• @Geodad@lemm.ee
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    1521 days ago

    I just deleted my old Mocrosoft account. Forgot I had it until recently.

  • kingthrillgore
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    2920 days ago

    lol there’s already a fix: run start ms-cxh:localonly from a CMD line in the installer

    • @redwattlebird@lemmings.world
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      121 days ago

      I am! Looking for a distro that I can use AGI32 on. It already crashes consistently on Windows for large projects and I reckon it’ll do worse on wine.

      I also use substance painter a lot but I reckon moving into a FOSS alternative will be a good move for that. Wean myself off Adobe dependency. Unless it works in wine but I’ve been told anything Adobe or Autodesk can’t run in wine.

      • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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        321 days ago

        Oh wow I looked up AGi32 and that thing seems like a mess. I feel sorry for you.

        I get that it might be hard to migrate some really nastily written software, but… In the year of our lord 2025, it should not be acceptable for any sort of simulation software that requires an expensive paid license, to be 32-bit only.

        • @redwattlebird@lemmings.world
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          120 days ago

          Agreed but the alternatives are not much better for me. I also use Dialux Evo which is much, much better at rendering but it’s extremely Euro centric and you can’t easily make a template for Australian standards. There’s Relux which I tried using but I didn’t want to pay for yet another license just to practice and get better at using it.

          Unfortunately, for us Australian lighting designers, there’s not a lot of options. It’s a gag in the industry where if you hear someone yelling “FUCK!!” out of nowhere, AGI has crashed.

      • @Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        721 days ago

        Steam VR runs on Linux natively, doesn’t it? I switched to Linux a few weeks ago but haven’t tried VR gaming on it yet.

        • @Jezza@sh.itjust.works
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          921 days ago

          It does, but performance seems a lot laggier than Windows.

          I’ve been using Linux full time for a while now, and only recently installed Windows on a secondary drive, just for those two things.

          Before, on Linux, it was a bit of mixed bag. Sometimes it would start up without issue, other times sound wouldn’t work, etc.

          Using corectl is a must, and make sure you have a stable steam install. (iirc the steam I installed didn’t come with half of the 32 bit libs it was expecting). I’m rocking a 7900xtx, so it’s not exactly low-end, and half-life alyx was giving me a lot of stutters.

          • @JaddedFauceet@lemmy.world
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            120 days ago

            I have quite a different experience, can’t tell if it is placebo or not, but my vr experience is slightly smoother in Arch Linux compared to my Windows 10.

            i play VR via Proton using ALVR (steamvr) or Wivrn

            But i havent tried playing Alyx on linux yet

      • @dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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        1621 days ago

        No they don’t. Steam VR is native on Linux, and most of fusion 360 can run in wine. Good news for you!

    • Gormadt
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      921 days ago

      I’m liking Linux Mint and Kubuntu personally.

      Especially Kubuntu for my main desktop PC, Linux Mint for my little clunker PC I use to run my 3D printers.

    • @ZMonster@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Unfortunately the “horror” that is windows persists almost as much as the horror of Linux. Which is a bunch of fanbois crowing about their distro without any explanation at all. But why do they do this? Because that’s how they got into it, and that’s how the people that got them into it got into it.

      Which fucking distro should I use?
      - Well, really it’s just preference.

      Then I choose arch.
      - Uh, wrong try again lol.

      Fair enough, Which fucking distro should I use?
      - Well, really it’s whatever works for you.

      Okay, I didn’t like the feel of that one.
      - Well, you were using the wrong desktop environment.

      😐😑😤😠… …Which fucking desktop environment should I use?
      - Well, really it’s just preference.

      🤬. 🤬🤬, 🤬. 🤬.
      - Look clearly you don’t know what you’re doing just use Ubuntu, or Kubuntu, or Lubuntu, or Xubuntu, or Fubuntu, or Poobuntu, or Schmubuntu. And with cinnamon obvi.

