There’s been tens of dozens of annoyances over the last decade.
Literally not even boiling the frog at this point, the frog is fried.
Comment on Windows users don't want copilot on their taskbar
morrowind@lemmy.ml 7 months agoFor the average user this is like a minor annoyance like once a month. Not worth switching OS’s over.
There’s been tens of dozens of annoyances over the last decade.
Literally not even boiling the frog at this point, the frog is fried.
blind3rdeye@lemm.ee 7 months ago
Yeah, it’s a minor annoyance… another minor annoyance on top of all the others. And another personal data leak (or siphon) to go with all the others.
This on its own is not worth switching OSs for - but as a piece of a larger picture it’s yet another reason to consider it. And for some people this may be what tips the scales in their evaluation.
drcabbage@lemmy.ml 7 months ago
It’s a boil the frog scenario. Windows users will always cope with more and more shit thrown at them.
Statick@programming.dev 7 months ago
And Linux fanboys will get up on their high horses while googling how to fix their driver issues.
my_hat_stinks@programming.dev 7 months ago
This may have been true historically but I’m not sure it still holds up. I switched to Linux Mint as my regular OS a while back and the only driver issue I’ve had was that the installer didnt properly install my wifi card’s proprietary driver (which was working during live boot from usb), so I had to tether to my phone to download the driver through the driver manager. It even installed Nvidia drivers just fine.
It might still be an issue for more barebones or heavily customisable systems but I’m fairly certain nobody’s recommending people switch to Arch for their first Linux experience.
Miaou@jlai.lu 7 months ago
Certainly better than throwing a perfectly working machine because Microsoft won’t support it 🤷♂️
drcabbage@lemmy.ml 7 months ago
Driver issues usually only happen if the manufacturer doesn’t provide a Linux driver. Usually it is best to do some research to ensure the hardware will work before purchasing. Otherwise, the driver usually is included with the kernel so it is plug and play even for things that require manually downloading and installing on the Windows side.