Lippy

joined 7 months ago
[–] Lippy@fedia.io 21 points 1 day ago

It wasn't the same experience over here. All MSRP cards sold out instantly on all stores. Whatever was actually in stock were all at least £100 over MSRP, and they quickly sold out too.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 67 points 1 day ago (15 children)

The entire GPU market has gone to shit.

It's unacceptable that there's new cards for sale (if you can even find one) that cost more than I paid for my 1080 Ti 8 years ago and have essentially the same amount of VRAM (12 GB vs 11 GB).

I thought that maybe the 9070 XT would be at least a reasonable option if I could get it for MSRP. Of course that launch ended up being another farce.

At this point it looks like I'm going to be riding my 1080 Ti until the bitter end. Sure, newer cards will wipe the floor with it, but I can't justify the current prices.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 7 points 3 weeks ago

Yep, you can delete your Windows partition once you no longer need it or any data within it. Then once you update your bootloader (usually GRUB, some distros do this automatically when updating the system), Windows will disappear from the boot options.

Then you can either create a new partition in its place to store data on, or extend an existing partition to fill the empty space.

I'd recommend also backing your data as a precaution in case something goes awry.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 8 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

If you have a spare drive on your PC I'd recommend trialling Linux on that. With that setup, you will have it dual booted with your existing Windows installation. It should help with the transition since you can just boot into Windows if you still need it for anything. That will give you time to get accustomed to Linux while still having that Windows safety net for a while.

Also if you later find that Linux isn't for you then it's easy to undo that, since all you will need to do is boot into your Windows drive instead.

I went with that strategy when I made the jump 4 years ago, and later dropped Windows entirely when I built my new PC a few months later since I realised I didn't need it at all.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 4 points 1 month ago

Nova Lake was always planned to be a late 2026 release according to a leaked Dell roadmap.

We were supposed to get Arrow Lake Refresh for desktops later this year but this was cancelled. So while the headline is technically correct, it's not because Nova Lake is delayed.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 49 points 3 months ago (5 children)

That's fine, I've closed the door on supporting Microsoft. They could have just charged for the 'upgrade' and that would have been better since it wouldn't result in the colossal amount of e-waste that this is creating. Even without the forced obsolescence, their products have become hostile, invasive and generally just a PITA to use. Meanwhile Linux distros are knocking it out of the park lately.

I really don't know what Microsoft are thinking. They haven't made particularly good strides towards gaining any kind of goodwill, so once it becomes common knowledge that alternatives not only exist but actually show them up, those lost customers are people that they will never get back. Look how pathetic their marketshare is for Edge for example, even though it's the default browser on Windows. They still haven't been able to shake off the bad stigma that Internet Explorer had (and to be fair, they aren't doing people any favours with Edge either).

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 8 points 3 months ago

Not only that, but hundreds of millions of PCs can't 'just upgrade' because Microsoft has arbitrarily blocked them from doing so without resorting to hacks in order to bypass those blocks.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 7 points 3 months ago (10 children)

That kinda did the trick for me since my old PC was starting to struggle with some tasks, so I went and built a new PC recently.

Joke's on Microsoft though, I installed Arch Linux on it instead. It's so much less work to maintain compared to Windows these days.

A relative of mine had also got fed up with the Windows BS and was interested in what I was running, so I got her machine dual booted with Debian now to try it out. She hasn't looked back either, so that to me proves that Linux is ready for non-techies.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 18 points 5 months ago (5 children)

I already did this 2 years ago and I still don't miss Windows. I want my OS to just work, and that means not having big companies intentionally blocking updates and bullying consumers just so they can profit from artificially induced OEM license sales. It's pretty wild how quickly Linux has fit the bill in recent years, and how Windows no longer does.

Only hurdle on Linux right now is the transition from X11 to Wayland. Proton doesn't have good support for it yet so I occasionally have to load an X11 session for some games to run. I can imagine that getting worked out eventually.

Microsoft could have simply dropped official support for older machines and then literally done nothing and that would have still been better than what they did. At least then those machines would still receive security updates beyond next year, provided they could still run the latest version of Windows.

For the record, if the arbitrary CPU block is bypassed, then it's possible to install Windows 11 23H2 on a Prescott era Pentium 4 or Athlon 64. The true requirements did change for 24H2, but even then you can install that on a 1st gen Intel or a Bulldozer era AMD system. Microsoft can go suck a dick.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 8 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Yeah it was pretty terrible until recently. It at least seems to be changing now. The Pixel 8 line and up now get 7 years of support, and Samsung followed shortly afterwards by doing the same with the S24 series (but not their lower end devices). There's still plenty of other Android devices that get barely any support though, so it's getting there, slowly.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 4 points 5 months ago

The S10 stopped receiving Android security updates in March 2022. The issue here is with an issue with a SmartThings app update on Android 12. Not sure if there's any Samsung devices that both run that version of Android and are still supported, and that's likely why the issue wasn't caught.

I suppose with an issue this serious, they're probably compelled to fix it regardless of whether or not the affected devices are still supported.

[–] Lippy@fedia.io 15 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Defectors: "There are dozens of us... DOZENS!"

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