      Well how do I know? The site for each one uses the exact same bloviated claims. They’re all feature rich, and lightweight, and extended support, etc. Do I have to install them all to find out?
      - Yes but that’s impossible. So just use mine, it works.

      Until it doesn’t. Then you need to hit up Linux self help forums, to get help from Linux bros, who are the most detestable group of unhelpful, impatient, and pretentious neckbeards imaginable. “Did you try searching first?” “Just use our discord!” “Just use [my fucking distro!]”

      😖🤯👺

      FML

        • @ZMonster@lemmy.world
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          120 days ago

          Lol, thought I was replying to a different comment, my bad 😆

          Please accept my apologies 🙏

          I’m not unhinged, more or less

          • @Reygle@lemmy.world
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            220 days ago

            Been there. Accepted

            To answer your questions though, I suggest the non-Cosmic version of Pop!OS. (and switch to wayland if it’s not the default yet- not sure, I’ve had this install for YEARS) It’s a good blend of “just works” and “up to date enough” to run anything, and I recommend steering well clear of Arch. I’ve been using Linux for a decade and I’ve always found a way to whoopsie it into a broken state. That’s a “me problem” yes, but if I can fudge it up that easily and I have experience using it, I think it’s unsuitable to recommend to anyone.

            Most people live in a web browser- does it really matter if the desktop environment isn’t riced enough or isn’t windows-ey enough? That said, it takes actual hackery to make any version of Windows usable these days, so I’ll forgive a distro not being “absolutely elite” for someone’s preferences. Let’s not compare Linux forums to Windows forums, where no-one has ever, I repeat ever received ANY useful advice besides reinstalling their Windows, am I right?

            • @ZMonster@lemmy.world
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              119 days ago

              Lol, touche. Unless you include how to “unbreak” every single windows update, but even those resources are growing ever more seldom. Thanks for the explanation. I think I remember hearing about pop during the great steam Linux supportathon a few years back. I held off since the video card support wasn’t quite ironed out of something like that and haven’t checked back.

  • @seven_phone@lemmy.world
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    6821 days ago

    Describing the ability to make a local account as a loophole is letting a little too much real intention slip out.

  • @waigl@lemmy.world
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    9321 days ago

    Why the fuck is a Microsoft account so important to Windows that running it without one is considered a “loophole”?

    • @A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      2721 days ago

      because microsoft is shifting focus from selling you a product, to selling you as a product

      And they need a unique account to track every single click and thing you do on your PC, and the web, and everywhere else to facilitate doing that with greater control and ease.

      Its literally what, and for the same reason, google has done for the past decade+

    • Not a replicant
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      120 days ago

      Microsoft will sell it as a safety thing - your essential stuff is backed up to your Microsoft account, so in the event that your computer is compromised or damaged, you can wipe and start over with your important stuff restored from your Microsoft account.

      Which is not a bad idea in itself, but the rest of the data harvesting and telemetry makes it yuck. I use pihole to block access to Microsoft telemetry servers.

    • @kevincox@lemmy.ml
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      3321 days ago

      They want to make money off of services, every service they offer requires a Microsoft account to purchase and use. Everyone that they force to make an account during setup is one step closer to paying for a Microsoft service.

      There are obviously tradeoffs (less sales of these versions of windows and some users pushed away from Windows altogether among others), but the motivation is clear.

  • dinckel
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    14421 days ago

    I’ve used the unpatchable Win11 account loophole, that exploits a functionality of your pc, where you wipe your boot drive, and install NixOS on it

  • @jasoman@lemmy.world
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    -521 days ago

    To be far this command was only needed for win 11 Home. Pro did not need a command as the option is available through normal prompts windows gives you.

