isn’t as good as Mac. For example, there is no Claude Desktop app for Linux nor an Apple Music desktop app. If you need those, you’re using somebody’s hacked together project that half works, a web version with limited features, or paying for a third party app.

LogicHound•28m ago
I had the following problems. Note my hardware was ageing at the time and was about 5 years old. I know a quality apple specialist that did the work.

- Glue'd in batteries on Laptops. I had a Mac Pro with a glue'd in battery. I could have done it myself, however I ended up opting to get someone who knows what they are doing to replace it. Labour and battery replacement cost me about £250.

- Official charger made the power lines toast. Another £250 to get it repaired.

- iOS Safari browser sometimes stops videos / audio when the screen locks or you switch apps. It is really annoying. Doesn't happen on Graphene OS or Android.

- iCloud is kinda required if you use an iPhone even though I don't use it for backups.

- Upgrades just aren't possible. Every single on of my laptops I have, I have upgraded ram, disk and even processor on some of the older models I have. I changed an intel Mac Mini drive to an SSD, it was a fiddly to say the least. On other SFF machines it is often a 5 minute job.

- MacOS is kinda just weird. While it is a Unix, it does everything it can to hide it. As someone that used both Linux/BSD. MacOS feels like running a weird Linux distro. Brew was kinda weird after coming from Linux world. I would have just preferred to run Linux.

- The online account stuff with Apple is somehow worse than Microsoft.

These days I buy refurb Business Laptop from Dell or Lenovo. Literally 10% of the price, Linux almost always works and if breaks, I can buy another one cheap for the same price as repairing an Apple machine. I get it, they are not as nice but for me they work fine and are much cheaper.

surgical_fire•1h ago
Mac is not an option.

I'd rather install Win 11 on my laptop than buy another Apple computer. Did so once and it was the worst experience I ever had. Never again.

teekert•2h ago
Your computer is not yours citizen. Stop your disobedience.
subscribed•2h ago
OK, I really hope they were downloaded and will spread on other platforms like vimeo, dailymotion and especially The Internet Archive?
a5c11•1h ago
It's funny to see how Windows and Linux completely switched sides. Linux once being the clumsy one, hard to install, even harder to configure, mediocre UX, running on poor device drivers and requiring hours spent on the internet to solve a problem. Today, replace the "Linux" word with "Windows" in the previous sentence.
JohnLocke4•1h ago
Convention and the terminal holds it back. A terminal looks like the 1970s but feels like the future
luma•1h ago
I'd rather suspect it has a lot more to do with 40+ years of application backward compatibility and the ludicrous stack of software available for the platform.
xtiansimon•44m ago
> “terminal holds it back”

Presumably the it here is Linux? That’s not what I would have said. The terminal makes maintaining your own systems much easier because it’s all text. Opposed to having to mix screen shots and instructions. Which is to say, I don’t imagine people who can’t handle the terminal (and are on Windoz) are doing any maintenance or configuration beyond a few GRRR items they’ve convinced themselves is ultimately intolerable.

From a small business I’d say what keeps the accounting office on Windoz is software (ie. quickbooks, excel). But a close second would be tighter integration of file management and core office apps (ie email). It’s very easy to rename, move, copy, files on windows. You can perform many of these file management tasks inside an app experience (ie saveas dialog box). Apple has the mindset with their suite of Apple productivity apps, Chromebooks are very easy for general users to get their head around. If Linux could roll up a Chromebook environment with a QB clone into an expert system (e.g. no. We don’t need pictures, videos or games folders), I think our firm would consider the switch. It would certainly have the appearance of stability productivity, and simplicity which is always a plus when your job is not maintaining IT systems. (Now we just need to find new outsource IT for troubleshooting)

naikrovek•1h ago
they have definitely not completely switched sides. Linux is still clumsy and hard to configure if everything isn't configured for you. Linux has worse UX than Windows has ever had (I'm including windows 8 in that comparison)

Really liking Linux doesn't make Windows worse, and it doesn't make Linux better.

Watch someone who is not familiar with Linux and how it works attempt to install it and use it. Do not intervene. Now do that with a dozen different people on a dozen different machines which you do not preselect.

On Windows it is a much smoother experience.

I am making zero statements about any application compatibility or application comparisons between platforms. I am talking only about UX, UI, and installation.

Linux still has so, so very far to go.

