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KonalaKoala , to technology in A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back
@KonalaKoala@lemmy.world avatar

For those of you that don’t know about this OS and are tired of Microsoft’s bullshit, you can look into supporting ReactOS as a true Windows alternative which needs it, and you feel you want to give the middle finger to Copilot, Copilot+ PC initiative, and Windows Recall. It can even be made to look like you have went back in time to the Windows XP era with the use of a theme and yet its not Windows, and could run things that you could already run in Windows 10. If even says you can fork it on Github, meaning you could choose to labor for months using it and Linux Technology to build a better OS to replace Windows using it and Linux Technology. And if you already going going FOSS by using Libra Office instead of Microsoft Office, LibraWolf instead of Firefox, and are currently looking to FOSS for your paint program and other things you use, why not look into going FOSS with your OS as well.

rottingleaf , to technology in A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back

I see no broken backs here. People have been composing songs about Bill Gates being a faggot (I’m not homophobic, that was just the climate back then) since he entered the general conscience. Microsoft being both clumsy and criminal has been the butt of too many jokes since Windows 95 at least.

I’m too young to remember anything older than 98SE, but I remember that when XP came out, people were complaining that it’s slow ugly shit as compared to 2K, and it felt that if MS doesn’t change the general direction, people will remain on older stuff or move to alternatives, Vista was hated so badly that everybody suddenly forgot the hate for XP, 7 was first advertised as something sky cool and impossible, then turned out to be kinda mundane, but usable. Actually with every Windows OS new brand there’s an outrage. With every MS big news there’s an outrage. They always deliver the opportunity.

TL;DR - Hoping that MS will kill itself is stupid.

dual_sport_dork ,
@dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world avatar

The thing is, during the 95/98/ME/XP/Vista days Microsoft had less competition in the consumer computing space, smart phones weren’t really a thing, and a PC was “the” way to get online. Nowadays everyone and their dog has an iPhone or Android device instead, and ever dwindling numbers of people even bother to have a PC anymore. So in modern times, there is a nonzero possibility that on a consumer level at least, Microsoft might finally slide into irrelevance. That’s not to say they’ll go out of business anytime soon, but they might not be able to remain the Microsoft we’ve known so far for too many more years.

Nerds use Linux. A lot of people who want to buy an off the shelf computer that “just works” buys a Mac. And everyone else just uses their phone for everything.

Microsoft doesn’t actually do anything (except make the XBox, I guess) that non-corporate users give a shit about except “make computer machine go” and “stupid subscription ribbon bar program I need to use to open files work sends me.”

This is why M$ has been so gung-ho about their path to enshittification in recent years, I’m sure. This is a profitability thing. They see the writing on the wall that just selling operating system and office suite licenses to rubes is not going to remain a profitable business model much longer. Instead, they have to scrape and datamine and sell adds and push subscriptions and all the rest of it for alternative recurring revenue, because no member of the public will willingly pay for a Windows license anymore. I sure as hell won’t… If I need Windows, I’ll pirate it. And there’s no way they are shifting as many OEM licenses as they were in the early 2000’s. People aren’t buying computers like that anymore.

gnuplusmatt ,

They make their money in azure now. AzureAD, cloud services, intune (managing win/mac/android even Linux). Windows and office are just hobby projects compared to the revenue those generate.

rottingleaf ,

I’m glad you mentioned actual work somewhere along the way.

You have also omitted PC gamers.

WhiskyTangoFoxtrot , to technology in A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back
lvxferre , to technology in A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back

I know that I shouldn’t, but here’s what I think about this whole deal, illustrated with a single image macro:

https://i.imgur.com/Oz7R9pn.gif

Get wrecked, Microsoft.


I think that the article does a good job highlighting how much of a trainwreck this is, because Microsoft is not to be trusted. The Windows users hysterically complaining about this are not expecting Microsoft to behave in some outrageous way; they’re expecting Microsoft to behave as usual.

Gsus4 ,
@Gsus4@mander.xyz avatar

Every generation needs to learn what microsoft is all over again, but they only learn the hard way.

ultratiem , to technology in A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back
@ultratiem@lemmy.ca avatar

You guys trusted MS before this???