    • Dlolor
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      821 days ago

      I think that option was removed even on Pro a pretty long time ago, no? At least the last couple of times I installed W11 Pro the graphical option was nowhere to be found. It used to be available easily enough that anyone could choose it if they didn’t blindly click Next, then it got more and more hidden away and now I’m 99% sure you need the command unless you prep the ISO using Rufus and its function to create a local account for you. On that note, I wonder if this will affect the Rufus method too…

      • @jasoman@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        It is under sign in option when you get to it then choose domain join. This get you to create a local account. Just did this to 5 new computers last week.

        • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
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          421 days ago

          And it still tries to convince you to go MS account with it’s, “even better, create a Microsoft account” link that’s conveniently located where the Next button should be.

          • @jasoman@lemmy.world
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            421 days ago

            All I know is i been doing this for 6 months upgrading companies from win 10 to 11. I am sure you’re not doing something wrong.

            • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
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              321 days ago

              Upgrades are a different process than a brand new install. Going from 10 to 11 on a Pro is an easy process. Long, as in a couple hours, but easy. The post is talking about brand new installs (the OOTB experience).

              • @jasoman@lemmy.world
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                221 days ago

                The last 5 msi laptop OOTB have been able to create local accounts as a mean to join to domain. The 4 Dell i did the week before was able to do the same.

                • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
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                  121 days ago

                  Yes. Windows Pro. They’re talking about Home OOTB. And in pro, even though you still can (for now), they keep nagging you about the ms account.

  • @mazzilius_marsti@lemmy.world
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    1220 days ago

    LibreOffice better step up their games and make their office suites better. Outside of very niche and specialized applications like CAD or video editor, the average Joe will just need a good office suite to do stuff.

    • irelephant [he/him]🍭OP
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      720 days ago

      Most people just use the online office 365 thing.

      What issues did you have with LibreOffice? I didn’t spot any problems when I used it

      • @mazzilius_marsti@lemmy.world
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        520 days ago

        oh LibreOffice works great for me in general. Only for some documents with macros that were created in MS Office, I have problems running them. Eg: I once received a MS Word document that has some preprogrammed drop down list - so you click to extend the list and choose your items. The document opens fine, but I couldnt get the drop down feature to work. For Excel, documents with lots of VBA codes, I need to go in and do some manual changes.

        In general, for 99% of the tasks, LibreOffice is fine. But it is that 1% which makes me still open up my Windows VM for MS Office.

        After their shenanigan with subscription only models, we still see MS Office being used a lot. It shows how strong MS grips on the Office area is.

        You are correct that 365 is used for most people. I used to use it too…For me, I prefer to be able to access stuff whenever I want. I live in an area with very shitty internet (both Wifi and 4G). Once, a client and I had to wait 5 minutes because Office Online takes too long to load up a spreadsheet. Offline for me is just a peace of mind.

      • @Vinstaal0@feddit.nl
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        19 days ago

        Depends on what you do with it. In accountancy we and most of our clients work with Microsoft Office desktop. Also things like templates based on CRM work better with actual Word.

        Edit: Libreoffice is also a bit annoying since the settings aren’t in the same layout so helping others becomes harder. Not sure if they implemented it since I am not that well versed with it as with Excel, but I belief they don’t have a PowerQuery alternative?

    • @atrielienz@lemmy.world
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      321 days ago

      Bill Gates doesn’t run Microsoft anymore. He’s not the CEO and largely not responsible for the change in their business model.

      Also, I game on Linux more than I do on windows (though I do have a partition in my drive to run windows for games I couldn’t get working on steam OS/ Bazzite. It’s literally 4 games out of over 100.

      • @mhague@lemmy.world
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        119 days ago

        I’m making fun of the juxtaposition of people that express frustration/animosity for Windows with the need to stay on Windows in order to consume cutting edge video games.

        It gets to be comical. Something about the “height” difference. Like you have the giant “They’re taking away my ownership of my data and my very computer!” standing next to little old “But I like my raytracing.”

        “My data is being exposed in the name of corporate AI!” next to “But I can’t play games with anticheat with my friends.” It’s funny. I’m going to laugh.