And, honestly, there is no operating system which a complete newbie can start using without help in some form. Linux is not some golden child, here.

You like Linux on the desktop, and that's fine. Keep enjoying it. Just be aware that your experiences color your viewpoints, sometimes completely.

I am not a fan of Microsoft, I use Windows about once a month these days, but the UX difference between Linux and Windows is still very large. Very large.

ruszki•49m ago
Yeah, I don’t understand the parent commenter either. Even with my latest laptop, it took days and weeks to make everything work (like audio, my monitors, DPI, VLC/mpv, even networking). And even then I had to turn off some hardware functionality, because it’s so buggy (bye-bye battery life). And this is before introducing Wayland for example…

Also installing is way easier for beginners with Windows. I’m happy that Linux installation now at least reached the level of Windows 98, but I still need to search for things every single time, even when I do it about every other years for several decades now. Just because somebody thought that it’s so important to ask simple users about an implementation detail which almost nobody care about. And this is before bugs… which I encounter quite frequently.

It’s getting better, but by not much. It could be a very stable OS with the right hardware even 20 years ago. That didn’t change, you still need to be very careful if you want a good experience with Linux and a GUI. I had no laptop or PC in the past 30 years on which I could install Linux without serious hiccups if I wanted anything more than terminal. I could almost always make it usable (it was impossible with one laptop), but I always had to give up something, like battery life, game performance, my headset at the time, etc. And of course a ton of time.

a5c11•44m ago
> Watch someone who is not familiar with Linux and how it works attempt to install it and use it.

What a dumb analogy. My mother can use Windows very well, it doesn't mean she could also install it. The same rule applies to most Windows users. That's why it comes preinstalled, and not with an attached bootable USB stick.

UX of recent Windows versions is crap. The bearish tendency started with 8 and have never recovered, with Windows 11 being the cherry on top of the crap. Telling that as a user of almost every Windows version since 3.11. Microsoft completely changes user interface with every recent version, this is an anti-pattern in UX world. How is that I can smoothly switch between Debian and macOS major updates, and when Windows does the same it is a nightmare? "Oh no, where are the network settings again..."

SirFatty•44m ago
If that really was the case, then this would finally be the year of the Linux Desktop(tm).
baobun•18m ago
2025 is it!
AlienRobot•6m ago
To me it's sad that Linux never became a good desktop OS, Windows just became worse and worse until it became worse than Linux :(

When I upgraded to 7 I tried Linux and I simply hated that I had to deal with the terminal and install strange third-party programs from strange forums to get anything working. Then I had to upgrade to 11 and I had to run strange terminal programs to install it without without creating a Microsoft account, and everyone recommends using some third-party Windows power tools to fix what Microsoft did to Windows. I could not believe it. IT IS THE SAME THING!

Now I'm using Linux, and I don't like it, but least it isn't spyware.

joduplessis•1h ago
I wiped Win11 from my Ideapad and installed Ubuntu. I love Gnome & it's the closest it'll get to MacOS (am a Mac user mainly). Win11 was absolutely wild though - around every corner was some ad for Office365 or Copilot or some other shit product. You don't own Windows (anymore) - you borrow it.
breve•1h ago
Guide for setting up KDE like macOS (or you can install a macOS theme):

https://www.howtogeek.com/heres-how-i-made-linux-feel-more-l...

kgwxd•1h ago
Oh no, all the 10 minute videos that should be 10 bullet points in plain text?
alyxya•1h ago
The main issue is how opaque the system is, though that may also be a feature to limit people’s abilities in figuring out how to bypass various restrictions. No one should have to risk the existence of their channel and livelihood to some unknown automated algorithm. Although the reddit post only cites videos from one person running into this issue, the first video link has comments referencing someone else so I found a video from that other person as an additional data point.

https://youtu.be/vQ-RXzzU9u0

amarcheschi•1h ago
At least in eu, one should be able to access and contest the decisions made to remove your content, I don't know if this is the same outside eu
alyxya•1h ago
I imagine youtube has the same automated system comply with eu, but the videos linked in the reddit post mention how quickly the appeals were denied, so accessing and contesting decisions alone doesn’t fix the automated system problem.
keepamovin•1h ago
I made some videos of installing Windows 95, 98 and NT on DosBox-X on macOS ARM: https://youtube.com/watch?v=RBMSW1B6hKk

And a GitHub repo: https://github.com/BrowserBox/windows-dosbox-x

I tried different AIs to make the scripts to automate installs in DosBox-X as long as you have a product key and ISO or other media.

