Windows 11 often requires new hardware. But that will be extremely pricey or have very little RAM for a while.

I dont believe that a single competent person works at Micro$oft anymore, but maybe maybe this could lead them to make a less shitty OS?

And garbage software like Adobe Creative Cloud too?

They obviously dont care about users, but the pain could become too big.

    • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      It sounds like you have a lot of experience with running out of memory that I don’t have. I’m curious – how much ram do you have in the laptop you switched to windows? I don’t think I’ve experienced running out of memory recently. Been running Linux for like 3 years now and I’ve always felt every possible aspect is far snappier. Regarding ops comment about windows being the ram problem, I think they just were referring to it using a lot of ram, which it does. You’re calling it a few Mb and that’s just not accurate. I can’t say for sure what exact difference it was for me, but years ago I compared windows 10 to pop os. I think the difference was not far from a GB. And we can split hairs about what specifically occupies ram. Services, kernel, third party apps. The fact is that windows culture is different in a very bad way. You have to opt out of apps running on startup constantly, manually checking settings under an “advanced” tab often… I vastly prefer the culture of bloat being opt-in in almost every case. There are dozens of reasons I prefer Linux but the fact that it just runs faster without effort specifically to make that happen, is atop the list.

        • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Interesting take…

          Another relevant twist of the knife on the Linux side is thunderbird not having a tray icon

          What would you need one for?

          What is the purpose of an email client that doesn’t stay running 24/7?

          Genuinely confused here. To receive email? What’s the purpose of leaving it running all the time? The only difference in the setup I have and what you seem to want is that instead of clicking an email icon on the dock and waiting ~1second, you want to see a notification in the tray? Given that email is 90% noise no matter how many things I unsubscribe from, the last thing I want is a constant stream of notifications on yet another device.

          I feel like specifically because I run Linux all my apps launch faster so yes I prefer to close them when not in use. Feels a lot cleaner for my mental model. Don’t get me wrong, I often run 6-8 apps at a time if I need to. But even then I don’t think I go much beyond 8 GB of ram used, unless I’m gaming.

            • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              I’m not contradicting myself and I understood all that. You didn’t get what I was saying.

              I was simply saying that you want something I’d never want. Has nothing to do with a distaste for email. Has to do with adding stress to my life while also using my system resources. And I was pointing out the only non-stress difference is I have to click once to open my email and it loads very fast. I wouldn’t see any value in what you see as a minimum requirement. I’d actually go to a lot of trouble to disable that if it were on by default lol

              It sounds like you’re a person who not only uses chrome but also dozens or hundreds of tabs. I’m opposite to all that. I stand by my claim that Linux performs far better and I suspect I’d think so even if I wanted to run a lot of ram hungry apps at the same time tbh, because I just haven’t experienced literally anything you’re saying.