• Dogiedog64@lemmy.world
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    24 hours ago

    There’s an easier way. Switch to Linux. It’s good now, and only going to get better with more adoption.

    • Atropos@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      I would love to, but unfortunately our work requires windows due to the software packages we use. And no, I really don’t want to run a virtual machine for CAD.

      • ByteOnBikes@discuss.online
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        21 hours ago

        People don’t realize how difficult it is.

        Not only do you have to do a lot of feature replacement (getting off of teams and using zulip and jitsi. Getting off of outlook and using Zimbra. Using next cloud over whatever the hell Microsoft’s version is)…

        You also have to deal with all the Microsoft chucklefuck IT people who never touched a command line before. The push back I had in previous companies is lazy IT folks who don’t want to learn anything their Microsoft certification didn’t teach them.

        • ghen@sh.itjust.works
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          17 hours ago

          Not to mention that windows domains fail gracefully. You can still format and reinstall if you want but most problems can be cleaned up as you limp along rather than taking the whole company down with a single server failure

      • naticus@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        Yep. Already did at home and I still need Windows at work. I may get to that point eventually but not there yet myself. When it’s time for a hardware refresh for me, I think I’ll push for Linux and see if I can work on ways to roll it out elsewhere too. I really need to find a way to manage it in a similar way to Group Policy, but haven’t looked into it too much yet.

  • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Business has spoken, consumers have spoken. No one wants AI right now. Large companies trying to out compete each other on LLM is stupid. Time for the bubble to pop before more people get hurt.

    • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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      12 hours ago

      No one wants AI right now.

      I don’t know why anyone would ever want “AI” on their workstation let alone in a production environment. Its like a calculator that works 94% of the time, useless and distracting. Or like a bowl of candy where only one is poison, why would you want that?

  • kieron115@startrek.website
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    19 hours ago

    "If this policy is enabled, the Microsoft Copilot app will be uninstalled, once. Users can still re-install if they choose to. This policy is available on Enterprise, Pro, and EDU SKUs."If this policy is enabled, the Microsoft Copilot app will be uninstalled, once. Users can still re-install if they choose to. This policy is available on Enterprise, Pro, and EDU SKUs.

    so… they arent allowing admins to uninstall it. they’re letting admins ask their users very nicely to not reinstall it.

  • aliser@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    FYI: as a user, you are already allowed to uninstall Windows and switch to Linux

  • namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev
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    18 hours ago

    I thought they renamed their entire product line to “Copilot” by now, didn’t they?

    Uninstalling it at this point would leave absolutely nothing left!

  • tabular@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    May allow

    The benevolence! Your own computer can do whatever you want it to… if MS agrees to it.

    • kadu@scribe.disroot.org
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      2 days ago

      Our luck was that personal computers existed before phones. The fact computing is open is a miracle.

      Microsoft would love to only sell computers with locked bootloaders, enforced DRM, locked down stores. Imagine having to jailbreak your desktop.

      • kshade@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        That was a big concern when TPMs first started appearing. I’m glad that that didn’t go the way it might’ve. Yet.

      • wuffah@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        People call me paranoid, but after my dad’s MS Surface spontaneously encrypted itself and lost the recovery keys, my belief is that what you described is the goal they are working towards.

        Apple already does all of this along with client side scanning and MS is falling over itself to implement the same ecosystem.

      • tabular@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Hardware alone is not a working computer. If you control the software running on your computer then that software is yours (like it’s your book on your bookshelf even though another person owns the copyright). If someone else controls your computer then that erodes your ownership of it.

    • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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      2 days ago

      You are not spending tens of millions annually and thus Microsoft doesn’t give a shit about you. They literally would not piss on you if you were on fire.

      • Damage@feddit.it
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        1 day ago

        I mean, they already lost the war to Linux on infrastructure, those are billions they never made. It’s not unlikely for them to lose the desktop as well.

        • kchr@lemmy.sdf.org
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          1 day ago

          Not really. Almost every Windows-based organization over a certain number of employees will use some shape or form of Active Directory (whether on-prem or in Azure) and most likely also Office 365, which is corporate/enterprise infrastrucure that is really hard to migrate away from once you built your IT and processes around it.