TwilightVulpine ,

A couple years ago it wasn’t thoroughly and transparently sucking off every bit of personal data it could get, and gearing up to put adds on the desktop on top of that.

Linkerbaan ,
@Linkerbaan@lemmy.world avatar
Duamerthrax ,

Seems the consensus is that telemetry started with Win7, but I swear I remember privacy people freaking out about Win95 or 98 sending system specs or something back with out telling the user. It’s been a slow boil for a long time.

ultratiem ,
@ultratiem@lemmy.ca avatar

Yeah I think 7 was when it was a big blip on the radar. But 100% they had to start laying that foundation beforehand, so I wouldn’t be surprised if it was either always there or started making its way in 98.

95 was relatively groundbreaking and a part of me thinks the PC was so new they hadn’t thought of it yet or if it was even possible given the nature of internet, but you can’t put anything past the marketing guys that would probably love to know what colour your shit is.

ninekeysdown ,
@ninekeysdown@lemmy.world avatar

Yes & No.

From what I remember from that time it wasn’t really a lot of people going on about privacy at that time. We were more concerned with how they just grabbed the BSD networking stack without saying anything about it.

There were a few things w/rt activation that people were pissed about. That was more towards the XP era though.

Though maybe someone else remembers it differently than I do since I wasn’t paying attention to privacy at that point and I don’t remember seeing anything about it in PCMAG or G4

Duamerthrax ,

I vaguely remember something from TechTV or Slashdot. Searches only turn up more recent discussions though. The old stories are getting buried by the more recent shit going on.

ninekeysdown ,
@ninekeysdown@lemmy.world avatar

Don’t worry a quick google search will tell us to use a non toxic glue mixed with vanta black to keep privacy intact

Abnorc ,

I remember when Windows 10 first came around, and people were trying to bring attention to the privacy issues in the TOS. Now it’s been widely adopted just about everywhere, and this is probably going to be the same.

admin ,
@admin@lemmy.my-box.dev avatar

Is github, owned by Microsoft, the largest public code repository?

ninekeysdown ,
@ninekeysdown@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve always trusted them to do what they’re great at… which is get a product nearly 100% perfect, then back it up about 20%, and polish it off by shooting themselves in the foot.

Which I’ve always found it insane that EVERY product they ship is like that. The only exceptions (IMHO) to that were Office, DOS5, Win7, (Maybe XP)

A_Very_Big_Fan , to technology in Microsoft addresses Windows Recall backlash, promises to fix security issues and make it opt-in

Why the hell wasn’t it opt-in from the beginning?

Stanley_Pain ,
@Stanley_Pain@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I like daaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaata

– Microsoft

random_character_a ,
@random_character_a@lemmy.world avatar

It’ll be opt-in, till it isn’t.

conciselyverbose ,

For the same reason it used an unprotected DB. Because they don’t give a shit about your privacy or security.

RizzRustbolt , to technology in Microsoft addresses Windows Recall backlash, promises to fix security issues and make it opt-in

Losing all your government contracts can be a great motivator.

BombOmOm ,
@BombOmOm@lemmy.world avatar

I’m really hoping this shit is banned on all government and corporate computers. But, with how poor IT competence is…such a ban will be sporadic at best.

absquatulate , (edited ) to technology in A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back

I don’t think this will bury MS because they can easily market this to enterprise clients ( if they haven’t already ). Recall is a particularly useful tool for any employer that wants to keep track of everything employees do, especially in an age of WFH. They probably figured they can take the PR hit from users concerned about privacy and move on unaffected.

ChairmanMeow ,
@ChairmanMeow@programming.dev avatar

Any enterprise working with sensitive data certainly has to disable the feature. And turns out, that’s most enterprises.

I have heard very little, if any, enthusiasm about this. Nobody seems to be excited about it at all.

secret300 ,

I love the concept… I think it should remain a concept

LEDZeppelin , to technology in Microsoft addresses Windows Recall backlash, promises to fix security issues and make it opt-in

Windows 10 will be the last windows I will use. Already switching to Linux at least part time to wean myself off of Microsoft

Delonix , to technology in A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back

Linux ftw!

