- Joined
- Dec 17, 2019
Funny, I never paid for Windows.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It's absolutely impenetrable without having first read a glossary of terms. Basically "hyperconverged" is an industry buzzword for VM hosts that have storage, networking and a hypervisor bundled as a complete package when you purchase them. e.g. Dell sells this thing called VxRail which is a pimped out R740xd pre-configured with licensed ESXi, vCenter and a bunch of storage for vSAN. (No need for a separate SAN and a two-host cluster can be directly connected to each other so you don't even need a 10G switch)Microsoft also sells a product called Azure HCI which I think is intended to be an on-premises middleman between your local infrastructure and Azure? Everything I can find about Azure HCI is so full of marketing buzzwords I can't actually tell what Azure HCI is used for.
Thin clients already exist and I've worked in places where the majority of staff are on thin clients. I've also worked in places where thin clients were the norm but they got removed and other places where they were strongly considering it. As with anything, there are pros and cons but also big price tags associated. The biggest benefit I've seen from thin clients is that when a VDI guest inevitably shits the bed, you can just blow it away and the user gets a new guest that's functioning. Users can also easily hot desk with a roaming profile and since the thin client is just a little Linux machine, it boots up insanely fast and it gets its config from a central server.I think they wanna do that. But I don't think it will actually happen. Its all dependent on internet access. What happens if some idiot cuts the demark cable for an entire building? I guess the company loses money. Sorry employees, go home. And even though companies like Dell and Lenovo would love to sell a cheap product at markup, they do depend business through support and repeated sales
I remember. I still say win 10 is gay and still use 7 because I am not a nigger.Remember when Windows 10 came out and every retard said they would pry 7 out of their cold dead hands then those same retards started praising Windows 10?
I just install up to SP1, have a hardened network perimeter, zero cracked software, and a browser hardened to diamond state.And let's be real, Win7 was no picnic toward the end. Microsoft kept slipping telemetry in with the Windows updates and if you didn't keep a constant eye on it and comb through blogs and forums to find out which "bad updates" to disable, you'd be in nearly as bad a place as a stock Win10 install.
You can get a Windows 7 with recent security patches by using Windows POSReady 7. Which is an edition sold to run on ATMs and cash registers but is fully functional.I remember. I still say win 10 is gay and still use 7 because I am not a nigger.
I just install up to SP1, have a hardened network perimeter, zero cracked software, and a browser hardened to diamond state.
I have a years old install that every time it's fucked itself I have stubbornly fixed rather than reinstall. It's held together with a whole load of shit I can't even remember doing. At this point I want to ride it until the wheels fall off. Also every program I use is customised to fuck and I'm not doing all that shit again. If it ever dies to the point I can't revive it, I'll just boot into my Linux partition and grab the files, then never use Windows again (apart from using 10 in a VM for work like I already do).You can get a Windows 7 with recent security patches by using Windows POSReady 7. Which is an edition sold to run on ATMs and cash registers but is fully functional.
I used W7 on a daily driver PC for a period last year when I didn't have a W10 PC handy. It's still perfectly cromulent as long as you use decent anti-virus software and practice good opsec (hint: using a browser without uBlock Origin is like doing a street walker bareback... though that's true of any current year OS).I miss win 7. I was very upset when I could not stop the canceraids update from updating
My laptop has given me a decade of use, still uses Windows 7, and now I'm scared what will happen next. This sounds even worse than Windows 10. Halp.
Not really. Just stay vigilant (see above).So does this mean I finally have to move on from 7?
The other option is Windows 10 LTSC. You'll need to sail the high seas to download it and the activation procedure requires a few extra steps, but it's worth the minimal hassle due its relative light weight and almost complete lack of bloatware. Clean up what little remaining bloatware there is by using the Chris Titus debloater, run O&O ShutUp10 to reclaim a little bit of privacy and you'll be fine until the end of the decade (LTSC EOL is around 2029).
I already know how to use Linux, but I choose not to because Linuxfags are some of the most insufferable cunts this side of Teslafags. It's only gotten worse since the troonification of FOSS movement.imagine downloading 20 utilities just to reduce the puke flavor enough to swallow MS' load, lol. my brother in christ, just learn to use Linux
I already know how to use Linux, but I choose not to because Linuxfags are some of the most insufferable cunts this side of Teslafags. It's only gotten worse since the troonification of FOSS movement.
Anyways, I'd rather actively stick it to the man by taking the time to set up the cleanest possible Windows experience in current year.
Requiring TPM and a Microsoft account came across as nefarious to a lot of people.I completely understood the Vista hate as it was slow and borderline unusable, but I'm not in the slightest getting the hatred for 11 that I'm seeing here. Disclaimer that I'm a pretty basic user, though, so I'm sure a lot of you guys are doing more intensive stuff that I'd never run into issues with.
Be thankful they've yet to implement their "Content distribution regulation by viewing user" patent. (20120278904)The only thing that could've made it worse is if it suddenly screamed at 100% volume "Hi there! I'm Cortana, and I'm here to help."
Going to go against the grain a bit. I'm not a huge fan of Windows 11 out of the box, but once you make some changes to make it more like what you're used to, it's absolutely fine. Good, even, especially once you're used to the minor changes from previous versions. You can customize it to look and act almost exactly like a traditional Windows OS without the app garbage and connectivity. It's got plenty of questionable privacy settings and tracking, but so did 10, and that can all be disabled and disconnected along with the account tie-in.
I completely understood the Vista hate as it was slow and borderline unusable, but I'm not in the slightest getting the hatred for 11 that I'm seeing here. Disclaimer that I'm a pretty basic user, though, so I'm sure a lot of you guys are doing more intensive stuff that I'd never run into issues with.