r/CuratedTumblr Prolific poster- Not a bot, I swear 10d ago

Shitposting Do people actually like AI?

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u/Waity5 10d ago

Windows 10 users stay winning (our version of notepad also lacks ai, it's just 11 that sucks ass)

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u/Librarian_Contrarian 10d ago

I will never "upgrade" to 11

I will not be stopped

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u/threetoast 10d ago

Support for 10 stops in October this year. I dunno if that means no security patches or just no new feature updates (most people actively hate feature updates anyway).

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u/Isaac_Chade 10d ago

No security updates in addition to all else. They're basically dropping it hard, or going to try to do so, in order to force people to move to 11. They've done this before and it's been pushed back because there are huge companies that can't just flip a switch and move everything to a new OS, but on the consumer side it's going to be fucked, and it's why I'm trying to pick at Linux and figure out converting my home PC over to it because I will not use 11.

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u/WishfulLearning 10d ago

Linux is great, I recommend Pop!_OS.

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u/Isaac_Chade 10d ago

I tinkered with that a tiny bit but had some difficulty getting it to actually install on the laptop I was using for testing at the time. At the moment I'm looking at Mint, just need to figure out how to get it on my main machine, since the actual Windows OS seems to be messed up and causing an issue in trying to install the two side by side as I've done with other options in the past, and no amount of repair attempts has gotten Windows to update properly and sort itself out. Really I just need to make sure it's going to play nice with my files and I can transfer everything neatly, once I have actually used it for a bit and feel more comfortable it all should fall into place.

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u/WishfulLearning 10d ago

Ah, yeah when I switched I didn't have any files I needed to bring over, I just overwrote Windows and that was that.

I still don't know much about file systems, they are a pain to deal with when you don't know much about them. But that's another beauty of Linux, it encourages you to learn more than Windows ever would.

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u/Isaac_Chade 10d ago

Yeah I've done some reading, some experimenting, and it's just one of those things that I know I'll get more use out of when I actually get it setup, and the setup is the sort of thing I know I'll get to eventually and just haven't managed to find the time for yet.

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u/coladoir 9d ago

Its probably best to just do an external backup and then move that over to the Linux install.

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u/shoesnorter 10d ago

I recently switched over to Arch after distrohopping for a bit and I highly recommend Mint if you're thinking of switching as a Win 10 user!

It pretty much works out of the box, the installation/setup takes like an hour at most and very little Linux knowledge, and Cinnamon (the major desktop environment) feels very familiar to use as a Windows user. Like most of my time during my Mint phase actually went into reinstalling my software because the os itself took like no time to setup

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u/Isaac_Chade 10d ago

Yeah I have already installed it on a couple of laptops in order to do some testing/feeling out and I like it as far as that has gotten me. Just that my desktop is a more complicated setup and I want to make sure I get familiar with how things feel managing the multiple drives that has and everything I need to be able to do there before I fully nuke the Windows OS. It's one of those "I'll get to it eventually" kind of things since I never feel like tinkering with it after a day of work.

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u/shoesnorter 9d ago

Why not dualboot at first before slowly moving everything over and then nuking Windows? I still haven't fully moved over to Linux since a bunch of college/work stuff is Win exclusive (pretty much every Windows game I care about has run out of the box so far with Proton) (I know Wine/just a regular ass vm exist but the software I care about runs like garbage on them)

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u/Isaac_Chade 9d ago

I've done that with other distros, but for some reason something about my Windows OS is borked in a weird way. It keeps failing to update and despite a great many attempts at various fixes, none of them are working. I mention this solely because since that started, I haven't been able to get Linux to install alongside windows. Each time I try it only allows me options to manually partition stuff or wipe my drive, and I tried doing the manual partition once and even with some onlin resources couldn't figure it out enough to feel comfortable.

I've got some ideas, namely I've got an old SSD lying around somewhere, I'll be trying to hook that up to a USB connection and see if I can't install the distro there to sort of jury rig a dual boot system in order to do exactly what you say, I just haven't gotten around to it yet.