CarbonatedPastaSauce ,

For those of you that are tired of Microsoft’s bullshit, a great place to start is Linux Mint or, if you want to be on the bleeding edge with a rolling distro that still gets some testing, openSUSE Tumbleweed (which is what I’m using).

Signed,

Linux daily driver convert of ~3 months now.

Jode ,

I went through quite a few distros to find one that would cooperate with my laptop and opensuse is the one that did it.

CarbonatedPastaSauce ,

Same reason I picked it. I did some distro hopping when I made the switch and Tumbleweed was the first one I tried that my motherboard audio worked with.

Jode ,

Did you try leap before tumbleweed because I still have a few issues I am running on bandaids right now.

CarbonatedPastaSauce ,

No, I tried Mint and Manjaro for a couple weeks each and a couple other distros I’ve forgotten cause I just booted them up, checked audio was broken, and replaced them. But I know Leap wasn’t one of them.

rottingleaf ,

I started with Mint, but for Windows users I’d advise openSUSE too.

There’s an issue, though, with them preparing for the next big release to become something like Fedora Silverblue or I don’t remember. But for now it’s a distribution with the corporate feeling in a good sense as strong as with Windows, almost none of that feeling in a bad sense, and it’s very polished.

ssj2marx ,

I’ve been driving Linux for about a year now, I ended up switching to Debian because I don’t want my programs updating with bleeding edge releases that can break things. The coolest part about Linux is that you can choose like that.

ruse8145 ,

I found endeavour (arch) to be a much simpler experience vs fedora or opensuse or void. Tpm chip worked right away, clear instructions for setting up secureboot with a hook that signs everything as it’s updated, etc. I could barely get void to boot, opensuse worked well but after a power outage the tpm stopped working and I was never able to get it back, fedora I had no success with tpm. I’m sure that’s all pretty variable depending on hardware.

If you aren’t looking for full functionality of your hardware most any distro should be fine, but…why sacrifice security?

cultsuperstar ,

Tell me about gaming on Linux. Most if my gaming is via Steam and I have a Steamdeck which I know runs on a flavor of Linux so it can be done. Is it fair to say that any game that runs on the Steam runs on Steam Linux?

I just got a new prebuilt with Windows 11 Pro and I’ve been curious about Linux for the past few months. I know the variations have gotten better over the years but haven’t done too much research into it. I hear Mint and Arch quite a bit.

psycho_driver ,

Did you mean to say “any game that runs on the Steam Deck runs on Steam Linux?”

If so, the answer is yes. It’s honestly surprising these days to run across a steam title that doesn’t run in linux (though always look into the anti-cheat situation for online games).

kshade ,
@kshade@lemmy.world avatar

Is it fair to say that any game that runs on the Steam runs on Steam Linux?

No, it’s not that far along. A lot works, but if there’s invasive DRM or anticheat then it probably won’t. If you have specific games you want to play in mind check out www.protondb.com

I know the variations have gotten better over the years but haven’t done too much research into it.

If you’re curious you can just create a live USB stick to test drive it. Won’t work well for gaming though.

CaptPretentious ,
Tywele ,

There is more than one distro.

ReveredOxygen ,
@ReveredOxygen@sh.itjust.works avatar

If you’re still using Ubuntu, I’m not sure what you’re expecting

Rivalarrival , to technology in A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back

Straw that broke the camel’s back? Every vertebra in that camel’s back has been smashed with a sledge hammer over the past 30 years.

Windows 95 was the last version I was excited about; Windows 98 SE was the last version of Windows I willingly purchased, and XP was the last one I willingly used. When they announced Win7, I downloaded Ubuntu 6.06, “Dapper Drake”. Since then, Windows has only existed on my computers as pirated, virtual machines.

CarbonatedPastaSauce ,

I think Windows 7 was good, and their last decent desktop OS before they started backporting Windows 10 garbage into it late in the lifecycle.

