• nickwitha_k (he/him)
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    110 months ago

    To me, this gives off the same sort of energy as “Americans will do anything to avoid using the metric system.”

    Getting an OS from questionable sources that MS is almost certain to be aware is not a legit copy and relying on their goodwill to in order to avoid either getting new hardware or switching to a more reliable and usually monetarily free OS.

    Maybe it’s that I’ve not been running Windows for over a decade but, I just don’t get it. You’re presumably going to be entrusting the OS with a Steam install and other potentially sensitive things.

    • @digital_roach@lemmy.world
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      210 months ago

      Hahaha very funny analogy and also very true. Ideally, yeah you’re 100% right. But in practicality, Linux/GNU is only free if you have time to spend. I do run Debian and openSUSE on some machines because there are use cases where it is unparalleled. However, there are times where you have to get hacky and pour over documentation to get it to do what you want for applications that would just work right out the gate with Windows, so the choice is obvious if you’re running against a clock or lack technical skills.

      Secondly yes it is sketchy but I would compare it to finding sources of information in the world of academics. All about where it comes from and if the affiliated community is trustworthy/expert enough to verify integrity.

      The individual I was referring to has been using LTSC since it’s launch 9 years ago and has never had a security breach (knock on wood). Their initial motivations were to avoid being part of the MS botnet and being fed up with advertising on software they’d paid for, but seeing the regression of the OS to its current state serves to confirm their sentiment.

      TL;DR sometimes there’s no practical choice but Windows and ltsc is the best one, if you’re careful