          All the license fees for just retaining access to and being able to onboard new employees in that infrastructure is a huge portion of the budget for these organizations.

          They just gave up the war on competing with UNIX/Linux on the non-enterprise production infrastructure side, since there were no money to be made there.

            • kchr@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 day ago

              I know what you mean, but it’s not what you said. :-)

              Just wanted to point out that they still have monopoly on the enterprise side of organization infrastructure, which is huge - the number of companies running production systems on self-hosted Linux infrastructure are orders of magnitude fewer than those that don’t, even if the number of Windows servers in total might be fewer.

              Microsoft gets paid per employee, per application suite and per cloud service (if Azure is involved for the AD) - not only per server. They were very early on the recurring subscription model almost every SaaS provider is leaning into nowadays, even for on-prem stuff.

      • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        That’s not really the point though. I’m not even talking about end users. Government agencies, corporate backend services, customer service agencies and more are all abandoning Windows for Linux partially because Win11 is a horrible product, but also because the requirements just keep growing which is stupid.

        Microsoft’s response to this is the above, which they were STAUNCHLY opposed to previously because they need to try and force AI down users throats to justify the money they have pissed away on it. They’re shoehorning Copilot bullshit into every product line they have now, and it’s WILDLY unpopular and unnecessary. If this is the best they can do to address it, they’ll continue to hemorrhage users.

        When more state agencies in the US start switching, they’ll release some “Windows Lite” bullshit, but it will too late because the commitments needed for these organizations to bother switching is massive. They’ll be losing licenses for an entire generation of Windows at the very least.

        • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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          24 hours ago

          I still have a some sway at work regarding tech stuff, and I know roughly half of my team feels at least half a strongly as I do about how shitty Microsoft is. there are a couple programs for which we need to use Windows, but I could see us at least exploring how to not use windows anymore. It’s just too difficult to do our goddamn jobs

        • jj4211@lemmy.world
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          23 hours ago

          Issue is that there’s one thing that organizations love about Windows that isn’t really catered to in any Linux distribution: Nannying the users and not letting them do their own things with their own systems.

          For example, no Linux distribution out there will help you prevent the end-users from changing their own desktop wallpaper, or what to show when the user locks their screen. When my company hands out laptops, the users are blocked from changing out the ugly propaganda slides they make our systems display. Just the tip of the iceburg for how much the enduser can be screwed with by a microsoft admin that just isn’t possible in any significant Linux desktop environment.

          So user may love Linux, but their employer still wants to make sure they are running Windows.

          • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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            20 hours ago

            Uhhhh yeah there is? You can customize any user profile and centrally control it just as you can on Windows. You can even PXE boot all workstations with new images whenever you want instead of relying on individual machines to issue updates, something that Windows isn’t capable of.

            Not sure where you got this idea, but you’re misinformed.

            • jj4211@lemmy.world
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              19 hours ago

              You can’t to the same degree. If you let the user use a typical desktop environment like gnome or plasma., then they can set their wallpaper.

              Now if you want to make a kiosk thing, so much easier in Linux. But if you want to have a general purpose desktop experience but restrict stupid stuff like wallpaper, windows has got you.

              I would rather use and administer Linux systems at scale any day, but if you hated your users and wanted to lock personalization, then Windows has done the work to enable that.

              • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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                15 hours ago

                Sorry, ma dude. This is 100% incorrect. Been doing this a long time, and have managed massive numbers of desktop sessions for enterprise end users.

                Lookup dconf. It’s the tool that manages the underlying configuration engine for Gnome specifically.

                Outside of the granularity there, you could also just lock everything to a group and exclude logged in users from that group. That’s a very simplistic way of explaining it, but achieves the exact same thing. You build a base image with only the apps the user needs, set execution to an inclusive group that user belongs to, and everything else to some other groups, and there you go. Dead simple.

                Of course that’s not how you’d do it for an org with thousands of users, but you get the point.

    • MIDItheKID@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      IT admin here, we certainly do know how to do it, and already have. It’s an appx package, and it’s really not difficult to remove.

  • Eternal192@anarchist.nexus
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    2 days ago

    Oh they’ll “allow” it, how’s this go fuck yourself and keep your shitty AI crap to yourself since you fucking love it so much.