Most interesting to me was the different quirks between OSeS. NT was the most tricky in getting to work on DosBox-X and syncing up internet, IIRC. But overall a very fun project. Brings back nostalgia of 3.5" disks and seeing those install screen. Very cool times in the 90s ha! :)

sd9•1h ago
In my domain (motorsports), almost all software is ancient 3rd party stuff only available as windows desktop apps.

I’ve tried emulators but performance is abysmal for these apps. There are also all sorts of weird networking things that don’t work.

And generally when you work with a new team which has a different tech stack, there just isn’t time within the context of a race weekend to faff.

I’m unfortunately locked in.

agigao•48m ago
Try Omarchy with Windows VM: https://learn.omacom.io/2/the-omarchy-manual/100/windows-vm
sd9•47m ago
Thank you. I haven't tried this. I'll look into it.
herbstein•41m ago
I hope you don't mind being a bit curious about this, as a hobby driver.

At what level of motorsports are you working? It sounds like you both semi-regularly work with new teams. And are you working with them as a programmer? I'd be curious to know what kind of applications you're then working on, if so.

sd9•31m ago
I work primarily with GT3 teams across the highest level championships (WEC, IMSA, DTM, GTWC, ALMS), with a variety of manufacturers.

With a small team of software engineers and data scientists, I'm building a cloud based motorsports data analysis platform which eliminates the friction involved in handling motorsports data and the differences between different manufacturers' software systems, and quickly gives drivers & coaches insights on how to improve their driving. So this involves getting into the weeds of a lot of this legacy software.

There are a few teams I work more closely with where I've set up their entire trackside network/tech stack, although nowadays I'm more focused on the software. Over the years I've done a bit of everything at the track, up to and including physically laying cables in a bare garage or setting up the systems on the car, although I don't do anything related to vehicle dynamics.

criticalfault•36m ago
Would this help you?

https://reactos.org/

This is an open source reimplementation of winxp. I think they can even run drivers made for windows now.

beAbU•14m ago
If the software is as ancient as you say, then surely you should be able to get away with installing an old copy of Win7 or even older? When you say "weird networking" do you imply internet as well? If it's all offline and only locally networked I see no reason why you need to run a modern version of windows.
sd9•13m ago
Yes, I could probably run Win7
vintermann•4m ago
Having once worked with maintaining an ancient 3rd party windows desktop app, I'm surprised you don't have problems with them on recent windows. I guarantee you the developers do. They must be truly heroic maintainers if none of those frustrations bleed through to you.

A time will come when the easiest way to run these beasts is in a docker container running wine, and I don't think it will be long.

naikrovek•1h ago
The number of Linux fanboys coming out of the woodwork to complain about Windows (and to provide anecdotes about Windows which are clearly exaggerated) is very high.

Please read the Linux Advocacy HOW-TO.

Shitting on Windows and MacOS does not make you look authoritative, honest, or credible. It makes you look like you have a very strong opinion and shut off from anything that does not conform to your opinion.

mumber_typhoon•34m ago
Windows and macOS will happily do everything they can to take your money and keep you in their ecosystem but shitting on them is a crime ?
sharas-•1h ago
Is this year of the Linux yet?
sharas-•1h ago
use bottles.org to run windows apps on Linux. All games run on Linux with it.
poisonborz•1h ago
Correct url is https://usebottles.com/
WhereIsTheTruth•1h ago
The parody of Techno-feudalism
Havoc•1h ago
Thank you Microsoft for your efforts towards making year of the Linux desktop a thing
itomato•14m ago
Set your sights on GitHub, VSCode and npm.
101008•38m ago
They have been taking down a lot of YouTube videos with Bob Dylan botlegs in the recent days, so maybe the platform is becoming more restrictive with everything, not just Windows 11 installs
PeterStuer•35m ago
Fwiw I had to report one of those "free win11 activated" videos as it was having users download and run a script from a suspicious source and handing full domain admin to a 3rd party.
codeulike•32m ago
This is probably youtuber drama about some random youtube algorithm led takedown and likely nothing to do with Microsoft or the actual content of the video that got taken down
itomato•12m ago
A game is fun. Software that prevents you from doing what you want with it is neither of those things.