• terrific
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    01 month ago

    As someone who was forced to start using Windows again after ten years after ten years of exclusively running Linux: Why is it like this? Everything is so crappy and slow!

    • @rdri@lemmy.world
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      01 month ago

      Partially because Defender does a lot of unnecessary work. Partially because Explorer now has Chromium under the hood of many elements.

      Also Copilot. Not even joking. Having so many copilot buttons in apps is not an issue. The issue is to actually try using it. Even a light conversion crashes both the desktop an Android clients too often. At this point I would rather have those resources consumed by actual AI running locally than on a crappy frontend. Pathetic.

      • @AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.world
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        01 month ago

        Don’t they have the whole “copilot+ ready pc” branding thing now for computers with npus? is none of it actually local yet?

    • obnomus
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      01 month ago

      I’m dual booting on my laptop cuz I need windows for something, but 8gb ram is too much on Linux and the same amount of ram is too little on windows, Like I have 170 processes and 6gb ram usage at idle with my apps running in background, very poor memory management.

    • SeductiveTortoise
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      01 month ago

      It’s nearly the same for me, except it’s been nine years, and I’ve been using both Linux and Mac. It’s not bad enough to look for a new job, but oh man, I hate it so much.

      • The_Grinch [he/him]
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        01 month ago

        It’s definitely gotten more wasteful lately in particularly. You could run 8.1 on any computer that supported Vista, and IME it was even a little snappier, but 10 and 11 have each been significantly worse.

        i3wm on a 32bit IBM thinkpad is still instantaneous-response-fast

        • @relativestranger@feddit.nl
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          01 month ago

          i only recently moved my main home pc from 8.1. 1st gen. mechanical disk, 32gb ram and pascal gpu. i skipped all the way to a rufus’d 11 and it’s actually running well (with all the crud ripped out, though).

      • @filcuk@lemmy.zip
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        1 month ago

        I have recently booted into dad’s decade(s?) old xp pc and was baffled by how snappy that thing was…

        • @selokichtli@lemmy.ml
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          01 month ago

          XP was snappy at first, but then I used to install a couple of programs and things started to suck big time. It was always the registry. At the time, a lot of people I knew, used to just format Windows on a regular basis, also because the spyware and malware were so prevalent.

    • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      01 month ago

      Linux aint perfect either. Look at the memory usage of most modern “fully featured” distros. They’re using damn near as much at idle as windows is. Same thing going back 10 years in time.

      The key is with windows you get one windows, and maybe some tweaks. With linux you could go with a hyper minimal DE with not much in the way of shiny features and go a whole lot further.

      • @GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        I’ve never seen a distro take more than 2gb RAM ootb (ubuntu gnome and kde are probably the “heavy” contenders), excluding precached files. In either case, Windows or Linux, you lose big time the moment you launch a web browser.

        • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          01 month ago

          The fresh install of Manjaro KDE on my laptop is using 2.6gb on a fresh boot right out of the box.

          I forget what distro it was (maybe neon?) that was using like 3.X gigs of ram on a fresh install. That was the point that I realized this wasn’t the Linux of old.

          • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            01 month ago

            For shits and giggles I just tested out Ubuntu 25.04 and it’s only 1.3 gigs with it’s stock Ubuntuified de.

            For as much shit as Ubuntu gets it’s really not that bad compared to some of the others.

          • @Grapho@lemmy.ml
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            1 month ago

            It probably was Neon. I switched recently and (for me) it’s more resource hungry than Kubuntu, even.

      • @Squiddork@lemmy.world
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        01 month ago

        Linux also uses a lot of ram for disk caching, it’s flagged as a form of available memory so there’s no performance overheard for this.

          • @Squiddork@lemmy.world
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            01 month ago

            Huh TIL, had a look through my system and it sits at about ~5GB not including disk cache. Been on Fedora KDE since 39 and have put it through its paces so I’m pretty happy with that

            I would’ve reformatted windows twice in that time because of bloat accumulation, and like you said there’s always room for improvement with hyper minimalist packages.

            God I love Linux.

      • @Grapho@lemmy.ml
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        01 month ago

        I switched to KDE Neon lately and holy fuck does it chug down my battery in a few hours time (though most of the consumption is from Firefox so can’t blame it completely on the distro)

      • @selokichtli@lemmy.ml
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        01 month ago

        Not prefect, but c’mon. You can run Linux+GUI in a potato, but even KDE Plasma is nearly close to Windows in RAM/CPU usage (excepting misconfigurations of baloo).

      • Communist
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        01 month ago

        And ontop of that, they have no incentive to work on performance, if they made it better you’d have less of a reason to upgrade your machine, they want to slowly make performance worse and worse to maximize this effect

        • Tenderizer78
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          01 month ago

          If you upgrade your machine it becomes easier to sell you AI, since AI will work faster on an upgraded machine. Hence it’s a win-win for Microsoft.

    • companero [he/him]
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      01 month ago

      Realtime antivirus scanning is a big culprit. I’m sure all the advertising/telemetry junk doesn’t help either.

      • @relativestranger@feddit.nl
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        01 month ago

        updates. the constant barrage of updates. the cpu, ram, and disk time needed just to ‘check’ for updates is horrible (it used to be a lot worse, too). and if you are still on an old-school mechanical hdd, those ‘cumulative’ updates are absolutely brutal every month with win10 or 11.

        last week i booted-up a silverblue that hasn’t been run in a couple months. 8gb, mechanical disk, not a speed demon either–3rd or 4th gen. i didn’t even notice the updates were coming in until the notification popped up saying they were done.