- Joined
- Nov 15, 2021
Come on now, not knowing the gay little name Microsoft puts on something for marketing purposes isn't the same as not knowing about computers. Don't be a retard like @Samuel Hyde here.
Anyone who spends ten minutes finding out what TPM is will run really quickly into articles about cloud drive security. If someone doesn't know what Bitlocker, OneDrive, or Personal Vault are, that means he has spent zero minutes, zero seconds learning about Windows 11's TPM requirement.
I've noticed over the years that Linux people tend to know a lot about the specific computer sitting in front of them, in part because you need to in order for Linux to be useable, but tend to just rely on guesswork and assumptions when it's something outside their direct experience. The kinds of people who form snap opinions about technology and get passionately angry without even learning what the technology actually does tend to not know much in general.
Who in the name of Allah would do something like this? Holy shit.'
You know, having read through the thread I can't help but notice a fundamental difference in the Linux advocates and Windows apologists.
Linux people are constantly demanding the user should know more, improve themselves and apply what they learn to the machine they use. They should be the ones making the final decisions and choosing how things are done, even if it makes it more work for them.
Windows meanwhile keep deferring back to the idea the computer should just work. That expecting users and final customers to improve is a complete crapshoot and instead the software should just work as expected and that's it.. Compatibility, simplicity and functionality should come first.
Quite interesting distinction.
The biggest difference in this thread is that Linux people get upset when Windows users keep using Windows and don't switch to Linux, while Windows users don't really care what someone else uses if it works for them.
It might be my own bias but it sounds to me that this zoomer was so insistent on Word and PowerPoint because he simply did not want to bother considering much less learning any of the alternatives at all. I say this mostly because of the focusing on PowerPoint. I cannot think of anyone who actually uses it nowadays outside school project (though it also applies for university ones) as every job I have had on the last 10 years I never even saw it be mentioned. If he had said "Excel" that would have made a lot more sense to me and would sound like a actual requirement.
The developers where I work use Powerpoint in shared drives instead of the ticketing system to manage & document their projects. I am not making this up.
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