

The answer is always DRM and monetization. If you didn’t have enough reasons to not buy products with locked down software, here’s even more reasons.


The answer is always DRM and monetization. If you didn’t have enough reasons to not buy products with locked down software, here’s even more reasons.


Your applicable skills could be applied elsewhere, be it at private companies or in other public sectors. You could also - wild thought - work alongside your co-workers to prevent those who are trying to harm the citizens you were appointed to protect from attacking us, such as ICE impersonators.
TL;DR, please find another job if you don’t like the labels and stigma, or put some effort into changing the perspectives of the citizenry.


Good point, I should have mentioned that. Although I think it would be reasonable to say that paying a subscription for security updates would be a non-starter for almost all of the home users.


My decision was to install Linux Mint first on my work laptop and not my main gaming rig, so I would have the ability to switch between both OS’s as needed, and have a fallback machine if either failed.
ProtonDB (Compatibility Database) should be your friend in checking what works and what doesn’t, and for the most part, Windows games “just work”, no need to even toggle a setting (unless you count forcing Proton instead of a native Linux port).
If you have software that is critical to your daily life on windows (Photoshop, Autodesk, VR software, anti-cheat heavy games), you dont need to jump ship on your main hardware. There are ways to get support after October 15th (Through IOT LTSC versions of windows 10, but you’ll have to find a way to get it).
All of your other use cases would be perfectly served by any Linux distro, the Interstellar Lemmy client even has a convenient flatpack for a 1-click install.
Check ProtonDB first (you can even log in to view all your library at once). If everything you would want to play works, go for it! If not everything works currently, I’d recommend getting your hands on IOT LTSC win10, and use a spare device to get familiar with Linux distros.
There’s no one “gaming” Linux distro that will work, but I personally just use Linux Mint because it is ol’ reliable for me - intuitive enough GUI, but just as configurable as anything else. You do miss out on some of the more bleeding edge stuff that distros such as Arch and Bazzite get, but unless you are using very new hardware, I’m not sure if it would be necessary.


Iraqi Military became Iraqi insurgents/rebel forces (During US Occupation). Especially with all of their weaponry and training practically falling into the laps of the US’s opposition during the war.


The more who are aware, the more who will care. And hey, not like typing an honest answer hurt anyone here.


You are excited for October 15th because less people will be trumpeting Linux migrations.
I am excited for October 15th for the avalanche of cheap liquidated hardware flooding eBay.
We are not the same


You’re welcome! Always glad to help ppl with these kinds of questions!


Didn’t the US federal government learn in Iraq the consequences of stiffing paychecks to existing service members… ?
Guess not.


No updates for consumer versions of Win10. Including security ones. If on October 15th a zero-day exploit is out in the wild, Microsoft would not be obligated to patch it. They may regardless (see WannaCry Malware patch for Windows XP), but it will not be ongoing, and probably not all-encompassing.
The longer you use the machine on win10 after October, the more exposed you are to any exploit found in the existing windows 10 version.
What this post is trying to present is that Linux distributions almost never run into these issues - especially when it comes to running on legacy hardware. If you install Linux Mint today, you’ll still be able to update it in october and beyond, for the foreseeable future.
Edit: There will be a subscription option to receive extended security patches from MS for Windows10, but it will not be free, and the price will rise as time passes (similar to win7).


Decentralized control is probably the biggest asset we have to fight back against these issues. Each instance host has motivation to keep their community in the best shape possible, for users and visitors.
If one instance is having struggles, you can migrate to another - and instance hosts could share tactics and information about the process of management.
I love this place! My account’s gonna get Thanos snapped with the lemm.ee shutdown though, hopefully I can migrate before then…


This is California, the state with the strictest gun laws in the country on the books. You’re asking civilians with compliant arms to go up against literal military surplus equipment (provided through the 1033 program)?
Also, nice bot username. Let’s see if you reply to any of the comments.


Fair enough, then a more apt statement would be a permissive non-commercial license with media assets injected from the base game (alla GMOD)


Well boy howdy do I have news for you lol.
Tf2 is open source now - just with non-commercial strings.


Yep, and I’d argue thats one of the most fruitful things to come out of MS’s blunders. It incentivized the other stakeholders to get win32/64 compatibility efforts into high gear for linux, and I couldn’t be happier with what we ended up with today (on the linux side ofc)
Edit: Also, I mentioned the MS store and UWP because that was the reason behind that infamous quote - the team wanted to motivate developers to get on board with the platform, and announcing 10 as the last version of Windows was part of that campaign.


Yeah, if the MS store and UWP apps worked out for Microsoft (they didn’t lol).
Now win11 is “okay, now this really will be last version of windows, because you can’t refuse installing our crap.”
Correct.
Steam Trust factor is likely now part of TF2, similar to CS2. Following that logic, if your account is filtered as “human account”, you probably can chat freely.


I think it’s the same phenomenon in multi-player gaming - community hosted servers tend to have less garbage flying around compared to centrally hosted company servers.
If you run your own server, you’re far more likely to care about the user experience. And if you run your own server, you make your own rules and can manage how you’d like - no obligations.
“It’s not your loot, just your turn to use it.”