I’m in the same boat as you now. Earlier this year I’d had enough and there was no way I was going from my de-shittified Win10 Enterprise install to Win11. I’m on Tumbleweed for my main PC now.

lightnsfw ,

My job is in the early stages of planning for updating everything to windows 11. I just got my testing VM with it the other day which is my first experience with it and I had an almost physical reaction to how bad the gui looks when I first logged in. I haven’t even done anything with it and I already hate it.

On the other hand the Linux VM I set up at home to test my personal stuff out on has been going swimmingly.

bufalo1973 ,
@bufalo1973@lemmy.ml avatar

I hated Windows from the day I saw the 3.1 floppies had no write tab (that tiny piece that allowed you to write the disk). My first though was “we’ve payed for this and they forbid us to write on them? Fuck MS”. It was the last original Windows in any PC at home. And I used DRDOS, so even worse (Windows 3.11 had a “bug” that made it crash if it ran on DRDOS).

oo1 ,

Tape over the hole.

bufalo1973 ,
@bufalo1973@lemmy.ml avatar

I know (and then too) but that’s not the point. It’s “you are not selling this to me”.

Wolfwood1 ,

You lasted until Windows 7? I’m guessing you didn’t have to deal with Windows Vista’s bs then. I changed ship thanks to Vista.

I also suffered Windows Me, but I was too young and at that time I didn’t know there was an alternative.

I dual booted Vista/7 and Ubuntu/Mint for a while but after not using Windows in years ended removing it completely. Now I’m a happy Antergos Arch user ¯_(ツ)_/¯

Rivalarrival , (edited )

Wow, I actually forgot about Vista. I never actually had it installed on anything. XP was the last OS I had installed on hardware. Win 7 was the first I knew only from VM installations.

GamingChairModel ,

When they announced Win7, I downloaded Ubuntu 6.06, “Dapper Drake”.

Windows Vista was so bad that it gets forgotten even in a retrospective about how Windows versions sucked. But yeah, Win7 didn’t come out for another few years after that, to rescue the world from Vista.

rottingleaf ,

I have a unique memory of people saying that XP sucks ; after Vista nobody remembers that.

rottingleaf ,

and XP was the last one I willingly used.

Same.

When they announced Win7,

I, eh, still used it for some time, but then went to Linux.

circuscritic , (edited ) to technology in Microsoft addresses Windows Recall backlash, promises to fix security issues and make it opt-in

I maintain one baremetal Windows install that gets fairly regular use. It’s on a major OEM business class workstation with a legit Windows 10 pro license.

Recently, I had to wipe and reset and goddamn do they try and trick you into choosing all the worst spyware settings AND even if you successfully duck and weave past them, they’ll just cheat and enable them, or reinstall shit like co-pilot during an update.

They just made me sign into that shitty M365 app to install a legit subscription of Office, and on the next reboot, it converted the local user account into an online user account.

Make no mistake, Recall is going to be enabled by hook, or by crook, for the vast majority of Windows 11 users in due time. No matter how many times they disable it, or opt out.

RustyShackleford ,

Yup. We’re back to the old days where Microsoft didn’t give a damn and enabled things by default.

It’ll take less than a decade before they get sued, yet again. By then, the penalty will be <5% of what they’ve made, but the merry go round will circle back and start all over.

Rolando , to technology in Microsoft addresses Windows Recall backlash, promises to fix security issues and make it opt-in

It will now require Windows Hello (via facial recognition and/or fingerprint)

So Microsoft also wants my fingerprints and a realtime capture of my face? Yeah that totally addresses my concerns. /S

Retro_unlimited , to technology in Microsoft addresses Windows Recall backlash, promises to fix security issues and make it opt-in

Too late Microsoft, I jumped into the Linux pool and the water is fine.

ElvenMithril ,

Exactly. Running fedora desktop and I am thinking why the move does.not do more poeple. The only Microsoft junk I am using is the corporation laptop and that I am sure wont get this function.

Lettuceeatlettuce , to technology in Microsoft addresses Windows Recall backlash, promises to fix security issues and make it opt-in
@Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml avatar

If somebody shows you who they really are, believe them the first time…

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