this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2026
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[–] Dozzi92@lemmy.world 1 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

Except that's not true. The little tweaks, remove onedrive, turn off copilot, use powertoys to reprogram the Copilot key to right control. Little, useful tips to improve user experience.

And the thing is, it's something we've been doing for as long as I can remember. I remember screwing around with windows 98 to improve my experience. It's been a fact of life with windows, and it's fine.

[–] Katana314@lemmy.world 4 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

It maybe used to be more true, but these days even when someone posts a decent guide on de-bloating Windows, it can A) Miss something critical, leaving spyware telemetry running, or B) Become out of date one month later when a Windows Update manually re-enables all the things you turned off.

I would've appreciated it when I was on Windows, but now? I'm kind of just happy not to be constantly fighting my OS on things, even if I do get compatibility annoyances.

[–] Dozzi92@lemmy.world 1 points 14 hours ago

I appreciate what you're saying. I will agree 100% it's gotten worse. I use it because I have a software that will never work on anything else, and a piece of hardware that only has drivers for windows.

I just find the argument to be disingenuous that Linux is this - to use the Ron Popwil catchphrase - set it and forget it OS. And I'm not suggesting you made that, but I see it often.

And so because I'm stuck with my work software (which I will use until I die because retirement isn't real), I just don't feel like going over to Linux is going to somehow better my life. I get along more than fine on Windows, same as I always have. I do get the itch to try Linux though, just to see, and so the constant bombardment here on Lemmy might be working. I did try Red Hat briefly 20+ years ago, but that's about the limit of my experience. I wanted to take over a MUD that had gone extinct.