An HOA (home owners associations) can say what color you can paint your house, What you can plant in your yard, What you can have in your driveway, and some even say what color your blinds can be.

Microsoft controls your computer, they say what info is sent back to Microsoft, and they say when you must upgrade. They can shut down your computer when they want whether you like it or not.

  • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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    4 days ago

    I’d say they’re more like the developer, they’ve made the house their way, you can kinda change it, change the paint, move the furniture but you can’t make any major structural changes.

    As much as Microsoft sucks their os is generally pretty solid. Not great but good enough for most

    (I say this having not had a windows install on a personal machine for over a year now)

    • WasPentalive@lemmy.oneOP
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      4 days ago

      You will not find a developer standing at your front door saying “Sorry, Updating the house- you can’t go in right now” - and if you buy a home usually you can remodel but if you are in an HOA you probably have to beg permission to do anything that would be visible from the street.

      • desentizised@lemm.ee
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        4 days ago

        I didn’t understand the “forced upgrade” argument until now. Yea I guess you’re right, at some point you have to do updates (they nag about upgrading to 11 but you can skip that indefinitely). But with how popular Windows is you have options for a lot of problems (including forced updates which to be fair shouldn’t be ignored when it comes to security patches).

        If you open up Chris Titus Tech’s Windows Utility (https://christitus.com/windows-tool/) you basically have a comprehensive list of all the ameliorations one could ever want at their disposal. That’s really the main thing Windows still has going for it, it’s a decades-long mainstay which means there are plenty of knowledgable people out there who know how it can be made to heel even if Microsoft decide to force a Microsoft account on you, telemetry, whatever it may be, there will probably always be a way around it.

        For example one of my main gripes with Windows 11 is how you can’t make the taskbar show all tray icons anymore by default. They removed window titles in the taskbar so now everything is basically a square down there meaning there’s all this empty space between my open windows and the tray. But of course someone out there has written a program to automatically unhide all tray icons and thrown it on GitHub.

        To me personally it doesn’t matter how crappy the design choices are as long as they can be mitigated. If bad corporate decisionmaking is a dealbreaker (which is also a fair assessment) then you have to ditch the corporation entirely and go Linux or what have you. Not trying to be smart or anything but there really is no reason to stay on Windows left anymore. Maybe if you absolutely need Microsoft Office or something but ever since Proton came out the issue with Windows-only games has pretty much evaporated.

        Switching to Linux without prior experience will challenge even the most tech-savvy, but it’s an investment worth making many times over.

        • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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          2 days ago

          Switching to Linux without prior experience will challenge even the most tech-savvy, but it’s an investment worth making many times over.

          I would normally agree with this but for reals, I’ve switched over “I just need a computer and don’t care what’s on it if it does what I need” types to Linux Mint, usually because they keep a perfectly good old laptop around that is getting Windows-crusted and nagged to updating to an even slower bloatier version…

          …and I get very few help requests, and I hear “I’m getting used to it and I like it!” Especially now with how their Steam games will just work 98% of the time. I also hear that it’s faster and more responsive.

          It’s truly awesome, and I think a lot of the fears come from past horror stories and turbo-nerd elitism haha.

          There’s still holdout issues, like VR or Adobe stuff, yeah, but it’s going in such a lovely trajectory. :D

        • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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          4 days ago

          I don’t get the forced update thing at all, use windows at work and don’t get nagged about updates ever. if it ever has updated on its own it’s done so completely imperceptibly to me

          The only argument I see is that they’re dropping support for win 10 soon which kinda sucks but the majority of people will not even notice they’ve been upgraded

          • desentizised@lemm.ee
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            4 days ago

            Is that an Enterprise version at work? I mean even if you pause updates for as long as they allow you to on consumer versions, at some point you do have to do it. I do get nagged on one of my installations but not on my main one. Both Windows 10.

            I was planning to transition to Linux completely by this autumn but laziness strikes as per. I guess autumn 2025 is the new deadline now.

            • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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              4 days ago

              It is the professional version yes but even when I used to have windows 10 I managed to turn auto updates off permanently

      • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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        4 days ago

        I haven’t had an update forced on me on my work machine ever

        If you’re having the house fumigated, or making some renovations you’d have to be out of the house for a bit

        • youmaynotknow@lemmy.ml
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          3 days ago

          You must be the one person I’ve ever seen saying that. I remember up to windows 7 and some time with 10 that updates would just wait for you (assuming you configured it to wait) and I would update when ready to shit down. But I’ve seen 10/11 just kick people out over an update way too many times to know it’s. I configured my wife’s computer to not update at all unless I actively told it to, and it she woke up to windows 11 one day (which I appreciate because that was the trigger for her to love to Fedora, lol).

        • WasPentalive@lemmy.oneOP
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          3 days ago

          Funny, that Linux manages to 1) Tell you when updates are available and leaves it up to you to apply them 2) Apply updates quickly, rarely over a minute. 3) Even more rarely requires a reboot. Because of these three features, I am usually more than happy to install an update any time one is available when I come to a convenient point to do so.

          • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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            3 days ago

            The first two are not true on my distro

            People complain about being notified about windows updates all the time, and they generally install quietly in the background for me while I get on with my work

            The only time I consciously update is when I get wind of a CVE

            • WasPentalive@lemmy.oneOP
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              3 days ago

              Debian lights up an icon in the System Tray. When I am ready I can either click on that icon to bring up the package manager GUI or I can open a Konsole window and run ‘sudo nala update’ then ‘sudo nala upgrade’. (Nala is a beautiful front end for apt)